LONDON — British Prime Minister Keir Starmer said Wednesday that Treasury chief Rachel Reeves is secure in her job after a series of government U-turns dented her revenue-raising plans and sparked speculation about her future.
Rumours swirled after Reeves appeared to be in tears in the House of Commons, the day after an embarrassing reversal for the government over its plans to cut welfare spending. Many viewers observed that Reeves looked exhausted and upset as she sat behind Starmer during the weekly Prime Minister's Questions session.
The Treasury said Reeves was dealing with a ''personal matter.'' It would not elaborate.
Starmer initially declined to say, when asked by opposition leader Kemi Badenoch, that Reeves would still have her job when the next election is called, likely in 2029.
The pound fell against the U.S. dollar during the session and the cost of government borrowing rose on uncertainty about Reeves' future and the administration's fiscal plans.
Starmer's press secretary later stressed that Reeves ''is going nowhere. She has the prime minister's full backing.'' And the prime minister said Reeves would remain Chancellor of the Exchequer ''for a very long time to come.''
''She's done an excellent job as chancellor and we have delivered inward investment to this country in record numbers," Starmer told the BBC.
He said Reeves' tears had ''nothing to do with politics.''