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Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves embark on Budget week that will define Labour government

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Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves embark on Budget week that will define Labour government

Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer will on Monday set the scene for a Budget this week that will define his government.

“This is the last chance to get out of the doom loop of higher taxes, low growth and cuts to public services,” said one colleague.

Rachel Reeves is preparing a major increase in UK taxation — about £40bn of tax rises and spending cuts are planned — a sharp rise in borrowing and a wave of investment in public services, notably the NHS. “It’s big,” an ally of the chancellor said simply.

Starmer, recovering from jet lag after his trip to Samoa for the Commonwealth summit, will give a speech intended to convey a joint sense of purpose with his chancellor, after almost four months of sometimes tense preparations for the fiscal event.

Government insiders reject claims that Reeves made a mistake in July to cut winter fuel payments for 10mn pensioners, but admit that it was a damaging episode and say “lessons have been learnt” about the way the policy was drawn up.

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Reeves’ imposition of tough spending controls for 2025-26 triggered a cabinet backlash, but Starmer backed her, even if some ministers claim his instincts were less fiscally stringent than those of the chancellor.

“The truth is that this isn’t the Budget that we wanted to do but it’s the Budget we have to do,” said one ally of Reeves.

Rachel Reeves is preparing a wave of investment in public services, notably the NHS © Mark Thomas/Shutterstock

The unusually long four-month gestation of the Budget since Labour’s general election win on July 4 has been partly blamed for a sense of drift at the top of government and plummeting approval ratings.

Senior officials insist Reeves was right to take time to get the Budget right, but they admit the delay has raised the stakes. “They are higher because of the level of public cynicism,” said one ally. “We haven’t had the smoothest of starts as a government.”

The chancellor, sustained throughout the Budget process by Earl Grey tea and an enthusiasm for running, has had to reassure corporate bosses that she remains pro-business, even as she prepares to hit companies with a huge tax rise. “They are grown-ups,” said an ally of Reeves. “They want to know we are taking responsible decisions and then we can move on.”

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As the shape and sheer scale of Reeves’ fiscal statement has become clearer, it has also become obvious that Labour was — at the very least — sparing with the details about its plans for government before the election.

“They lied to the British people through their teeth,” was the verdict of Robert Jenrick, Conservative leadership contender.

Paul Johnson, director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies think-tank, said it could be “one of the biggest tax raising Budgets in history”.

Reeves argues she could not have foreseen what she says is a £22bn “black hole” left by the previous Tory government. But some of the problems she faces — for example, the crisis in the NHS and prisons and the need to fund public sector pay rises — were clear to many before polling day.

The chancellor’s £40bn funding gap includes a political choice to inject more cash into public services to avoid a “return to austerity” later in this parliament. Former chancellor Jeremy Hunt had planned real annual growth in day-to-day public spending of just 1 per cent.

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This implied real cuts for “unprotected” Whitehall departments and was a subject Reeves chose to skirt over during the election campaign. The problem was widely known: Richard Hughes, head of the Office for Budget Responsibility, the fiscal watchdog, warned in January that spending plans beyond 2025 were worse than “a work of fiction”.

Reeves’ prescription of perhaps £35bn of tax rises to patch up public services and an additional £20bn a year of extra borrowing to fund capital investment has forced Labour to perform some verbal gymnastics to claim the Budget is consistent with its manifesto.

Starmer, who last week denied misleading voters, has struggled to define the “working people” that Labour promised to protect.

Reeves is expected to extend the freeze in income tax thresholds beyond 2028, a “stealth tax” on workers who would be pulled into higher tax bands. She had promised not to raise income tax.

On Sunday, education secretary Bridget Phillipson suggested the manifesto income tax pledge might apply only in the short term, rather than the whole parliament. “After the Budget, when people look at their payslips, they won’t see higher taxes,” she told the BBC.

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As for the commitment not to increase national insurance contributions, Starmer and Reeves were explicit only after the election that this applied just to employees, not employers, who could end up paying up to £20bn a year more. The Tories call it a “tax on jobs” that will be passed on to workers.

Reeves’ relaxation of fiscal rules to allow potentially £50bn a year of extra borrowing for capital investment — in practice likely to be closer to £20bn — was another seismic Budget change unheralded before the election.

