Downing Street insists Rachel Reeves has been 'straight with the public' amid CV row
by Stephen Topping · Manchester Evening NewsDowning Street insists chancellor Rachel Reeves has been 'straight with the public' amid claims she embellished her CV. In a 2021 interview with Stylist magazine, Ms Reeves claimed to have spent a decade at the Bank of England.
But reports over the weekend suggested her LinkedIn account described working there for a six-year period between 2000 and 2006. Some media outlets have also reported a change to her profile on the networking site.
The change reportedly saw the role of 'economist' at Halifax Bank of Scotland replaced with 'retail banking', between 2006 and 2009. Asked whether the Chancellor had exaggerated her CV, Number 10 defended her record.
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“The Prime Minister is very clear that the Chancellor has restored financial stability,” a spokeswoman said. She added: “This is someone who on coming into office looked under the bonnet and exposed a £22 billion black hole in the public finances, and has been straight with the public about what is necessary to balance the books and restore financial stability in the face of that.”
Pressed about Sir Keir Starmer’s thoughts on the reports, the No 10 spokeswoman added: “He is very clear that this is a Chancellor that has been straight with the public about the state of the public finances and what is necessary to restore financial stability. That is most important.”
Ms Reeves LinkedIn profile lists her work history from 2000 onwards. It says she worked in three areas of the Bank over the six-year period she was employed there: its international economic analysis division, then at the British Embassy in Washington DC in the second secretary economic division, and finally in the structural economic analysis division.
After this it lists her time working for Halifax Bank of Scotland, then her political career following her election in 2010. The questions about Ms Reeves’ work history emerged as ministers faced growing anger from farmers about inheritance tax reforms which the Chancellor announced in the Budget.
A 'mass lobby' of MPs organised by the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) will take place in Westminster on Tuesday, alongside a separate protest. They are warning more farmers will be impacted by changes to tax relief on their property and land than the Treasury has accounted for.
Official estimates suggest only the richest quarter of landowners will be affected, but the NFU and others say reforms to inheritance tax relief could drag more farmers into paying extra.