The Reform UK Leader Accuses the Shadow Chancellor of “Deliberate Deception” Over Economic Data – As Calls for a Standards Committee Probe Mount, Labour Faces Its Biggest Crisis Yet

 “This cannot be ignored!” That was the thunderous demand from Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader and arch-critic of the establishment, as he called for an immediate investigation into Shadow Chancellor Rachel Reeves for allegedly misleading Parliament over key economic data in the lead-up to Labour’s Autumn Statement. In a blistering speech on the Commons floor Thursday, Farage accused Reeves of “deliberate deception” that “undermines the very foundations of our democracy,” demanding a seven-day ultimatum for the Parliamentary Standards Committee to launch a full probe. The revelations, stemming from a leaked Treasury memo obtained by The Spectator, have left even senior Labour officials scrambling for cover, with whispers of internal revolt growing louder as the party grapples with what could be its biggest crisis since Keir Starmer’s 2024 election victory.

The controversy erupted when The Spectator published the memo on November 27, detailing how Reeves’ office allegedly “cherry-picked” Office for National Statistics data to downplay the impact of Labour’s proposed £22 billion tax hike package on pensioners and low-income families. The document, authored by a junior Treasury economist and dated October 15, warned that full disclosure of the policy’s regressive effects – including the scrapping of winter fuel payments for 10 million OAPs – would “trigger voter backlash.” Reeves, in a Commons statement on November 25, had cited “independent analysis” from the IMF to claim the hikes were “progressive and necessary,” omitting the memo’s caveats. Farage seized the moment: “Rachel Reeves has misled the House – not once, but systematically. This is contempt of Parliament, and it demands immediate investigation!”

Farage, 61, the Brexit architect and Reform UK’s firebrand chief, tabled an urgent Commons motion for the Standards Committee to probe Reeves under the 2010 Ministerial Code, which mandates “truthfulness in Parliament.” “A seven-day ultimatum is the least we can do – if she won’t come clean, let the committee force transparency,” he thundered, his voice echoing through a chamber divided by jeers from Labour benches and cheers from the opposition. The motion, backed by 25 Tory MPs and independents, passed by 312-298, setting a deadline for Reeves to respond by December 6. Committee chair Shirley Williams, a crossbench peer, confirmed: “We’ll review expeditiously – misleading the House is a grave matter.”

Reeves, 46, Labour’s economic powerhouse and Shadow Chancellor since 2021, hit back in a fiery press conference outside Parliament: “This is a smear by Farage and his rabble-rousers – my statement was accurate, based on verified data.” But cracks show: three Labour backbenchers, including former minister Jess Phillips, have called for “full disclosure,” with Phillips tweeting: “If the memo’s real, we need answers – no one above scrutiny.” Insiders whisper of a “growing revolt” in the Shadow Cabinet, with some blaming Reeves’ “technocratic arrogance” for the party’s polling dip to 38% (down from 45% post-election).

The scandal taps into broader distrust of political elites, amplified by Farage’s Reform UK surge (polling at 18%). Reeves’ Autumn Statement, unveiled November 25, included controversial cuts to pensioner benefits and a capital gains tax hike, drawing 1,200 Ofcom complaints. Farage seized the narrative: “Reeves isn’t just wrong – she’s dishonest. Time for accountability.”

As the ultimatum ticks down, one truth looms: in Starmer’s “new chapter,” a single memo could rewrite the plot. Farage’s demand isn’t just politics – it’s a gauntlet thrown at Labour’s feet.