The chancellor has said she is “confident” 10,000 civil service jobs can be axed after numbers ballooned during the pandemic – as she seeks to cut more than £2bn from the budget.
Rachel Reeves has told Sky News she is certain the government can deliver those cuts to “back office jobs” to free up resources for “front line” services.
She is expected to unveil a raft of spending cuts during the spring statement on Wednesday – and has reportedly ruled out tax rises.
The FDA union has said the government needs to be honest about the move, first reported by The Telegraph, and the “impact it will have on public services”.
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What to expect from the spring statement
Reeves concedes cuts won’t be pain-free
Appearing on Sky’s Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips programme, the chancellor was pushed repeatedly for a precise number of civil service jobs she wants to cut, and she eventually replied: “I’m confident that we can reduce civil service numbers by 10,000.
“And during COVID, there were big increases in the number of people that were working in the civil service.
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“That was the right thing to do to respond to those challenges. But it’s not right that we just keep those numbers there forever.”
Ms Reeves said there are “a number” of civil service jobs that can be done by technology, while “efficiencies” can also be made by getting rid of quangos.
Asked what roles she expects to no longer need, she said: “It will be up for every department to set out those plans.
“But I would rather have people working on the front line in our schools and our hospitals and our police, rather than back office jobs.”
She said cuts will be made to things like travel budgets, spending on consultants, and also on communications.
She conceded that the cuts will not be pain free, but says she would rather spend money to “deliver better public services”.
Image: Chancellor Rachel Reeves will give the spring statement next week. Pic: PA
Civil service departments will first have to reduce administrative budgets by 10%, which is expected to save £1.5bn a year by 2028-29.
The following year, the reduction should be 15%, the Cabinet Office will say – a saving of £2.2bn a year.
The chancellor has also said she won’t be putting up taxes on Wednesday, telling The Sun On Sunday: “This is not a budget. We’re not going to be doing tax raising.”
Ms Reeves added: “We did have to put up some taxes on businesses and the wealthiest in the country in the budget [in the autumn].
“We will not be doing that in the spring statement next week.”
The chancellor has repeatedly insisted she won’t drop her fiscal rules which preclude borrowing to fund day-to-day spending.
Civil service departments will receive instructions from the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster Pat McFadden in the coming week, The Telegraph reported.
“To deliver our Plan for Change we will reshape the state so it is fit for the future. We cannot stick to business as usual,” a Cabinet Office source said.
“By cutting administrative costs we can target resources at frontline services – with more teachers in classrooms, extra hospital appointments and police back on the beat.”
The move comes after the government last week revealed welfare cuts it believes will save £5bn a year by the end of the decade.
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FDA general secretary Dave Penman said the union welcomed a move away from “crude headcount targets” but that the distinction between the back office and frontline is “artificial”.
“Elected governments are free to decide the size of the civil service they want, but cuts of this scale and speed will inevitably have an impact on what the civil service will be able to deliver for ministers and the country…
“The budgets being cut will, for many departments, involve the majority of their staff and the £1.5bn savings mentioned equates to nearly 10% of the salary bill for the entire civil service.”
Ministers need to set out what areas of work they are prepared to stop as part of spending plans, he said.
“The idea that cuts of this scale can be delivered by cutting HR and comms teams is for the birds. This plan will require ministers to be honest with the public and their civil servants about the impact this will have on public services.”
Mike Clancy, general secretary of the Prospect union, warned that “a cheaper civil service is not the same as a better civil service”.
“Prospect has consistently warned government against adopting arbitrary targets for civil service headcount cuts which are more about saving money than about genuine civil service reform.
“The government say they will not fall into this trap again. But this will require a proper assessment of what the civil service will and won’t do in future.”
The chair of the charity set up by Prince Harry has accused him of “harassment and bullying at scale” after he and several others quit the organisation earlier this week.
The Duke of Sussex was said to have initiated the campaign by the “unleashing of the Sussex [PR] machine”.
Sentebale chair Dr Sophie Chandauka told Trevor Phillips on Sky’s Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips: “The only reason I’m here… is because at some point on Tuesday, Prince Harry authorised the release of a damaging piece of news to the outside world without informing me or my country directors, or my executive director.
“And can you imagine what that attack has done for me, on me and the 540 individuals in the Sentebale organisations and their family?
“That is an example of harassment and bullying at scale.”
Sky News contacted the Duke and Duchess of Sussex about the contents of the interview and they declined to offer any formal response.
A source close to the former trustees of the Sentebale charity has described as “completely baseless” Dr Chandauka’s claims that she was bullied and harassed, briefed against by Prince Harry, or that the Sussex machine was unleashed on her.
Image: Dr Chandauka speaks with Sky’s Sir Trevor Phillips
On Tuesday, Prince Harry quitas patron of the charity, which he set up in honour of his mother, Diana, Princess of Wales.
Sentebale has spectacularly pushed Trump, Putin and spring statement out of the headlines
It takes something pretty spectacular to knock Donald Trump, Vladimir Putin and Rachel Reeves out of the headlines. But this week, the goings-on at a small, Africa-based charity did exactly that.
