Why did Starmer cut the winter fuel allowance? It’s called Treasury brain – and that spells trouble | Rafael Behr

Why did Starmer cut the winter fuel allowance? It’s called Treasury brain – and that spells trouble | Rafael Behr

Economic policy, Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves, Tax and spending, Public finance, Economics, Labour, Politics Business | The Guardian

​The notorious syndrome causes chancellors to demand savings that look ingenious but really aren’t. No 10 must be vigilantAn unwritten law of Westminster mechanics states that power, in the absence of a countervailing force, gravitates to the Treasury.The governing agenda can be set in No 10, but a prime minister has few instruments of control as immediate and far-reaching as the purse strings in a chancellor’s hand.Rafael Behr is a Guardian columnist Continue reading… 

The notorious syndrome causes chancellors to demand savings that look ingenious but really aren’t. No 10 must be vigilant

An unwritten law of Westminster mechanics states that power, in the absence of a countervailing force, gravitates to the Treasury.

The governing agenda can be set in No 10, but a prime minister has few instruments of control as immediate and far-reaching as the purse strings in a chancellor’s hand.

Rafael Behr is a Guardian columnist

Continue reading… 

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