Opposition response Conservative Party chairman
Kevin Hollinrake wrote to the Prime Minister's independent adviser on ministerial standards requesting an investigation into whether Rayner had breached the
Ministerial Code. Hollinrake characterised the arrangement as "hypocritical tax avoidance", arguing that it was inappropriate for a minister who supported higher taxes on family homes to seek to minimise her own tax liability. The Conservatives also initiated legal processes to challenge Rayner's electoral registration in Ashton-under-Lyne, saying she did not meet the legal tests for residency there. They argued that if successful, this would make her liable for council tax on her London flat, potentially costing an additional £2,000 annually with the second-home premium.
Government defence Initially, both Rayner's spokesperson and Health Minister
Stephen Kinnock defended her actions, stating she had paid the "relevant duty" in line with the rules and "entirely properly". Kinnock said Rayner had done "absolutely nothing wrong" and had "complied with the letter of the law". On 3 September 2025 prime minister
Keir Starmer backed Rayner after her admission, stating he was "very proud to sit alongside" his deputy and praising her transparency in referring herself to the ethics adviser. On 3 September 2025,
Peter Kyle defended Rayner, stating: "Just because it is Angela, with her accent and her background, people are treating her in a way they wouldn't, that if a Tory MP who was born in wealth had a second home, which many of them do already". On 4 September 2025,
Rachel Reeves said that she had "full confidence" in Rayner. Later that day, the BBC reported that Keir Starmer had repeatedly refused to say whether he would dismiss Rayner if his standards adviser concluded she had breached the ministerial code, stating he would "of course act" on the adviser's report once published.
Criticism from other parties On 3 September 2025,
Reform UK Deputy Leader
Richard Tice called for Rayner's resignation, describing her as "the biggest hypocrite in the land" for her criticism of opposing politicians whilst in opposition. In contrast,
Liberal Democrat leader
Ed Davey expressed understanding for Rayner's situation, stating that he trusted she was acting in her family's interests and that it was not the Liberal Democrats' role to call for resignations unless the ethics advisor found a rules breach. == Rayner's admission ==