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Welfare

  • Economy faces ‘midlife crisis’ as benefit claimants hit new high

    August 10, 2025

    The economy faces a “midlife crisis” after a fresh study revealed the number of jobless benefit claimants aged 50 or older has reached nearly two million for the first time. A new report from the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ) has shown the number of 50 to 64-year-olds who are out of work and claiming [...]

  • Keir Starmer bars Labour MPs after rebellion 

    July 16, 2025

    Prime Minister Keir Starmer has suspended at least four Labour MPs who have had a record of voting against the government in parliament.  The Labour backbenchers to have been barred from the party include Neil Duncan-Jordan, Brian Leishman, Chris Hinchliff and Rachael Maskell.  Sources told The Times, which first reported the story, that the MPs [...]

  • Kemi Badenoch backs costly triple lock pension as ‘Conservative policy’

    July 10, 2025

    Opposition leader Kemi Badenoch has doubled down in her backing of the triple lock pension after the UK’s fiscal watchdog said its costs on the state had soared far higher than expected.  The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) warned this week that the Labour government could not afford the triple lock pension along with other [...]

  • Benefits claimants take home more than minimum wage workers

    July 10, 2025

    Brits claiming sickness benefits can be paid up to £25,000, which is more than the take home pay of a minimum wage worker. That’s according to new research from the Centre for Social Justice (CSJ), which found that if a claimant is receiving universal credit incapacity benefits alongside personal independence payments and housing benefits, the total [...]

  • Brutal bean-counters break the news: we’re utterly broke

    July 9, 2025

    These are difficult times for a news organisation that likes to think of itself as being on the glass-half-full side of life. Optimism is in short supply, and whatever reserves remained after 12 months of this government were snatched away from us yesterday by those bean-counting assassins at the Office for Budget Responsibility. Once a [...]

  • UK cannot afford triple lock pension, OBR says

    July 8, 2025

    The UK government cannot afford to keep the triple lock pension, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) has warned.  Chancellor Rachel Reeves has faced staunch opposition from within her own party and seemingly from the wider electorate over cuts to welfare spending as she bids to meet fiscal rules that prevent high borrowing from further [...]

  • Ministers ‘pushed ahead too fast’ on welfare reform, says Phillipson

    July 6, 2025

    Ministers “pushed ahead too fast” and “didn’t listen enough” on welfare reform, the education secretary has said. Bridget Phillipson also said that future spending decisions had been made “harder”, when asked about the prospect of the two-child benefit cap being scrapped. Phillipson told the BBC’s Sunday With Laura Kuenssberg programme that she was “not going [...]

  • Keir Starmer refuses to rule out £40bn tax raid 

    July 3, 2025

    Keir Starmer has refused to rule out that this year’s Autumn Budget will be softer than the tax raid seen last year, which targeted business and homeowners in raising £40bn extra in receipts.  The prime minister has previously said that the UK cannot “tax [its] way to growth” while under-pressure Chancellor Rachel Reeves vowed to [...]

  • Labour versus the bond markets, businesses and ballots

    July 3, 2025

    Birthdays aren’t best celebrated on a hangover but Labour’s senior leaders will be waking up with a painful headache this morning after haemorrhaging support from both bond markets and backbenchers. As dozens of Labour MPs discovered the level of influence they held over whips in parliament, unsympathetic bond traders flexed their own powers as medium-term [...]

  • Reeves on growth ‘hell slide’ after welfare U-turn as rebels call for wealth tax

    July 2, 2025

    Rachel Reeves faces a “hell slide” in her ambition to balance economic growth with her “iron clad” fiscal rules following Labour’s U-turn on welfare. The Chancellor had hoped government plans for welfare reform would shed £5bn in spending as they targeted restrictions on personal independence payments (PIP) and limited the sickness-related element of universal credit. The [...]

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