UK Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves left behind turmoil in financial markets to travel to Beijing in pursuit of growth drivers for the British economy, sparking a media backlash at home and dismaying critics of China’s Communist Party. The results were underwhelming.
Rachel Reeves, the UK Chancellor, embarks on a significant trade mission to China, aiming to bolster economic ties and explore investment opportunities. Her visit comes at a time when the UK economy faces challenges,
Rachel Reeves was flying back from China into an economic storm as the Pound lost further ground against the Dollar and the cost of long-term Government borrowing hit a new high early on Monday.
Rachel Reeves is on her way back to the UK after a brief visit to China over the weekend. The Chancellor faced calls to cancel the trip, not over alleged human rights abuses by her
Mel Stride tried his best to ‘shark’ the chancellor, writes Joe Murphy – but ended up throwing her an inadvertent lifeline
Our Chancellor of the Exchequer went to China on the day this reluctant shopper was in York city centre trying - and failing - to find a single item of clothing made anywhere else but the East Asian country.
UK chancellor Rachel Reeves has shrugged off calls for her resignation, insisting to MPs that her economic plans can deliver an “immense” prize and defending her visit to China last week.
Rachel Reeves, U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer, joins 'Squawk Box' to discuss her efforts to bring U.S. companies to the U.K., impact of President Trump's tariff proposals, trade partnership with U.S.
The Chancellor claimed Britain has its 'best days ahead' in a new interview - with multiple drops in interest rates forecasted, and a plan in hand to fix Britain's 'perverse' benefits system.
It comes after Sir Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves’ own cosying up to Beijing, which experts have seen as an attempt to “hedge” against Trump’s unpredictable presidency, an approach which the EU had previously looked on dimly but is now aping.
Companies are cutting jobs at the fastest pace since the global financial crisis, barring the pandemic, after Rachel Reeves announced £40bn of tax rises in the Budget, according to a closely watched survey.
Donald Trump’s return to the White House is driving a climate policy divide in the Labour Party