Birmingham Post

Byrne refuses to apologise in job figures row

- Tom Dare Local Democracy Reporter

LABOUR mayoral hopeful Liam Byrne has refused to apologise for seemingly inaccurate claims about the region’s unemployme­nt figures.

The Hodge Hill MP claimed that unemployme­nt in the West Midlands had risen by 25 per cent since last year.

Taking to Twitter, he said: “Andy Street thinks he’s ‘categorica­lly’ done enough to be re-elected.

“This morning we learned our region’s unemployme­nt has RISEN 25%.

“What planet are they on?” However, research by fact checking site fullfact.org has since shown the claims to be inaccurate, instead showing that “the unemployme­nt rate in the area decreased from 6.7 per cent to 5.9 per cent between 2017/18 and 2018/19.”

Instead, it was found that the ‘claimant count’ across the seven councils of the West Midlands Combined Authority increased by 26 per cent between August 2018 and August 2019 – though this was likely due to the recent roll out of Universal Credit.

The claim has caused the Birmingham Conservati­ve Group, led by Cllr Robert Alden, to demand an apology. He wrote: “For Liam Byrne to claim that unemployme­nt has risen by 25 per cent when in fact it has fallen from 6.7 per cent to 5.9 per cent shows yet again just why he cannot he trusted with the job that would have responsibi­lity for the West Midlands economy.

“Rather than try deceit and scaremonge­ring over jobs, he should be celebratin­g the fact that under Andy Street and the Conservati­ves the West Midlands economy is growing faster than anywhere outside London and last quarter grew at double the national average.”

However, the Labour MP has refused to apologise for his claims, telling the Conservati­ve group to stop ‘quibbling’ over statistica­l definition­s.

“Let’s be clear, the Claimant Count consists of claimants of Jobseekers Allowance and Universal Credit claimants who are looking for work,” he said.

“The number of people claiming has gone up by 18,695 in one year – that’s 25.4 per cent.

“So if the Tories worked as hard on getting people back to work as they did quibbling about statistica­l definition­s, we might have a lot more people in jobs across our region right now.”

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