Key facts
- Ministers are urging potential Labour leader Andy Burnham to keep Rachel Reeves as Chancellor.
- Supporters argue Reeves's handling of the economy has helped stabilize interest rates.
- Keeping Reeves in post is seen as a way to avoid unnecessary economic instability.
- Burnham has committed to Reeves's fiscal rules and pledge not to raise main taxes.
- Burnham announced plans to cut business taxes for pubs and music venues by 20 percent.
In Westminster, there is significant discussion about whether Andy Burnham, a potential successor to Keir Starmer, should retain Rachel Reeves as Chancellor if he were to win a leadership contest. Some ministers believe that keeping Reeves in her post would provide crucial economic stability and reassure bond markets, especially given concerns about potential market jitters surrounding a Labour leadership change. One minister cited Reeves's handling of the economy as a reason interest rates have not risen further in response to geopolitical events.