Rachel Reeves Goes for Growth as UK’s First Female Chancellor

  • Former chess whizz’s career includes stint as BOE economist
  • Reeves has kept a tight grip on Labour’s spending plans

Rachel Reeves arrives in Downing Street on July 5. 

Photographer: Hollie Adams/Bloomberg

The UK’s first female Chancellor of the Exchequer, Rachel Reeves, had an early taste for breaking glass ceilings.

Growing up in south London in Margaret Thatcher’s Britain of the 1980s, the state-educated girl who would rise to become the nation’s finance minister took pride in beating all-comers — mostly boys who went to fee-paying schools — in local chess tournaments. “There was a lot of snobbery,” she recalled years later. “I was just as good as them and I was going to prove it.”