Rachel Reeves Accused Of Misleading Voters Over State Of UK Economy Ahead Of Budget
Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves speaks to nurses and members of the media during a visit to University College London Hospital in London, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025. (Adrian Dennis/Pool Photo via AP)Rachel Reeves has been accused of misleading voters by claiming there was a huge hole in the government’s finances which did not actually exist.Treasury officials briefed that the chancellor needed to raise around £20 billion in the Budget to balance the nation’s books.Reeves herself even held a highly-unusual pre-Budget press conference in Downing Street on November 9 in which she refused to rule out putting up income tax – a move which would have broken a key Labour manifesto pledge.Later that week, she told Radio 5Live that deep cuts in public spending would be needed if she did not increase income tax rates.But days later the Financial Times revealed that Reeves had decided not to put up income tax rise after all.Treasury sources said that was because the Office for Budget Responsibility’s (OBR) forecasts showed the economy was in better shape than previously thought.But figures released by the OBR on Friday showed that fully two weeks before that U-turn, their assessment was that there was no black hole at all.Reeves hiked taxes by £26 billion in the Budget as she massively increased public spending, including on welfare.Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said the chancellor had “lied to the public” and should be sacked.Posting on X, she said: “Her Budget wasn’t about stability. It was about politics: bribing Labour MPs to save her own skin. Shameful.”Yet more evidence, as if we needed it, that the Chancellor must be sacked. For months Reeves has lied to the public to justify record tax hikes to pay for more welfare.Her Budget wasn’t about stability. It was about politics: bribing Labour MPs to save her own skin. Shameful.
https://t.co/fR1dNgeUKp— Kemi Badenoch (@KemiBadenoch) November 28, 2025Treasury sources denied Reeves had misled the public, and said the OBR calculations had not taken account of things like the government’s decision to reinstate winter fuel payments for pensioners, and the chancellor’s decision to give herself more fiscal headroom, or spare cash.“I don’t think anyone can suggest she was preparing the country for something that didn’t end up happening,” said one Reeves ally.A Treasury spokesperson said: “We are not going to get into the OBR’s processes or speculate on how that relates to the internal decision‑making in the build‑up to a Budget, but the chancellor made her choices to cut the cost of living, cut hospital waiting lists and double headroom to cut the cost of our debt.“We take Budget security extremely seriously and believe it’s important to preserve a private space for Treasury–OBR policy and forecast discussions, so we welcome the OBR’s confirmation that this will not become usual practice.”However, social media users reacted angrily to the OBR’s figures.So…the “blackhole” never existed after all.There’s spin and then there’s flat-out deception.Could be a long weekend in No11…
https://t.co/5gQdtEpatz— Tom Swarbrick (@TomSwarbrick1) November 28, 2025The OBR's jaw-dropping revelation this lunchtime puts Reeves on course to go down as the most dishonest Chancellor we've ever had Snap analysis -
https://t.co/doMJ0RpKOt— Calgie (@christiancalgie) November 28, 2025The OBR has - of course - in effect confirmed that Rachel Reeves’s decision not to increase the basic rate of income tax had zilch to do with any late-arriving new information about higher tax revenues - which was what was briefed to the media at the time of the u-turn as the…
https://t.co/jK2LDcLGzf— Robert Peston (@Peston) November 28, 2025Reeves gave her tough choices/income tax press conference four days after the OBR told her she was in the clear. WTF?
https://t.co/fR9ermrEad— Robert Colvile (@rcolvile) November 27, 2025Related...BBC Question Time Audience Deliver Damning Verdict On Rachel Reeves's BudgetAnalysis: Rachel Reeves's £26 Billion Gamble Could Be The Final Nail In Labour's CoffinReeves Scraps The Two-Child Benefit Cap And Delights Campaigners: 'We Won!'
Rachel Reeves Accused Of Misleading Voters Over State Of UK Economy Ahead Of Budget
Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves speaks to nurses and members of the media during a visit to University College London Hospital in London, Wednesday, Nov. 26, 2025. (Adrian Dennis/Pool Photo via AP)Rachel Reeves has been accused of misleading voters by claiming there was a huge hole in the government’s finances which did not actually exist.Treasury officials briefed that the chancellor needed to raise around £20 billion in the Budget to balance the nation’s books.Reeves herself even held a highly-unusual pre-Budget press conference in Downing Street on November 9 in which she refused to rule out putting up income tax – a move which would have broken a key Labour manifesto pledge.Later that week, she told Radio 5Live that deep cuts in public spending would be needed if she did not increase income tax rates.But days later the Financial Times revealed that Reeves had decided not to put up income tax rise after all.Treasury sources said that was because the Office for Budget Responsibility’s (OBR) forecasts showed the economy was in better shape than previously thought.But figures released by the OBR on Friday showed that fully two weeks before that U-turn, their assessment was that there was no black hole at all.Reeves hiked taxes by £26 billion in the Budget as she massively increased public spending, including on welfare.Tory leader Kemi Badenoch said the chancellor had “lied to the public” and should be sacked.Posting on X, she said: “Her Budget wasn’t about stability. It was about politics: bribing Labour MPs to save her own skin. Shameful.”Yet more evidence, as if we needed it, that the Chancellor must be sacked. For months Reeves has lied to the public to justify record tax hikes to pay for more welfare.Her Budget wasn’t about stability. It was about politics: bribing Labour MPs to save her own skin. Shameful. https://t.co/fR1dNgeUKp— Kemi Badenoch (@KemiBadenoch) November 28, 2025Treasury sources denied Reeves had misled the public, and said the OBR calculations had not taken account of things like the government’s decision to reinstate winter fuel payments for pensioners, and the chancellor’s decision to give herself more fiscal headroom, or spare cash.“I don’t think anyone can suggest she was preparing the country for something that didn’t end up happening,” said one Reeves ally.A Treasury spokesperson said: “We are not going to get into the OBR’s processes or speculate on how that relates to the internal decision‑making in the build‑up to a Budget, but the chancellor made her choices to cut the cost of living, cut hospital waiting lists and double headroom to cut the cost of our debt.“We take Budget security extremely seriously and believe it’s important to preserve a private space for Treasury–OBR policy and forecast discussions, so we welcome the OBR’s confirmation that this will not become usual practice.”However, social media users reacted angrily to the OBR’s figures.So…the “blackhole” never existed after all.There’s spin and then there’s flat-out deception.Could be a long weekend in No11… https://t.co/5gQdtEpatz— Tom Swarbrick (@TomSwarbrick1) November 28, 2025The OBR's jaw-dropping revelation this lunchtime puts Reeves on course to go down as the most dishonest Chancellor we've ever had Snap analysis - https://t.co/doMJ0RpKOt— Calgie (@christiancalgie) November 28, 2025The OBR has - of course - in effect confirmed that Rachel Reeves’s decision not to increase the basic rate of income tax had zilch to do with any late-arriving new information about higher tax revenues - which was what was briefed to the media at the time of the u-turn as the… https://t.co/jK2LDcLGzf— Robert Peston (@Peston) November 28, 2025Reeves gave her tough choices/income tax press conference four days after the OBR told her she was in the clear. WTF? https://t.co/fR9ermrEad— Robert Colvile (@rcolvile) November 27, 2025Related...BBC Question Time Audience Deliver Damning Verdict On Rachel Reeves's BudgetAnalysis: Rachel Reeves's £26 Billion Gamble Could Be The Final Nail In Labour's CoffinReeves Scraps The Two-Child Benefit Cap And Delights Campaigners: 'We Won!'