Badenoch accuses Starmer of giving up on welfare reform
17 hours agoShareSaveAdd as preferred on Google Jennifer McKiernanPolitical reporter House of Commons Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has accused Prime Minster Sir Keir Starmer of giving up on welfare reform. Sir Keir was forced into a U-turn on planned benefit reforms , with measures to reform some personal independence payments (Pip) shelved. Speaking at Prime Minister's Questions, Badenoch asked why there was no welfare bill in this month's King's Speech and she claimed costs had risen by £20bn since Labour won the general election. Official figures show there has been an increase of just under £20bn in the last two years, with half of that rise made up of a £10bn increase in the state pension. The King's Speech sets out the government's planned agenda for proposed legislation for the upcoming parliamentary session, which usually lasts about a year. Referring to the shadow leadership contest swirling around Sir Keir, following heavy election losses earlier this month, Badenoch said: "The reason why there is no welfare bill is because the prime minister has given up, and he's given up because they have given up on him." The Conservative leader referred to messages from Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden, released in the latest batch of the Mandelson files, which revealed some private messages between ministers and the disgraced former UK ambassador to the US, Lord Mandelson. Badenoch said: "The welfare secretary [McFadden] said in private what they won't dare say in public. "He said 'every meeting I have with Labour MPs is about who we can tax so we can pay more benefits'." Sir Keir said Labour had inherited a broken welfare system from the previous Conservative government and was focused on getting more young people into work. He said: "Welfare reform is balancing universal credit so it no longer pushes people away from work. That's what we're doing, they voted against it. "Welfare reform is introducing a right to try to incentivise people to take up opportunities. That's what we're doing, they voted against it. "Welfare reform is providing record funding on apprenticeships, that's what we're doing. Apprenticeship starts fell by 40% on their watch." Opportunities shrinking for too many young people, says major report on 'lost generation' Welfare bill will not be included in government's King's Speech Welfare reform 'must happen', minister says Last week, the government published the Milburn review into how to tackle a record level of young people not in education, employment or training, which official figures show has now reached one million, the highest level in 12 years.
Original story by BBC Politics • View original source
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