Conservative baroness Karren Brady told Sky News that she felt “nothing other than sympathy” for the Chancellor, after Rachel Reeves was seen crying in the House of Commons during the Prime Minister’s questions.
Mrs Reeves was visibly seen crying in the room in the morning after his government was forced to another U-turn on the reform of social protection by work deputies, everything except any economy in the expenses it hoped to achieve.
The Prime Minister failed to support his chancellor until after the PMQS, which led the markets to question his future.
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The apprentice star warned: “She will be labeled” weak “because she is a crying woman, the first female chancellor, and I think she is a very dangerous thing.”
The help of Lord Sugar, which was raised in the upper House in 2014 by David Cameron, agreed with the declaration of Kemi Badenoch according to which “the chief of the opposition called him” shield “, that the Prime Minister hides behind and there is probably a little truth too.”
Baroness Brady, who has already criticized the negative economic feeling of the Labor government and tax increases on business, said that Ms. Reeves is “a strong and diligent person who does her work at best in incredibly difficult circumstances”.
Earlier this year, she told a newspaper that reeves hikes in commercial taxes “do not understand the operation of businesses” and that the increase in national insurance of employers from last year was a “misstep”.
However, speaking during an event in the city of London, Baroness Brady expressed his sympathy with the Chancellor saying: “Many people cry at work, most of them can hide in the toilet and not be seen.
“Being emotional is largely partly because you care a lot about what you do and how you do it.”
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However, she maintained her differences in opinion on the approach of the administration towards the economy, but said: “She made promises of promises, that no fault on her part, she may not be able to deliver because the soil has changed under her.”
23 years old, Baroness Brady was appointed Director General of Birmingham City FC in 1993, and in 1997 became the youngest director general of a British CLP, when the club floated on the London Stock Exchange.