But she insists the measures are needed to “fix the foundations”. For example, an extra £24bn a year would only maintain public investment at its current level of 2.4 per cent of GDP, rather than seeing it fall, as planned by Hunt, to 1.7 per cent in 2028-29.

Staff members line up to enter HM Prison Pentonville during a shift change. A white van with red and yellow chevrons is parked nearby, and the entrance is marked with signs reading "HMP Pentonville North Wall Gate."
Some of the problems the Labour government faces — for example, the crisis in the NHS and prisons — were clear to many before polling day © Leon Neal/Getty Images

Colleagues say Reeves knows her first Budget is the time to make tough decisions and take the political hit, not least because her Tory opponents are still consumed by a leadership contest. And she will have some covering fire.

Lord Jim O’Neill, a Treasury minister in the last Tory government, is among many economists who called for a looser fiscal framework to allow more public investment. “It’s very sensible, so long as the guardrails are serious,” he said.

One shadow cabinet member admitted: “It’s not a bad idea, within reason.”

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Reeves’ decision to raise taxes or cut spending by £40bn to meet her “golden rule” — that day-to-day spending should be covered by tax revenues — is also likely to be welcomed by markets as a sign that she is not about to go on a wild borrowing spree. Gordon Brown, former Labour prime minister, had a similar “golden rule” and Reeves has confirmed that “I speak to Gordon regularly”.

Like Brown, Reeves is using her first Budget to apply short-term constraints to public spending — one minister described the spending controls for 2025-26 as “horrible” — with the hope that higher growth will allow her to loosen the taps before the next election.

Reeves has also learnt from former Tory chancellor George Osborne, according to his ex-adviser Rupert Harrison, in deciding that if you are going to raise taxes it is better to go for one big hit — in this case the whopping rise in employers NICs — rather than lots of smaller ones.

“They were over-optimistic about the amount of money they could make from capital taxation,” Harrison said, noting that Reeves has been advised by Treasury officials to scale back her ambitions for big rises in taxes on capital gains and on “non-doms” and private equity executives, in recognition of the fact the wealthy can quickly change their behaviour.

“That’s why they ended up coming back to employer NICs,” he said. “It’s better to do one big tax rise and have one big fight, rather than have lots of fights over lots of smaller tax rises.”

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But Harrison added: “I think there will be a political price to pay. If you spend the election saying you don’t need to put up taxes and then you say you need to find £40bn, that’s quite a big thing.”

Video: Sketchy Politics: Labour pains

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Top Drug Regulator Is Fired From the F.D.A.

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Top Drug Regulator Is Fired From the F.D.A.

Dr. Tracy Beth Hoeg, the Food and Drug Administration’s top drug regulator, said she was fired from the agency Friday after she declined to resign.

She said she did not know who had ordered her firing or why, nor whether Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. knew of her fate. The Department of Health and Human Services did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The departure reflected the upheaval at the F.D.A., days after the resignation of Dr. Marty Makary, the agency commissioner. Dr. Makary had become a lightning rod for critics of the agency’s decisions to reject applications for rare disease drugs and to delay a report meant to supply damaging evidence about the abortion drug mifepristone. He also spent months before his departure pushing back on the White House’s requests for him to approve more flavored vapes, the reason he ultimately cited for leaving.

Dr. Hoeg’s hiring had startled public health leaders who were familiar with her track record as a vaccine skeptic, and she played a leading role in some of the agency’s most divisive efforts during her tenure. She worked on a report that purportedly linked the deaths of children and young adults to Covid vaccines, a dossier the agency has not released publicly. She was also the co-author of a document describing Mr. Kennedy’s decision to pare the recommendations for 17 childhood vaccines down to 11.

But in an interview on Friday, Dr. Hoeg said she “stuck with the science.”

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“I am incredibly proud of the work we were doing,” Dr. Hoeg said, adding, “I’m glad that we didn’t give in to any pressures to approve drugs when it wasn’t appropriate.”

