Reeves ‘going nowhere’ and has Starmer’s full backing, No 10 says – UK politics live | Politics

No 10: Rachel Reeves ‘going nowhere’ and ‘has PM’s full backing’

Rachel Reeves has the prime minister’s “full backing”, Downing Street has said.

Asked why Keir Starmer did not confirm in the Commons that he still had faith in Reeves, the prime minister’s press secretary said:

He has done so repeatedly.

The chancellor is going nowhere. She has the prime minister’s full backing.

He has said it plenty of times, he doesn’t need to repeat it every time the leader of the opposition speculates about Labour politicians.

The chancellor and the prime minister are focused entirely on delivering for working people.

It’s thanks to the chancellor’s management of the economy that we managed to restore stability, which has led to four interest rate cuts, wages rising faster than inflation and she recently delivered a spending review that invested in Britain’s national renewal.

Asked whether the prime minister still had confidence in work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall, the press secretary said: “Yes.”

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Diane Taylor

Diane Taylor

Government has today announced that it is boosting legal aid rates for housing, debt, immigration and asylum, after almost three decades of stagnation.

The £20 million per year injection of extra funds will add at least 10% on current rates.

The increase equates to a new hourly rate of £69.30 for London lawyers and £65.35 for non-London lawyers.

The government’s decision to raise legal aid rates follows a legal challenge to the very low legal aid rates for civil matters, after which the government agreed to conduct a consultation about legal aid fee levels

While legal aid lawyers and their representative bodies such as Immigration Law Practitioners Association, welcome today’s announcement, they have warned that the changes do not go far enough and only relate to housing and immigration legal aid at a time when they say the entire civil legal aid system is in crisis.

Toufique Hossain (corr) of Duncan Lewis solicitors who worked on the legal challenge against the government, arguing that legal aid rates need to increase, said: “The right to access justice has long been held to be an important constitutional right for all, especially those who are vulnerable. For years, investment in legal aid has been woeful.

“We welcome this decision, in response to our legal challenge and hope the changes will go some way to improve the dire state of legally aided immigration and housing advice.”

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