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Evening Standard
Evening Standard
Nicholas Cecil

Yvette Cooper not on 'resignation watch' after Spending Review row with Rachel Reeves, says minister

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper is not on “resignation watch” after heated negotiations with Chancellor Rachel Reeves over her budget, says a Cabinet colleague.

Net Zero Secretary Ed Miliband dismissed reports that Ms Cooper was considering quitting the Government.

“Don’t believe everything that you read on the websites,” he told LBC Radio.

However, the Home Office stand-off with the Treasury was intense, with Met Police chief Sir Mark Rowley and other law enforcement bosses even seeking to appeal over Reeves’ head, with a letter to Sir Keir Starmer, warning of the impact on crime-fighting if their budgets were squeezed.

Talks went on so long that it was only on Monday that Downing Street could say the Spending Review had been “settled,” with the Home Office having been the last department locked in budget negotiations.

Ms Reeves is expected to announce funding increases for the NHS, schools and defence along with a number of infrastructure projects on Wednesday, as she shares out some £113 billion freed up by looser borrowing rules.

But other areas could face cuts as she seeks to balance manifesto commitments with more recent pledges, such as a hike in defence spending, while meeting her fiscal rules that promise to match day-to-day spending with revenues.

Home Secretary Yvette Cooper was the last minister still to reach a deal with the Treasury (Jacob King/PA)

On Monday morning, Ms Cooper was the last minister still to reach a deal with the Treasury, with reports suggesting greater police spending would mean a squeeze on other areas of her department’s budget.

On Monday afternoon, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said: “The spending review is settled, we will be focused on investing in Britain’s renewal so that all working people are better off.

“The first job of the Government was to stabilise the British economy and the public finances, and now we move into a new chapter to deliver the promise and change.”

The Government has committed to spend 2.5% of gross domestic product on defence from April 2027, with a goal of increasing that to 3% over the next parliament – a timetable which could stretch to 2034.

Ms Reeves’ plans will also include an £86 billion package for science and technology research and development.

Last week the Chancellor admitted that she had been forced to turn down requests for funding for projects she would have wanted to back, amid the Whitehall spending wrangling.

Mayor of London Sir Sadiq Khan’s office is concerned that Wednesday’s announcement will include no new funding or projects for London.

The mayor had been looking to secure extensions to the Docklands Light Railway and Bakerloo line on the Underground, along with the power to introduce a tourist levy and a substantial increase in funding for the Metropolitan Police.

Mayor of London Sadiq Khan (Lucy North/PA)

A source close to the mayor said on Monday that ministers “must not return to the damaging, anti-London approach of the last government”, adding this would harm both London’s public services and “jobs and growth across the country”.

They said: “Sadiq will always stand up for London and has been clear it would be unacceptable if there are no major infrastructure projects for London announced in the spending review and the Met doesn’t get the funding it needs.

“We need backing for London as a global city that’s pro-business, safe and well-connected.”

Sir Sadiq’s office also fears that London will be among some regions to lose access to money from the shared prosperity fund, growth hubs and the levelling-up fund that support economic growth and efforts to tackle child poverty.

If the Treasury cuts this support it would be “incredibly short-sighted”, the source said, with a new report showing Londoners netting the Treasury £5,000 per head.

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