As the director of the agency’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research, she was a political appointee in a role that had been previously occupied by career officials. An epidemiologist who was trained in the United States and Denmark, she worked on efforts to analyze drug safety and on a panel to discuss the use of serotonin reuptake inhibitors, the most widely prescribed class of antidepressants, during pregnancy. She also worked on efforts to reduce animal testing and was the agency’s liaison to an influential vaccine committee.

She made sure that her teams approved drugs only when the risk-benefit balance was favorable, she said.

The firing worsens the leadership vacuum at the F.D.A. and other agencies, with temporary leaders filling the role of commissioner, food chief and the head of the biologics center, which oversees vaccines and gene therapies. The roles of surgeon general and director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention are also unfilled.

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Supreme Court is death knell for Virginia’s Democratic-friendly congressional maps

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Supreme Court is death knell for Virginia’s Democratic-friendly congressional maps

The U.S. Supreme Court

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The U.S. Supreme Court refused Friday to allow Virginia to use a new congressional map that favored Democrats in all but one of the state’s U.S. House seats. The map was a key part of Democrats’ effort to counter the Republican redistricting wave set off by President Trump.

The new map was drawn by Democrats and approved by Virginia voters in an April referendum. But on May 8, the Supreme Court of Virginia in a 4-to-3 vote declared the referendum, and by extension the new map, null and void because lawmakers failed to follow the proper procedures to get the issue on the ballot, violating the state constitution.

Virginia Democrats and the state’s attorney general then appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, seeking to put into effect the map approved by the voters, which yields four more likely Democratic congressional seats. In their emergency application, they argued the Virginia Supreme Court was “deeply mistaken” in its decision on “critical issues of federal law with profound practical importance to the Nation.” Further, they asserted the decision “overrode the will of the people” by ordering Virginia to “conduct its election with the congressional districts that the people rejected.”

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Republican legislators countered that it would be improper for the U.S. Supreme Court to wade into a purely state law controversy — especially since the Democrats had not raised any federal claims in the lower court.

Ultimately, the U.S. Supreme Court sided with Republicans without explanation leaving in place the state court ruling that voided the Democratic-friendly maps.

The court’s decision not to intervene was its latest in emergency requests for intervention on redistricting issues. In December, the high court OK’d Texas using a gerrymandered map that could help the GOP win five more seats in the U.S. House. In February, the court allowed California to use a voter-approved, Democratic-friendly map, adopted to offset Texas’s map. Then in March, the U.S. Supreme Court blocked the redrawing of a New York map expected to flip a Republican congressional district Democratic.

And perhaps most importantly, in April, the high court ruled that a Louisiana congressional map was a racial gerrymander and must be redrawn. That decision immediately set off a flurry of redistricting efforts, particularly in the South, where Republican legislators immediately began redrawing congressional maps to eliminate long established majority Black and Hispanic districts.

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Explosion at Lumber Mill in Searsmont, Maine, Draws Large Emergency Response

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Explosion at Lumber Mill in Searsmont, Maine, Draws Large Emergency Response

An explosion and fire drew a large emergency response on Friday to a lumber mill in the Midcoast region of Maine, officials said.

The State Police and fire marshal’s investigators responded to Robbins Lumber in Searsmont, about 72 miles northeast of Portland, said Shannon Moss, a spokeswoman for the Maine Department of Public Safety.

Mike Larrivee, the director of the Waldo County Regional Communications Center, said the number of victims was unknown, cautioning that “the information we’re getting from the scene is very vague.”

“We’ve sent every resource in the county to that area, plus surrounding counties,” he said.

Footage from the scene shared by WABI-TV showed flames burning through the roof of a large structure as heavy, dark smoke billowed skyward.

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The Associated Press reported that at least five people were injured, and that county officials were considering the incident a “mass casualty event.”

Catherine Robbins-Halsted, an owner and vice president at Robbins Lumber, told reporters at the scene that all of the company’s employees had been accounted for.

Gov. Janet T. Mills of Maine said on social media that she had been briefed on the situation and urged people to avoid the area.

“I ask Maine people to join me in keeping all those affected in their thoughts,” she said.

Representative Jared Golden, Democrat of Maine, said on social media that he was aware of the fire and explosion.

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“As my team and I seek out more information, I am praying for the safety and well-being of first responders and everyone else on-site,” he said.

This is a developing story. Check back for updates.

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