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Telegraph
13 minutes ago
- Telegraph
I shouldn't have gone to PMQs, says Reeves
Rachel Reeves has admitted she regrets attending prime minister's questions after she was seen in tears on the Government front bench. The Chancellor said she had been dealing with a 'personal issue' when her bottom lip shook and tears ran down her face during a moment of distress in Parliament on Wednesday. Ms Reeves was speaking after she made a surprise appearance alongside Sir Keir Starmer to unveil the Government's 10-year plan for the NHS. In an interview with The Guardian, Ms Reeves said she regretted going into PMQs after a 'tough day at the office', but hoped people 'could relate' to her distress. She said: 'In retrospect, I probably wished I hadn't gone in... But you know, it is what it is.' The Leeds West and Pudsey MP said she never thought about resigning despite backbench anger over the way she had handled the economy, adding: 'I didn't work that hard to then quit.' A backbench rebellion saw the government forced to drop key welfare cuts, which has left the Chancellor with a £5 billion black hole to fill. She has insisted she is 'totally' up for the job of Chancellor and asserted that she and the Prime Minister remain united. Ms Reeves said: 'People can see that Keir and me are a team.' Sir Keir stood by his Chancellor in the aftermath, telling BBC Radio 4 Today's Nick Robinson: 'She is going to be Chancellor into the next election and for many years afterwards.' He was quick to deny any political link to her tears, insisting it was a personal matter, saying: 'I'm not going to go into the personal matter of a colleague.' Labour insiders have claimed that the Chancellor has made herself 'unsackable' after the public tears. A government source said that Sir Keir 'seems to have tied himself to her' after her tears, which triggered a £3 billion market sell-off and crash in the pound's value. 'I thought at the beginning of Wednesday she would go, then thought it was confirmed when I saw her crying at PMQs but then she didn't,' said the source. Another source said Ms Reeves had enjoyed an 'outpouring of sympathy' over an incident that was still 'inescapably linked to the political facts' of the welfare rebellion. A third added that being pictured distraught on television had 'shored up her position'. In a turbulent week for the government, Ms Reeves refused to rule out tax rises in the autumn budget, saying: 'I'm not going to, because it would be irresponsible to do that. 'We took the decisions last year to draw a line under unfunded commitments and economic mismanagement. 'So we'll never have to do something like that again. But there are costs to what happened.'


The Independent
15 minutes ago
- The Independent
Emma Raducanu goes down swinging in thrilling loss to Aryna Sabalenka
Emma Raducanu reminded the tennis world what a special talent she is before her Wimbledon hopes were ended with a narrow loss to world number one Aryna Sabalenka. The 22-year-old played some electrifying tennis under the roof on Centre Court but was unable to apply the finishing touches, eventually going down 7-6 (6) 6-4 after exactly two hours. The first set alone took 74 minutes, with Raducanu saving seven set points and creating one of her own, while she led 4-1 in the second before Sabalenka recovered to set up a fourth-round clash with Elise Mertens. Raducanu will now drop to British number three behind Katie Boulter and Sonay Kartal, who is the last home woman left in singles, but that will not be the case for long if she can maintain this level.


The Guardian
16 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Lauren Filer leads fightback as England beat India to keep series alive
When Nat Sciver-Brunt was named as England captain in April, her teammate Tammy Beaumont might have had cause to feel slight disappointment at being overlooked, given her own success leading Welsh Fire. But at The Oval on Friday evening, with Sciver-Brunt out of the third T20 international against India with a groin injury, Beaumont finally got the chance to lead her side. More to the point, she managed a feat that has so far eluded Sciver-Brunt this summer – a win against the Indian tourists, albeit by the skin of their teeth. India had looked to be racing to victory after Shafali Verma smashed 47 from 25, while Smriti Mandhana glided her way to a half-century – but after Mandhana top-edged Lauren Filer to mid-on in the 16th over, England fought back at the death to seal a narrow five-run win. Filer thought she had Richa Ghosh next ball, caught at point, but England's DRS review was in vain as replays showed it had actually pinged off Ghosh's helmet. Lauren Bell – who had earlier shelled Shafali at deep third – then put down a tricky chance off Ghosh diving forward at short fine leg, but Charlie Dean held on to a brilliant diving catch in the deep in the 19th to make good the error. India were left needing 12 from the final over, and six from the final ball, but Harmanpreet Kaur could only fire the ball straight into the hands of mid-off. It should never have got so deep: earlier, Beaumont had contributed only two runs amid a mind-boggling late-innings collapse of nine for 31, as England squandered all the hard-won advantage of a 137-run partnership between Sophia Dunkley and Danni Wyatt-Hodge for the first wicket. Half-centuries apiece for the opening pair should have laid the perfect platform for England, especially after Wyatt-Hodge was put down twice off the left-arm spinner Shree Charani in the ninth, by Jemimah Rodrigues at deep midwicket and Harmanpreet Kaur at cover. But Dunkley – who somehow never quite looked in control in her innings of 75 – charged down the track and got a leading edge back to the bowler Deepti Sharma, before Harmanpreet held onto a second chance proffered by Wyatt-Hodge to cover. Sign up to The Spin Subscribe to our cricket newsletter for our writers' thoughts on the biggest stories and a review of the week's action after newsletter promotion Three Indian bowlers were handed the opportunity for hat-tricks – Arundhati Reddy, Shree Charani and Deepti Sharma – as Amy Jones, Issy Wong and Filer all fell to first-ball ducks, meaning England came breathtakingly close to handing India a series win. Instead, the series remains alive ahead of the fourth T20 at Manchester on Wednesday.