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Rachel Reeves squirms when challenged ‘who is running the country’ .hh

The Chancellor was skewered during tetchy broadcast interview.

Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg

Rachel Reeves speaks with Laura Kuenssberg (Image: PA)

Rachel Reeves has confirmed plans to slash Civil Service running costs by 15%. The Chancellor was also forced to admit the economy isn’t growing fast enough and the government needs to do more ahead of her upcoming spring statement.

“We are, by the end of this Parliament, making a commitment that we will cut the costs of running government by 15%,” she told the BBC’s Sunday with Laura Kuenssberg. She said anyone running a business will think that is “more than possible” given advances in technology and AI.

Trevor Phillips asks Rachel Reeves ‘who’s running this country?’

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“We’re going to cut the back office functions, the administrative and bureaucracy functions.

“The size of government increased massively during the Covid pandemic.

“That was five years ago … but the size of the Civil Service hasn’t come back during that period. So, we now need to make sure that we do realise those efficiency savings so we can invest in the priorities.”

Her remarks came as she toured broadcast studios days before her crucial fiscal package.

Ms Reeves denied she had crushed economic activity by hiking taxes and talking down the country’s prospects.

She also rejected warnings from a think-tank that living standards are set to fall over this Parliament.

The Chancellor confirmed that the Civil Service will be asked to find more than £2billion in cuts to admin budgets, with 10,000 jobs potentially going.

But the Treasury is thought to need far bigger savings because of tumbling growth forecasts.

The hole in the public finances could be as much as £15billion, even after proposals were unveiled to cut £5billion off benefits.

Challenged on Sky News over the sluggish economic performance, Ms Reeves said: “We do need to do more.

“Growth is the number one mission of this government. We’re turning things around, but it takes hard work and there are no shortcuts to get there.”

Ms Reeves was asked about reports that the Office for Budget Responsibility could slash the growth forecast by as much as half and how seriously her fiscal headroom had been hit.

“I’m not going to pre-empt the Office for Budget Responsibility’s forecast, but the world has changed,” the Chancellor told Sky News’ Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips

“We can all see that before our eyes and governments are not inactive in that – we’ll respond to the change and continue to meet our fiscal rules.

“But we’re also shaping the new world, whether that’s in the defence and security realm, or indeed on the economy.

“I promised at the general election to bring stability back to the economy.”

Pressed on a report from the Joseph Rowntree Foundation predicting a huge drop in living standards by the end of this parliament, Ms Reeves said: “I reject that and the Office for Budget Responsibility will set out their forecast this week.

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“Living standards in the last parliament were the worst ever on record.

“I’m confident that we will see living standards increase during the course of this Parliament, what we’ve already seen in these last few months of the Labour Government is a sustained increase in living standards.”

Ms Reeves pointed to cuts in interest rates, saying “wages are rising faster than inflation”.

Rachel Reeves and Trevor Phillips clash on Sky News

GDP

GDP (Image: PA)

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“That was not the case in the previous parliament, which was the worst on record for living standards, but are you saying ‘do we need to do more to grow the economy, to address the cost-of-living crisis?” she said.

“Absolutely we do. That is why we are reducing bureaucracy and regulation, it’s why we are reforming the pension system to bring more money into the economy and so much more.”

Conservative shadow chancellor Mel Stride has said the situation of the “so-called mini budget” is one “that this party will never, ever repeat”.

Speaking on Sky News’ Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips programme, he said: “On the so-called mini budget, I was then chair of the Treasury Select Committee and I had a lot to say about it, before it happened, when it happened, and since it happened, and that is a situation that this party will never, ever repeat.

“So, I will make sure that by the time we get to the next general election, the electorate are very confident that we believe in sound money, in prudence when it comes to the public finances, and that we will make sure the economy is kept in a sustainable and good place. And it’s as simple as that.”

Ms Reeves’ Autumn Budget plans have been been left in ruins following an alarming slowdown in economic growth and rising debt interest costs.

There are fears the national insurance raid and Donald Trump’s trade war are about to make things worse.

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But Ms Reeves has flatly ruled out increasing taxes again in this package, meaning the money will need to be found from spending cuts.

The Cabinet Office will tell departments to cut their admin budgets – such as for HR, policy advice and office management – by £2.2billion a year by 2029-30.

They will first be asked to reduce budgets by 10 per cent by 2028-29 in a bid to save £1.5billion.

The head of the FDA union said that equates to nearly 10 per cent of the salary bill for the civil service.

Departments will receive instructions in a letter from Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat McFadden in the coming week.

A Cabinet Office source said: “To deliver our Plan for Change we will reshape the state so it is fit for the future. We cannot stick to business as usual.

“By cutting administrative costs we can target resources at frontline services – with more teachers in classrooms, extra hospital appointments and police back on the beat.”

FDA general secretary Dave Penman said the union welcomed a move away from ‘crude headcount targets’ but that the distinction between the back office and front line is ‘artificial’.

“Elected governments are free to decide the size of the civil service they want, but cuts of this scale and speed will inevitably have an impact on what the civil service will be able to deliver for ministers and the country.

“Whilst we welcome the move away from crude headcount targets, the distinction between back office and front line is an artificial one.

“The budgets being cut will, for many departments, involve the majority of their staff and the £1.5billion savings mentioned equates to nearly 10 per cent of the salary bill for the entire civil service.”

He urged ministers to set out what areas of work they are prepared to stop as part of spending plans.

“The idea that cuts of this scale can be delivered by cutting HR and comms teams is for the birds.”

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