Rachel Reeves has not been sidelined by Number 10, a senior minister has said after Keir Starmer reshuffled his Downing Street team. Monday’s shake-up saw the chancellor’s deputy, Darren Jones, move into a new role as chief secretary to the UK prime minister. Starmer also brought in Minouche Shafik, a former Bank of England deputy governor, as his chief economic adviser and senior Treasury mandarin Dan York-Smith as his principal private secretary. The reshuffle has been seen as a sign the prime minister is seeking to boost Number 10’s economic firepower ahead of the budget this autumn, leading to the suggestion that Reeves’s role has been diminished. But speaking to Sky News on Tuesday, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper denied that the chancellor had been ‘sidelined’, insisting the situation was ‘quite the reverse’. She said: ‘I think the prime minister and the chancellor have always worked extremely closely together and continue to do so.’ Following the mini-reshuffle, Starmer will bring together his senior ministers on Tuesday also the prime minister’s birthday for their first Cabinet meeting after the summer recess. On Monday, he stressed that the government was moving into its ‘second phase’ with a ‘more powerful Number 10’ and a ‘focus on delivery’. Preparations for the budget are likely to dominate the coming weeks, with Reeves facing the prospect of introducing significant tax hikes or spending cuts if she is to meet her self-imposed rule of balancing day-to-day spending with tax receipts by 2029-30. Asked if Downing Street would have more input following Starmer’s changes, Cooper told Sky News that ‘ultimately, the chancellor always writes the budget’ but this was ‘always with conversations and discussions with the prime minister throughout, so you get that strong support’. By Christopher McKeon and David Lynch, PA Political Staff Press Association: Finance source: PA Copyright 2025 Alliance News Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
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