Rachel Reeves is pushing the UK to the brink, while pretending it’s all going to plan.
Rachel Reeves spends and spends, and taxes and taxes. Call this stability? (Image: Getty)
The Chancellor blew the national budget AGAIN in May. So how do her Treasury officials respond? Incredibly, they claim she’s “stabilising the economy”.
I despair.
I’m not sure what’s more infuriating about the Labour Chancellor – that she keeps getting everything wrong, or that she always finds someone else to blame.
Whenever something goes south, she points the finger elsewhere: the Tories, Brexit, trade tariffs, “global instability”… anyone but herself.
Now, Treasury officials are left defending the indefensible. With nowhere else to turn, they’ve resorted to arguing that black is white.
Every day, the economic picture gets worse. Both for Reeves, and the rest of us.
Yesterday, we learned that inflation isn’t budging. It came in at 3.4% in May, still way above the Bank of England’s 2% target.
Reeves shoulders much of the blame. Her £25billion national insurance raid on employers came into force in April, and businesses passed the cost straight to consumers.
Then came a double whammy, as the CBI slashed UK growth forecasts to a meagre 1.2% in 2025, and just 1% in 2026.
It also warned that unemployment will rise from 4.6% to 4.8%. An incredible 275,000 jobs have already gone under Reeves. So that’s even more people out of work.
Yesterday, the Bank of England also refused to cut interest rates, further squeezing households and businesses.
And today? Even more bad news.
Official figures show the Treasury borrowed a whopping £17.7billion in May. That’s £600million more than forecast, and £700million more than the same month last year.
Only once has a chancellor borrowed more in May: during the Covid pandemic.
This isn’t a one-off. It follows April’s £20.2billion blowout. That was the second-highest April borrowing figure on record.
And this despite record tax revenues following last year’s Budget blitz. Reeves raked in £82.5billion in May, up £5.3billion on last year, helped by higher income tax, VAT and corporation tax.
But spending continues to surge, driven by welfare bills and public sector pay rises.
Retailers also took a beating. Sales fell by 2.7% in May, as households tightened their belts. Food, clothes and department stores all took a hit.
It wasn’t just the weather. Shoppers are stretched. The public finances are cracking. Yet incredibly, Labour officials claim it’s all going to plan.
Chief secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones claimed today’s figures showed Labour has “stabilised the economy and the public finances”.
Seriously?
Apparently, Reeves has “taken the right decisions to protect working people, begin repairing the NHS, and fix the foundations to rebuild Britain”.
Here’s what he should have said: “We’ve destabilised the economy and the public finances, now we’re scrambling to undo the damage before it’s too late.”
He might have added: “Sorry.”
But no. The official line is detached from reality. As usual.
Reeves keeps overspending. Her fiscal headroom is vanishing. The books refuse to balance. And the full cost of her spending pledges haven’t even landed yet.
Brace yourselves. More tax hikes are coming in the autumn Budget. Economists say Reeves has no choice.
If this is stability, I dread to think what instability will look like. Unfortunately, we may be about to find out.