Rachel Reeves plans £50bn more on day-to-day spending than Tory predecessors

The Chancellor will set out her spending plans just as new figures show unemployment is up and hiring has slumped

Another round of revenue-raising off the backs of Britain’s entrepreneurs will destroy all hopes of growth

Unveiling the Spending Review in the Commons, Chancellor Rachel Reeves claimed she is 'renewing Britain'.

Chancellor pledges to end spending on asylum hotels in four years, as she contrasts Labour investment with Conservatives’ austerity

The Chancellor has no credibility left with investors: interest rates will keep rising

Rachel Reeves plans £50bn more on day-to-day spending than Tory predecessors

Outside Parliament for reaction from Reform’s Richard Tice and Tory Andrew Griffith

While the numbers may tally on paper, economists are already questioning whether they will work in reality

Chancellor pledges to deliver what the public voted for, but which departments will be forced to do so by limited means?

British families are at the mercy of this socialist’s lazy embrace of more borrowing and higher taxes

In a return to Labour's tax-and-spend approach, the Chancellor set out plans to 'invest' a staggering £4 trillion to fund 'the renewal of Britain'.

The chancellor has defended the plans set out in the spending review after the economy contracted 0.3 per cent in April

Businesses will pick up the bill for the ever-growing state at the Chancellor’s autumn Budget