Rachel Reeves, the UK's first female chancellor, may be the least popular senior politician according to recent YouGov polling, with a 66% unfavourability rating. Yet beneath the surface of political turmoil and potential ouster, she is executing a quiet but significant rebalancing of the British economy. Her focus on regional growth corridors, public investment, and fiscal discipline could leave a lasting legacy even if her tenure ends soon.
The OxCam Corridor Vision
Last week, Reeves delivered an upbeat speech in a Westminster conference room about the OxCam corridor, a high-growth zone linking Oxford, Milton Keynes, and Cambridge. She declared: “If we get this right, working together, this corridor will not just compete globally, it will lead globally.” The speech targeted investors, policymakers, and entrepreneurs, aiming to unlock billions in private capital for infrastructure and innovation.
This initiative is part of a broader strategy to rebalance UK plc away from London-centric growth. Reeves also championed a “northern growth corridor” to spread prosperity across regions that have historically lagged behind. By leveraging an active state to catalyze private investment, she is attempting to reverse decades of underinvestment that economists widely blame for the UK's sluggish productivity.
Political Headwinds and Fiscal Tightrope
Reeves faces severe political headwinds. If Andy Burnham wins the Makerfield byelection and topples Keir Starmer, she may be out of a job within weeks. She is irrevocably linked to Labour’s most embarrassing reversals, including the winter fuel allowance and disability benefits cuts, as well as a quiet climbdown on farmers’ inheritance tax.
The chancellor’s decision to increase employer national insurance contributions (NICs) to avoid breaking manifesto tax pledges has been widely criticized. Business groups argue this has hurt the struggling jobs market, while Burnham has mused about reversing the rise. Despite this, Reeves insists her fiscal rules are non-negotiable to avoid a bond market rout.
Strategic Rebalancing: Infrastructure and Investment
Reeves arrived in office determined to reverse chronic underinvestment, a key factor in the UK's economic underperformance. She changed fiscal rules to allow significantly more borrowing for social housing and net zero projects. These generous settlements reflect her conviction that public infrastructure investment yields the biggest economic wins.
A table summarizing her key strategic moves:
| Policy Area | Action | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Fiscal Rules | Relaxed to allow more borrowing | Enabled £28bn for green investment |
| Regional Growth | OxCam & Northern corridors | Targets £100bn in private investment |
| Tax Policy | Employer NICs increase | Funds public services, but hurts jobs |
| Social Housing | Increased capital spending | 50,000 new affordable homes planned |
Criticism and Legacy
Critics, including Peter Mandelson, accuse Reeves of lacking a clear strategy. He reportedly said she was “on a growth mission, but without an argument about where the growth will come from or how.” However, her supporters argue that her rebalancing agenda is precisely that argument: growth will come from unlocking regional potential through state-led investment.
Misogyny may also play a role in her unpopularity. Studies from the Institute for Fiscal Studies show that female chancellors face higher scrutiny and harsher public perception during economic downturns. Reeves’s killjoy demeanour, adopted by advisers to build trust, contrasts with her warmth off-camera but hasn't won over voters.
FAQ
Why is Rachel Reeves so unpopular?
Polling shows 66% of UK adults view her unfavourably. Key reasons include unpopular tax rises (employer NICs), cuts to winter fuel allowance and disability benefits, and a perceived lack of charisma. Economic hardship and misogyny are also contributing factors.
What is the OxCam corridor and why does it matter?
The OxCam corridor is a planned high-growth region linking Oxford, Milton Keynes, and Cambridge. It aims to boost jobs, innovation, and private investment, rebalancing the UK economy away from London. Reeves sees it as a flagship for her growth strategy.
Could Andy Burnham fire Rachel Reeves if he becomes PM?
Very likely. Burnham has already pledged to follow her fiscal rules but has expressed sympathy for reversing her employer NICs rise. Her close association with Labour’s most embarrassing reversals makes her a political liability he may not want to keep.
