The former Deputy Prime Minister has made her party and her Government less popular and less electable
The tax-dodging Deputy Prime Minister is unfit to serve
Bookmakers are giving odds on her successor as she faces intense pressure to resign
Prime minister has a track record of firing errant ministers – but will her power within the party protect his beleaguered deputy?
The PM’s deputy is a vital shield against Labour’s Left and losing her would open up a whole chamber of horrors
Labour’s working-class hero brought authenticity and candour to Parliament, but became the party’s biggest liability
Angela Rayner is understood to be leaving her post as Deputy PM after Sir Laurie Magnus delivered his verdict to Keir Starmer.
PM praises former deputy as the ‘living embodiment of social mobility’
In a blow to Prime Minister Keir Starmer, Ms. Rayner said she would step down after an ethics adviser found she had breached a code of conduct for government ministers.
Sir Keir Starmer is expected to carry out a wide reshuffle of his top team after Ms Rayner, 45, quit as deputy prime minister and housing secretary.
The outlet’s reporting on the former deputy prime minister has pointedly focused on her humble background
Politics is about to get much tougher for Keir Starmer.
Rayner’s departure is deeply damaging to prime minister who had initially stood by her
Frustration among deputy PM’s allies that after surviving waves of stories, tax row gave her opponents an open goal
Starmer has now suffered the most ministerial resignations, outside government reshuffles, of any prime minister at the beginning of their tenure in almost 50 years.
Guardian columnist Gaby Hinsliff talks through the tax row that brought down the now former deputy prime minister
Follow the ministerial comings and goings as we update you on the key developments throughout the day
Camilla Tominey and Tim Stanley speak to Richard Tice, Sarah Pochin and Jim Davidson at Reform’s conference as Angela Rayner steps down
Angela Rayner and those closest to her believe she has been betrayed by Keir Starmer and her departure followed a months long ‘get Angela’ campaign
Both the Chancellor and the Prime Minister will now want to keep the words ‘stamp duty’ out of national conversation