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Who could begrudge Reeves free tickets when she was, er, just trying to be a good parent?

The Observer

|

March 30, 2025

Under a stricter code of conduct, the chancellor and others need only use their judgment on gifts

In terms of Reeves' family values, the chancellor of the exchequer can hardly be faulted, she has been explaining, for snagging box tickets to a teens' pop concert, careless of the consequences if this gift became public when her spring statement was slashing welfare. "It is a balancing act in my job to try and be a good parent". Inferior parents should note that help is available: Sabrina Carpenter returns to the UK this summer, seats available for £191 each (VIP £364).

Keir Starmer once said that, under him, Britain would be the party of the family and the "best place to grow up in": we can already feel confident that, thanks to his approach to dynamic sponging, no child of a Labour minister need be denied their essential football or concert outing, regardless of ticket price or scarcity. Starmer leads the way with his non-negotiable Arsenal directors' box, a perk that Sky Sports at Chequers cannot be expected to replace. "It means I can continue to do something which is really special to me," he said (after his free specs and outfits scandal), "which is to go to football with my boy."

But as Reeves said, risking a further Labour masterclass in tineared entitlement, Sabrina Carpenter is not special to her. She obtained reportedly £600 worth of tickets on a more sacrificial basis for her daughter, for whom, we are invited to believe, no other companion was available. Plus Reeves would have loved to be "in normal seats". Anyway, she eventually conceded, after repeated freebie questions had disrupted post-Statement interviews: "I wouldn't do it again, I felt I was doing the right thing, but I do understand perceptions."

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