Rayner next to display case featuring M&S jacket she donated to the People’s History Museum. Photograph: Christopher Thomond/The Guardian
As the party prepares for its annual conference in Liverpool, Keir Starmer has faced criticism for declaring more free tickets and gifts than other major party leader in recent times, with his total topping £100,000, including clothes donated to his wife Victoria.
For Rayner, the important thing is he did declare the gifts, unlike some of his predecessors in No 10. “Look, the donations rules apply to all of us. Keir is really clear that you have to disclose when you’ve had donations,” she says. “I do think the rules matter. I’ve been slagged off for going to Glyndebourne. I’ve been slagged off for going to Ibiza for four days on my holidays. Am I not allowed to do that?
“I get criticised for doing things. [The womenswear brand] ME+EM donated me some suits and I declared them and you know, I’ve donated clothes for charity the other way.”
It emerged on Friday evening that Starmer, Rachel Reeves and Rayner would no longer accept free gifts of clothes following the outcry about donations.
She was attacked by the Tories for attending the opera festival in 2022, although she paid for the £62 ticket herself. She is also understood to have funded her recent holiday to Ibiza, although she got free entry into a nightclub as the DJ was a friend.
Angela Rayner spotted belting out lyrics to hit song in Ibiza nightclub
Rayner is keen to get the donations row in proportion, even as it risks becoming symbolic of something greater, with weary voters already suspicious all politicians are the same. She argues it is sometimes impossible for them to get it right. “I think we have to be really careful about the way people criticise politicians. One of the suits from ME+EM was the one that I wore when I walked up Downing Street and I got absolutely slaughtered for ‘the state of her’. You can’t do right for doing wrong sometimes.”
Although she laughs it off, she is clearly frustrated at reports swirling around about splits in different quarters of government, saying there is “not a Rizla paper” between her and the business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds, on workers’ rights plans. “I found it really funny because Johnny comes over for BBQs, he only lives down the road from me. It just tickled me [the idea] that we have issues. We’ve known each other for many years, we’re neighbouring MPs, we’re actually quite close.”
She dismisses reports she is annoyed that Reeves, the chancellor, has been given the use of Dorneywood, the grace and favour mansion usually reserved for use by the second-most senior minister. “Rachel wanted Dorneywood, I’m happy for Rachel to be using it. It was never an issue,” she says. “To be honest I haven’t had a weekend where I’d be able to get [there] because I’ve been really busy. I’m sure Rachel will let me go and visit Dorneywood if I want to.”