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    You are at:Home»Politics»Tories say Starmer should sack Reeves for breaking law and breaking ministerial code – UK politics live | Politics
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    Tories say Starmer should sack Reeves for breaking law and breaking ministerial code – UK politics live | Politics

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtOctober 30, 2025007 Mins Read
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    Tories say Starmer should sack Reeves for breaking law and breaking ministerial code – UK politics live | Politics
    Rachel Reeves at 11 Downing Street. Photograph: Wiktor Szymanowicz/ZUMA Press Wire/Shutterstock
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    Tories say Starmer should sack Reeves for breaking law and breaking ministerial code

    The Conservative have said Keir Starmer should sack Rachel Reeves. A Tory spokesperson said:

    Rachel Reeves has broken the law and broken the ministerial code, but Keir Starmer is too weak to sack her.

    While the chancellor is planning tax hikes for millions of families across the country at the budget, it’s one rule for the chancellor and another for everyone else.

    Keir Starmer pledged to restore integrity to politics, but now he’s laughing in the face of the British public.

    He should grow a backbone and sack the chancellor now. This is not over.

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    Badenoch says, if Reeves can’t handle her own paperwork, she can’t manage the country’s

    Kemi Badenoch is speaking now.

    She says they are there to talk about Rachel Reeves.

    [Reeves] promised not to put a tax on working people. Apparently, farmers aren’t working people. Apparently, anyone who has a job isn’t a working person because they put up the jobs tax and look at what’s happened.

    And she refers to the rental licence story.

    Rachel Reeves apparently has broken a law. Just like Angela Rayner before her and Louise Haigh before her. All we see is the Labour cabinet making mistakes, breaking laws. If the chancellor can’t even get it on top of her own paperwork, how is she going to get on top of the country’s paperwork?

    But Badenoch then reverts to her argument that, if Reeves puts up taxes in the budget, she should be sacked. (See 9.05am.)

    Kemi Badenoch speaking at Tory event in London Photograph: Sky NewsShare

    Stride says the Tories have an alternative economic policy. He refers to the plans set out at party conference to slash spending, and use the savings to abolish stamp duty, among other things.

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    Badenoch and Mel Stride hold press event

    Kemi Badenoch and Mel Stride are speaking at an outdoor rally/press event on the south bank in London.

    Stride, the shadow chancellor, is speaking now. He says Labour has broken its promises on tax and that’s “disgraceful”. He specifically refers to inheritance tax being extended to farms, which is something the party had previously ruled out.

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    Kemi Badenoch is about to deliver her speech shortly.

    Within the last hour, she has posted a message on social media saying that, if Rachel Reeves puts up taxes in the budget, she will have to resign.

    Rachel Reeves promised “no more tax increases”. That now looks like a lie.

    If she puts up tax, Starmer must sack her.

    This is confusing, given that the party is already saying Reeves should be sacked over the rental licence error. (See 8.42am.) If they think she is not fit to be chancellor now, it seems odd to be saying that she should also have to resign over a hypothetical decision happening in a month’s time.

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    Tories say Starmer should sack Reeves for breaking law and breaking ministerial code

    The Conservative have said Keir Starmer should sack Rachel Reeves. A Tory spokesperson said:

    Rachel Reeves has broken the law and broken the ministerial code, but Keir Starmer is too weak to sack her.

    While the chancellor is planning tax hikes for millions of families across the country at the budget, it’s one rule for the chancellor and another for everyone else.

    Keir Starmer pledged to restore integrity to politics, but now he’s laughing in the face of the British public.

    He should grow a backbone and sack the chancellor now. This is not over.

    Share

    No 10 releases letters from Reeves and Starmer about chancellor inadvertently renting home with necessary licence

    Good morning. Ministers often complain about Whitehall being slow and inefficient, but last night the government’s ethical standards machinery settled a misconduct allegation in record time. After the Daily Mail revealed that Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, had inadvertently rented out her south London home without requiring the specific licence required by the council, before midnight Downing Street had already released an exchange of letters on the issue between Reeves and Keir Starmer.

    Mail splash Photograph: Daily Mail

    Reeves apologised for the mistake. Her spokesperson has said that the letting agency she used told her a licence was not needed.

    Reeves’s letter Photograph: No 10

    And Starmer said that he had already consulted his ethics adviser, Sir Laurie Magnus, who had advised that, in the light of Reeves’s apology and her willingess to rectify the situation, no further action was needed.

    Starmer’s letter Photograph: No 10

    So, from Downing Street’s perspective, the whole thing was sorted before the Mail’s final edition went to press.

    In many European countries, this would not even come close to registering as a scandal and it would all be swifty forgotten. But, with a censorious media, and papers like the Mail actively hostile to Labour, Starmer and Reeves are unlikely to shut down the story quite that easily. Starmer is also open to the accusation of double standards. In other cases where ministers have been accused of breaching the ministerial code of conduct, he has taken a strict approach to enforcing the rules. Angela Rayner also inadvertently failed to comply with the relevant legislation in relation to a housing matter, and that led to her having to resign.

    Kemi Badenoch is due to give a speech shortly and she is not letting up. Last night she said that, if Reeves broke the law (and Southwark council says not having the right licence is a criminal offence), she should resign.

    The Prime Minister must launch a full investigation.

    He once said “lawmakers can’t be lawbreakers”.

    If, as it appears, the Chancellor has broken the law, then he will have to show he has the backbone to act.

    And this morning, highlighting a recent tweet from Reeves in which the chancellor welcomed a selective licensing policy for landlords in Leeds, Badenoch said it was hard to believe she did not know she needed a licence for her London rental home.

    Rachel Reeves was celebrating the renting law being expanded in her constituency, at the same time she was breaking that law with her own house

    Claiming that she wasn’t aware of these laws is about as credible as her CV.

    Here is the agenda for the day.

    Morning: John Swinney, Scotland’s first minister and the SNP leader, and Rhun ap Iorwerth, the Plaid Cymru leader, are meeting in Edinburgh to discuss a joint approach to countering “Westminster’s despair and decline”.

    9am: Kemi Badenoch and Mel Stride, the shadow chancellor, speak at a Conservative press conference in London.

    9.30am: Peter Kyle, the business secretary, takes questions in the Commons.

    9.30am: The Ministry of Justice publishes quarterly figures relating to prisons, including the number of assaults and deaths.

    11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

    If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (normally between 10am and 3pm BST at the moment), or message me on social media. I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word.

    If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.

    I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.

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    Updated at 04.46 EDT

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