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Minister insists Reeves did not mislead public in Budget build-up

Reeves denies misleading the public with pre-Budget messagingpublished at 07:08 GMT


Media caption,

Laura Kuenssberg presses Rachel Reeves on whether the public was misled before Budget

Reeves is facing accusations that she misled the public in the lead-up to the Budget, by suggesting the public finances were in a worse state than they actually were.

In a pre-Budget speech on 4 November, Reeves strongly hinted at tax rises, saying she would make the “necessary choices”.

It was “clear” that the UK’s productivity performance was “weaker than previously thought”, Reeves said.

But a letter from the OBR, external, sent to MPs on Friday, has – her critics say – challenged this narrative.

It reveals that a forecast of higher wages would help offset the effects of the productivity downgrade – something Reeves did not mention.

It also appears she was on track to meet her fiscal rules by 2029/30.

On 31 October, the OBR told the Treasury it was on course to meet its rule of not borrowing to fund day-to-day spending – albeit by £4.2bn less than the £9.9bn in “headroom” (or “buffer”) Reeves left herself last year.

Reeves delivered her pre-Budget speech just four days later.

Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said the letter showed Reeves had “lied to the public” and should resign.

Reeves has denied misleading the public. “I clearly could not deliver a budget with just £4.2bn of headroom,” she told the BBC’s Laura Kuenssberg on Sunday, saying that would have been “the lowest surplus any chancellor ever delivered”.

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