Sue Gray earns £63,000 more than Starmer gets in freebies

THE prime minister’s chief of staff earns a shocking £63,000 per annum more than he is receiving in declared gifts, it has emerged.

It has been revealed that Sue Gray earns £170,000 a year while Starmer, despite working tirelessly night and day to be gifted free stuff, has racked up only £107,000 in freebies and feels a failure.

A Downing Street insider said: “He’s done everything he can. He sent his wife to see Taylor Swift twice, even though it was three-and-a-half hours long and she complained bitterly.

“But you have to remember this total is since December 2019, so it covers the pandemic years when he couldn’t get out much and wasn’t prime minister. Over the next 12 months we expect his freebies to rocket.

“Still, it’s humiliating for him. To know that a mere civil servant, albeit one who stopped Boris Johnson’s lockdown parties by beating him on the cock with a wooden ruler, is living the high life while the best offer he’s had today was two tickets for The Corrs at the O2.”

Starmer said: “If only I could attend more than one Premier League game at a time. Or wear two suits.

“Let the British people be assured I will match her salary and surpass it within the next year. I’m attending all 22 of Oasis’s gigs. That should help.”

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Eamonn Holmes' guide to keeping the romance alive in a transactional relationship

WHEN you’re dating someone for the financial, sexual or career benefits it’s easy to let the romance slide. Here’s how my new partner Katie and I stay very much in love.

Show physical affection

When I was photographed recently with my hand on Katie’s bum, the papers said we were ‘packing on the PDA’, which sounds normal and is very much the pretence you’re trying to maintain. Also, touching your partner is a handy reminder that they’re going out with you, just in case they’ve forgotten they’re deeply in love.

Have slightly lower romantic expectations

Many couples in the first flushes of love will say things like ‘I can’t bear it when we’re apart’ or ‘You’re perfect in every way’. You’re aiming for slightly more realistic declarations of affection. ‘I need some more money for clothes’, ‘Can you help me break into TV?’ and ‘Lots of couples don’t have sex much’ are all better than nothing.

Make sure they don’t become successful

Few transactional relationships can survive one partner no longer being dependent in some way on the other, so encourage your beloved with career projects that are unlikely to go anyway, eg. creating their own brand of vegan candles. I don’t think there’s much danger of Katie becoming more successful than me, but that’s probably what Les Dennis thought.

Continue to impress them with your status

Obviously this is what allowed love to blossom in the first place, but it doesn’t hurt to keep reminding them how relatively successful you are. Personally this is a bit harder since I moved to GB News, but I’m sure I can still persuade top celebrities like Anne Diamond, Ian Botham or Mike Read to come round for a dinner party to impress Katie. If the worst comes to the worst I can always bury the hatchet with Schofield, he’s pretty free these days.

Leave love notes 

Countless relationship experts recommend leaving affectionate messages where your partner can find them. Katie and I swear by this, and it’s wonderful to find a romantic note saying ‘Hi!’ or ‘We’ll definitely have sex in October’. 

Take inspiration from other transactional relationships 

Paul Daniels and Debbie McGee proved that mismatched relationships can work. And comedian Dick Emery famously moved in with much younger actress Fay Hillier, although I have to admit I regret mentioning it to Katie, because she’s too young to remember who Dick Emery was and it took me 45 minutes to explain. You’re not sure either? ‘Ooh, you are awful!’ ‘Gaylord!’ No?

Focus on the things you’ve got in common 

Haters claim the large age gap typical of transactional relationships is a problem. Sure, with an age gap of 22 years Katie and I may not have similar memories or tastes, but we’ve got plenty of other things in common. We both like chicken, which gives us a lot to talk about, and neither of us likes wasps. And we both brush our teeth twice a day. When you look at it like that we’re practically twins.