
Rachel Reeves has appeared in public with Sir Keir Starmer a day after breaking down in tears alongside the Prime Minister in the Commons.
The public show of unity came after Sir Keir gave her his full backing and said he did not appreciate how upset she was in the Commons because he was focused on answering Prime Ministerâs Questions.
The pair were both at the launch of the Governmentâs 10-year plan for the NHS in London.
Ms Reeves was seen smiling and laughing with Sir Keir and Health Secretary Wes Streeting.
Setting out the Governmentâs decision to pump cash into the NHS she said: âWe fixed the foundations and weâve put our economy back on a strong footing.â
Earlier, the Prime Minister said all people could be caught âoff guardâ by their emotions, but the Chancellor had to deal with it while on camera in Parliament.
He said she was doing an âexcellentâ job, would remain in place beyond the next general election, and that they were both absolutely committed to the Chancellorâs âfiscal rulesâ to maintain discipline over the public finances.
UK Government bonds rallied and the pound steadied on Thursday, after reassurances from the Prime Minister about the Chancellorâs future.
The sight of her in tears on Wednesday, and the ÂŁ5 billion black hole in her public spending plans as a result of the welfare U-turn, had spooked the markets, triggering a sharp sell-off of bonds, with the yield seeing the sharpest increase since US president Donald Trumpâs tariff plans shook up financial markets in April.
Sir Keir told Virgin Radio he had spoken to the Chancellor on Wednesday evening and she was âfineâ, and her tears were as a result of a âpurely personalâ matter rather than the âups and downs of this weekâ.
Ms Reeves was visibly upset as she sat beside Sir Keir in the Commons on Wednesday, but he said: âI actually personally didnât appreciate it was happening in the Chamber, because I came in, Iâve got questions being fired at me in PMQs, so Iâm constantly up at the despatch box and down.
âI think we just need to be clear, itâs a personal matter, and Iâm not going to breach Rachelâs privacy by going into whatâs a personal matter for her.â
He said that âin politics, youâre on show the whole time, thereâs no hiding placeâ.
Ms Reeves was a âgreat colleague, sheâs a friend of mine and Iâll be working with her for a very long time to comeâ.
âBut like all human beings, weâre also personal.
âThere are moments that catch us off guard and if youâre in front of a camera for large periods of your life, unfortunately, that could be caught on camera in a way, if it had been anybody else at work, it would have not really been noticed.â
The sight of the Chancellor in tears on the front bench and Sir Keirâs initial lack of public support for her caused jitters about the Governmentâs borrowing plans, as Ms Reevesâ commitment to her rules to control spending are a key reassuring factor for the bond markets.
Sir Keir said: âShe is an excellent Chancellor, she will be Chancellor for a very long time to come, into the next election and beyond it.
âShe and I are absolutely committed to our fiscal rules and the economic stability that is so important to this country, and that is the rock on which we build everything else.
âOn that issue, Rachel and I are in lockstep, and have been for years.â