Saturday 23 August 2025 15:45
| Updated:
Saturday 23 August 2025 15:46
The top boss of the British bar chain has come out of the government’s hospitality task force after facing pressure on his criticism of the Rachel Reeves tax agenda.
Alex Reilley, chairman of Loungers, has been out of the Hospitality Sector Council (HSC) after receiving a reaction from civil servants because it public criticizes labor economic policies, The Telegraph reports.
“I criticize the government, which they don’t like because of their views ‘well, you are in now and you cannot openly criticize what the government is doing’,” Reilley said.
Boss Bar believes that his criticism is “justified” and “Take a view, I’m not ready to stop talking in my mind”.
Reilley has joined HSC earlier this year in an effort to help reflect high roads throughout the country.
Although still supporting the group, he said workers did not consider worrying quite seriously.
Reilley scored a government plan to create a “hospitality zone” to track the application of Al Fresco eating quickly.
“Workers deliberately destroy the ambition and punish the creator of work and this policy is only a Bull Tokenis-,” he told The Telegraph.
Reeves faces tax supervision
Loungers – who have a comfortable club – face investor battles at the end of 2024.
The company floated in the Alternative Investment Market (AIM) in 2019 until the takeover by the private equity giant last year.
Agreement with Fortress received a reaction from several shareholders, who argued that it was less than the company’s value.
Gresham House, who holds nearly four percent of shares in a relaxing seat, believes that the offer of £ 338 million from Fortress – 30 percent for lounger stock prices – tries to take advantage of low stock prices “at the worst time that may be” thanks to the decline in the consumer’s business after the budget.
The massacre of the Reilley labor tax policy follows the rally call from the British retail giant that government tax policy can damage its key promises to improve living standards.
In a letter to the Chancellor, companies such as Tesco, Sainsbury’s and John Lewis, represented by British Retail Consortum (BRC), stated that the costs forced by the government had added £ 7 billion to their business this year.
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Originally posted 2025-08-23 20:09:03.