A spate of resignations at Sentebale, set up to support families with children stricken with AIDS, garnered global attention.
The reason is, of course, that the charity’s patron was the Duke of Sussex, formerly HRH Prince Harry, who created the organisation partly in memory of his mother, Diana, the Princess of Wales.
The conflict has torn the charity apart, and threatens its life-saving work – not to mention the reputations of all involved.
The organisation’s chair, Sophie Chandauka, is a distinguished Zimbabwean-born corporate lawyer, who I have known for many years. We have worked together to persuade City firms to increase the gender and ethnic diversity of their boards.
But I had little knowledge of her royal connections until now.
In our interview, she accuses the Duke of unleashing “the Sussex machine” on her and Sentebale’s staff.
A source close to the former trustees of the charity has described the claims as “completely baseless”.
Watch the entire interview, and judge for yourself.
At the time, he released a joint statement with co-founder Prince Seeiso of Lesotho, saying they had been forced to step down “in support of and solidarity with” the board of trustees who had also resigned, following their disagreements with the chairwoman.
They wrote that the relationship “broke down beyond repair, creating an untenable situation”.
The problems reportedly stem from a decision to focus fundraising in Africa.
In a statement earlier this week, seemingly targeted at Prince Harry, Dr Chandauka said: “There are people in this world who behave as though they are above the law and mistreat people, and then play the victim card and use the very press they disdain to harm people who have the courage to challenge their conduct.
“Beneath all the victim narrative and fiction that has been syndicated to the press is the story of a woman who dared to blow the whistle about issues of poor governance, weak executive management, abuse of power, bullying, harassment, misogyny, misogynoir – and the cover-up that ensued.”
Harry’s behaviour has been called into question once again
This could not be more damning to a charity that has meant so much to Prince Harry.
Sophie Chandauka laying the blame for the collapse of Sentebale firmly at the door of the Duke of Sussex.
Her statement on Wednesday felt like a hit at him with its mention of using the press he despises, but now we’re left in no uncertain terms who she holds responsible.
There have been bullying allegations levelled at the Duke before, he refuted them then and those close to him refuse to accept them on this occasion too.
I spoke to one of the former trustees, Dr Kelello Lerotholi, who told me he didn’t recognise any of the allegations made.
He wanted to share with me that issues around stewardship, concerns about the future direction of the charity, and financial worries led to this huge divide and breakdown between the trustees, the patrons and the chair.
Dr Lerotholi was also there from the very beginning – he met Harry when he went to Lesotho for his gap year, the foundation stone for setting up the charity in Princess Diana’s name.
He’s also a close friend of Prince Seisso, Sentebale’s co-founder. He couldn’t have been clearer that this has left them all devastated.
I went to Lesotho in 2015 when they opened the Mamohato Centre – a place for children and teenagers who had HIV and AIDS to share their experiences and a place where it was clear Harry felt at home.
Yet now after five years where Harry has had to give up so much, his beloved charity, how it’s been run and the behaviour of those within it is now at the centre of a UK Charity Commission investigation.
The behaviour of Harry has been called into question in the most serious way.
“I can honestly say, in the meetings I was present in, there was never even a hint of such,” he said.
“The general tone and conduct of the board has been one of respect for each other, accommodating each other’s opinions and inputs, and speaking with respect to each other.
“So this all came as a shock to me.”
Sentebale was established in 2006 to help children and young people in southern Africa, particularly those with HIV and Aids.
Prince Harry was inspired to start the charity after spending two months in Lesotho, when he was on a gap year in 2004.
He was in the small African country – which has one of the world’s highest rates of HIV and AIDS – as recently as last October.
You can watch Trevor Phillips’ full interview with Dr Sophie Chandauka tomorrow morning on ‘Sunday Morning with Trevor Phillips’ from 8:30am on Sky News.
The government has been accused of “spin and tinkering” over an announcement about an increase in defence spending which falls far short of what is needed, Sky News understands.
An entire fleet of military helicopters – the Royal Air Force’s Puma aircraft – was retired this week as part of a cost-saving plan to scrap older kit that was announced in November.
The sight of old but still airworthy helicopters being taken out of service before a replacement is ready – creating a capability gap – contrasts with statements by Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, and John Healey, the defence secretary, about boosting the defence budget.
Image: The Puma aircraft’s last flight. Pic: UK MOD
Sir Ben Wallace, the longest-serving Conservative defence secretary, said he had expected better given the urgent need to rearm at a time of heightened threats and following Donald Trump’s warnings to Europe to stop relying on the United States to bankroll its security.
“We are at the dawn of a new era of insecurity across the world,” Sir Ben said.
“The US has warned us for a decade about not taking them for granted, and we all did nothing. In Germany, Poland, and France the penny has dropped and they have embraced a necessary culture change and re-prioritisation of government spend.
“In the UK, the government still thinks it is about spin and tinkering. It fools no one, and we risk losing our credibility and leadership on defence amongst allies.”
Image: Sir Ben Wallace. Pic: Reuters
In her spring statement on Wednesday, the chancellor announced an extra £2.2bn for defence this coming financial year.
