11th Jun 2025 13:30
(Alliance News) - UK Chancellor Rachel Reeves said "we are renewing Britain" as she set out how she plans to spend hundreds of billions of pounds of taxpayers' money.
The chancellor said total departmental budgets would grow by 2.3% a year in real terms and promised a "record cash investment" in the NHS, amounting to an extra GBP29 billion a year.
Setting out the spending review in the House of Commons, Reeves said the tax hikes and looser borrowing rules allowed her to spend GBP190 billion more on the day-to-day running of public services and GBP113 billion on investment.
The review marks a watershed moment for the government, almost a year after Labour's election landslide.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer told the Cabinet that the spending review "marks the end of the first phase of this Government, as we move to a new phase that delivers on the promise of change for working people all around the country and invests in Britain's renewal".
In a sign of the difficulties which face Starmer and the chancellor, migrants continued to cross the English Channel in small boats on Wednesday.
Reeves promised funding of up to GBP280 million more per year by the end of the spending review period in 2028/29 for the new Border Security Command and committed to end spending on hotels for asylum seekers by the next election.
In an attack on the Conservative legacy, she said: "The party opposite left behind a broken system: billions of pounds of taxpayers' money spent on housing asylum seekers in hotels, leaving people in limbo and shunting the cost of failure onto local communities.
"We won't let that stand."
She said "we will be ending the costly use of hotels to house asylum seekers, in this Parliament" with funding to cut the asylum backlog, hear more appeal cases and return those with no right to be in the UK.
The plan would save taxpayers' GBP1 billion a year, Reeves said.
The chancellor said her "driving purpose" was "to make working people, in all parts of our country, better off" as she promised cash to rebuild schools and hospitals, confirmed funding for nuclear power schemes and major transport projects across the country.
She said the government would set out plans for "Northern Powerhouse Rail" in the coming weeks and an additional GBP3.5 billion to upgrade the TransPennine route.
"We are renewing Britain," she said. "But I know that too many people in too many parts of our country are yet to feel it."
As well as changing Treasury rules to support investment in England's regions, Reeves said the spending review period would provide GBP52 billion for Scotland, GBP20 billion for Northern Ireland and GBP23 billion for Wales.
She said research and development funding would rise to more than GBP22 billion a year and promised GBP2 billion for the artificial intelligence action plan "because home-grown AI has the potential to solve diverse and daunting challenges as well as the opportunity for good jobs and investment in Britain".
The chancellor promised a cash increase of GBP4.5 billion a year for the core schools budget by the end of the spending review period, but also pledged up to GBP2.3 billion a year to repair "crumbling classrooms" and GBP2.4 billion for a programme to rebuild schools.
Police "spending power" – implying extra cash raised from council tax – will rise by 2.3% a year in real terms over the review period, providing more than GBP2 billion for forces.
By David Hughes, Caitlin Doherty and Christopher McKeon, PA
source: PA
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