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Amazingly there are 12% of voters who think Rachel Reeves does a GOOD job! Survey gives damning insight into Chancellor's policy backlash

Amazingly there are 12% of voters who think Rachel Reeves does a GOOD job! Survey gives damning insight into Chancellor's policy backlash

Daily Mail​3 days ago

Barely one in ten voters believe that Chancellor Rachel Reeves is doing a good job, a poll has revealed.
The YouGov survey, published on the eve of the Chancellor's spending review today, showed widespread disillusionment with her performance since taking office last year.
Just 12 per cent of people said Ms Reeves is doing a good job, while 53 per cent said she is doing a bad job – giving her a net approval rating of minus 41.
Ms Reeves even fared badly among Labour voters, with only 28 per cent voting in favour of her efforts, while 32 per cent condemned them.
A separate poll by the think-tank More In Common found that confidence in Labour's ability to deliver on its promises has collapsed since the election.
The survey also revealed that the public has become tired of Labour blaming the country's current problems on the previous Conservative government.
Ms Reeves and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer have repeatedly blamed the Tories for their economic inheritance, including claims of facing a £22billion 'black hole' in the public finances on taking office.
But the tactic seems to be wearing thin, with 54 per cent of voters saying Labour is wasting too much time blaming the Tories for its failures in office.
The survey also found that 71 per cent of voters do not expect Labour to improve their lives, compared to just 29 per cent who do.
When the same question was asked just days after last year's election, 54 per cent said they believed Labour would improve their lives, compared with 46 per cent who did not.
In addition to this, the poll suggests just a third of Labour voters believe the changes announced by
Ms Reeves in today's spending review will be good for the country.
Among the wider public, that figure falls to just 15 per cent, compared with 26 per cent who believe the Chancellor's expected spending splurge will make little difference and 32 per cent who fear decisions announced in the spending review will be generally bad for the country.
Civil Service hits 550,000
Civil Service headcount has hit a near 20-year high despite Labour vowing to crack down on numbers.
Official figures show the workforce grew by 2,000 in the first three months of the year to 550,000.
That was up from 544,000 in March 2024, and is the highest since 2006 when Tony Blair was in power.
In March, the Chancellor promised running costs would be reduced by 15 per cent by the end of the decade.
And in April ministers announced plans to squeeze numbers, including cutting 2,100 Cabinet Office staff.

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Israel bombarded by Iranian missiles after strikes on Tehran's nuclear bases
Israel bombarded by Iranian missiles after strikes on Tehran's nuclear bases

Glasgow Times

timean hour ago

  • Glasgow Times

Israel bombarded by Iranian missiles after strikes on Tehran's nuclear bases

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ANDREW PIERCE: Is Angela Rayner's hard-Left boyfriend plotting to put her in No 10 as revenge for his sacking by Starmer's ruthless right-hand man?
ANDREW PIERCE: Is Angela Rayner's hard-Left boyfriend plotting to put her in No 10 as revenge for his sacking by Starmer's ruthless right-hand man?

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

ANDREW PIERCE: Is Angela Rayner's hard-Left boyfriend plotting to put her in No 10 as revenge for his sacking by Starmer's ruthless right-hand man?

On the eve of the Government's difficult Spending Review, Angela Rayner was in surprisingly high spirits. Drinks were flowing as the Deputy Prime Minister held court, acting as the DJ playing loud 'house music' while her guests danced the night away. Rayner's office has refused to confirm whether a party took place in her resplendent grace-and-favour apartment in Admiralty House, once the home of Sir Winston Churchill, the night before the Housing Secretary received one of the biggest financial packages of the Spending Review. Rayner had to battle to the bitter end against Chancellor Rachel Reeves, but the outcome fell in her favour and is a sign of her growing influence. In recent weeks, there have been reports of Rayner limbering up to replace Keir Starmer as Labour leader, and she has solid backing from members of the soft-Left, as well as the unions. Her victory in the Reeves negotiations is a clear sign that Downing Street is trying to keep her on side. 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In a poll by independent party news website LabourList, she came second to Energy Secretary Ed Miliband, who is not a leadership contender after his disastrous election defeat in 2015. What's more, many Labour MPs believe they must elect a woman for the first time in the party's 125-year history. Even Rayner's many detractors, who scorn her intellectual ability, concede there is no serious alternative contender. Rachel Reeves and Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson have crashed and burned in the eyes of voters. Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham, another favourite of party members, does not have a Commons seat. And Health Secretary Wes Streeting's majority was cut to 550 by an independent Muslim candidate standing on a pro-Gaza platform. Many suspect he will lose next time. The man who helped Rayner avoid a similar fate is her close friend Wajid Khan, a former mayor of Burnley. 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Keir leads a stable government, a disciplined party, and knows what he wants. Ange would be woefully out of her depth as PM. She's not up to it and MPs know it.' But Rayner is indifferent to the barbs. She thinks she's on a roll and, judging by the mood of her party guests, they think the same.

MSP ‘overwhelmed' to become MBE
MSP ‘overwhelmed' to become MBE

The Independent

time2 hours ago

  • The Independent

MSP ‘overwhelmed' to become MBE

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