Reeves says inflation fall shows ‘plan for change is working’ – UK politics live | Politics




Reeves: inflation figures are latest 'encouraging sign that our plan for change is working'

Speaking about the latest inflation figures, chancellor Rachel Reeves said there were “encouraging signs that our plan for change is working.”

UK inflation dropped to 2.6% in March, meaning prices are rising slightly more slowly. Reeves said:

Inflation falling for two months in a row, wages growing faster than prices, and positive growth figures are encouraging signs that our plan for change is working, but there is more to be done.

I know many families are still struggling with the cost of living and this is an anxious time because of a changing world.

That is why the government has boosted pay for three million people by increasing the minimum wage, frozen fuel duty and begun rolling out free breakfast clubs in primary schools.

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The business secretary has been urged to suspend plans to visit China, after an MP was denied entry to Hong Kong to visit her family, PA Media reported.

Liberal Democrat MP Wera Hobhouse was held and questioned at Hong Kong airport when she flew there to see her son and newborn grandson, before being sent back to the UK.

Hobhouse, the MP for Bath who is a member of the Inter-parliamentary Alliance on China (Ipac) which has been critical of Beijing’s human rights record, has said she believes the action was taken to silence her.

Lib Dem leader Ed Davey has now written to foreign secretary David Lammy, urging the government to take five steps in response to Hobhouse’s deportation.

While Davey praised the initial support offered by ministers after news of his MP’s deportation, he claimed in a letter seen by the PA news agency that the government had since “been silent on attempts by Hong Kong officials to undermine Wera’s account of her detention”.

“For as long as this silence is allowed to continue, we can only conclude that the Chinese authorities have a secret blacklist of British parliamentarians,” he wrote in the letter, also signed by Lib Dem foreign affairs spokesperson Calum Miller.

Davey added: “It feels like you are now more interested in saving face with China than you are in standing up for the rights of British parliamentarians.

“There is also a wider principle at stake: if we timidly accept this kind of behaviour, it will only embolden China – together with other authoritarian states – in their efforts to intimidate us.”

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Posted: 2025-04-16 16:44:15

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