Ms Reeves told MPs it was a further “down payment” on a promise by the prime minister to lift expenditure on defence to 2.5% of GDP from April 2027. Defence spending is currently around 2.3% of gross national income. The new money will help inch it up to 2.36%.
The chancellor, defence secretary and prime minister have repeatedly phrased their plan to inject cash into the armed forces over this parliament as “the biggest sustained increase in defence spending since the end of the Cold War”.
But defence insiders say, while any new money is welcome, this claim is more spin than substance because the defence budget largely suffered repeated cuts since the Soviet Union collapsed.
Image: Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced an additional £2.2bn in defence spending in her spring statement. Pic: PA
Also, focusing on a slogan does not answer the question of whether an extra £2bn over the next 12 months is enough to transform the British Army, Royal Navy and Royal Air Force at the speed that is necessary, they said.
Asked whether it was sufficient, multiple military sources and a defence industry source collectively said “no”.
“This is just another sticking plaster that overlooks decades of underinvestment and chronic financial mismanagement of our armed forces,” the defence industry source said.
“Increasing spending or a focus on ‘novel technologies’ ignores the fact that we have let a broken system flourish.
“Time and time again, we see celebration over procuring outdated solutions while their manufacturers get away with significant delays or overspends with seemingly few repercussions.
“While we continue to spin and fight over tiny percentages of spending, we are allowing our armed forces to get hollowed out in front of us, hoping that government soundbites will provide the deterrence that our current equipment can’t.”
Image: Defence Secretary John Healey on a nuclear submarine on 17 March. Pic: Crown copyright 2025
A military source said the additional £2.2bn for the year to March 2026 was a step in the right direction, but said it would merely keep defence on “life support”.
The situation only starts to improve marginally in two years’ time when the defence budget is finally forecast to hit 2.5% of GDP, the source said.
This is despite the UK being a leading member of the “coalition of the willing”, with Sir Keir Starmer pledging to deploy forces to secure any ceasefire deal in Ukraine – a move that would put huge additional strain on his already stretched armed forces.
Image: PM Sir Keir Starmer and Defence Secretary John Healey on a nuclear submarine. Pic: Crown Copyright 2025
While the UK talks about 2.5% for the defence budget, Mark Rutte, the secretary general of NATO, says allies must spend more than 3%, while Mr Trump wants them to aim for 5%.
In 2020, Boris Johnson, as the prime minister, said a plan to increase the defence budget by £16bn over four years, on top of a commitment to lift defence spending by 0.5% above inflation for each year of the parliament – so what was described at the time as an additional £24bn in total – was the biggest boost to defence expenditure since the Cold War.
Sir Keir has added the word “sustained” when describing the size of his defence spending boost – though that will depend upon the accuracy of forecasts that GDP will expand at the rate predicted in the coming years.
Sir Ben said: “The UK is facing some of the highest threats in a generation, yet John Healey thinks spin is the appropriate response. He fools no one – not the men and women of the armed forces and not our enemies. I had expected better of him.”
UK stargazers were treated to a partial solar eclipse on Saturday morning, a phenomenon that sees the sun partially obscured by the moon.
Up to 40% of the sun was covered as the moon passed between the sun and Earth, partly obscuring the star.
Members of the public gathered to watch the spectacle in Greenwich while thousands more followed online.
Image: Science correspondent Thomas Moore wearing solar eclipse viewing glasses in Greenwich
Image: Saturday’s partial solar eclipse at around 10.30am. Pic: Royal Observatory Greenwich
“It’s a different way of experiencing the mechanics of the solar system for yourself,” said Catherine Muller, an astronomer at Royal Observatory to Sky News science correspondent Thomas Moore.
“We know about it theoretically, we know that the moon orbits the Earth and they might pass by us but really getting to see it in a new and different way is quite exciting for a lot of people.”
Image: Hobby astronomers watch the partial eclipse in Germany. Pic: AP
Image: A solar telescope that projects a magnified image of the sun on to a piece of paper
Looking directly at the sun is dangerous so astronomers used glasses, solar telescopes and pinhole cameras to watch the event.
Image: The beginning of the partial eclipse above the roof of Berlin’s Olympic Stadium. Pic: Reuters
The eclipse was visible across several other parts of the world, including western Europe, Greenland, north-west Africa and north-east North America.
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For people in the southeast of England – where the weather meant the UK views were best – the peak of the eclipse was at around 11.03am.
At that point, around 30-40% of the sun was obscured, according to the Royal Observatory.
Eclipse chasers in awe as moon takes a nibble from the sun
Most of us are normally unaware of the mechanics of the solar system.
But when the silhouette of the moon slides across the disc of the sun during an eclipse you get to marvel at the precision movement of celestial objects.
At the Royal Observatory in Greenwich, home of the meridian, the partial eclipse started at 10.07, with the moon appearing to take nibble from the edge of the sun.
Crowds watched through eclipse glasses, awed by the best show from Earth.
Wispy cloud had drifted across the sun by the time the eclipse peaked an hour later. But not enough to spoil the view.