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 ...
Rachel Reeves has defended her trip to China amid economic turmoil in the UK as MPs argued her Budget “hasn’t worked” and insisted: “The British people deserve better.” The Chancellor appeared in the ...
Ms Reeves made a statement to the Commons on Tuesday following her trip to China, after the cost of government borrowing hit its highest level since the financial crisis by one measure, and the value ...
The chancellor has been criticised for making the trip while the government is under pressure from rising borrowing costs.
The chancellor has said the budget is "non-negotiable" on a visit to China in the face of volatile markets back in the UK.
Mel Stride tried his best to ‘shark’ the chancellor, writes Joe Murphy – but ended up throwing her an inadvertent lifeline ...
The former intelligence chief has warned of the dangers to national security associated with deeper links with China.
Let’s be clear. Rachel Reeves had to go to China. The chancellor went to promote Britain and to win business. Staying at home would not have saved the pound. It would have looked like weakness ...
Rachel Reeves has been warned that she and Labour have abandoned their principles by seeking deals with China in a desperate attempt to save Britain’s faltering economy. The chancellor doubled ...
China and Britain have restarted economic and financial talks after a six-year hiatus during a visit by Britain's Treasury chief to Beijing.
Immensely pragmatic' Reeves will have a laser-focus on her job of growing the economy over other concerns when she visits ...