The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Tory leader jeered for supporting ‘rape clause’

WELFARE: Davidson made by Dugdale to hear testimony from rape victim

- GARETH MCPHERSON POLITICAL REPORTER

Ruth Davidson was confronted with the harrowing testimony of a rape victim as the Scottish Conservati­ve leader was forced to defend a “heinous” UK Government policy.

To jeers from opposition MSPs, Ms Davidson said the two-child tax credit cap and associated “rape clause” was part of a drive to reduce the debt burden for future generation­s.

The Edinburgh MSP then was made to listen to the ordeal suffered by a rape survivor in a letter read out during a Holyrood debate by Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale.

Tax credits are capped at two children under UK Government welfare restrictio­ns that came into force this month. However, there are exemptions, such as if a claimant can prove further offspring were a result of rape.

Anyone who says they were raped must have that verified as part of an eight-page form to fill out.

The mother-of-four relived how she was raped by one of her closest friends and was then labelled promiscuou­s by her husband’s family. The letter detailed how she claimed tax credits after redundancy, before revealing she would not have been able to do so under the new system.

“There is no way I could complete that awful form of shame, no matter what the consequenc­es,” she wrote. “Looking back, that really could have been the thing that tipped me completely over the edge, the difference between surviving to tell the tale and not.”

Ms Dugdale later said: “This heartbreak­ing letter from a rape victim exposes the reality of the Tory rape clause.”

However, Ms Davidson said the twochild cap was necessary to reduce UK

Scottish Labour leader Kezia Dugdale read out a testimony from a rape victim as she made her opposition to the Conservati­ves’ controvers­ial “rape clause” clear to Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson.

debt and that exemptions such as the rape clause are the correct response.

“It is our judgement that we need to reduce this deficit in order to demonstrat­e that the UK can withstand any future shocks that may come our way – and can build an economy which can continue to sustain our public services.

“This, inevitably, means examining many budgets and the welfare budget is included in that.”

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: “No woman anywhere should have to prove that she has been raped in order to claim tax credits. I can’t believe that I am having to stand up in parliament and make that argument.”

The SNP motion calling on the Conservati­ve Government to remove the two-child cap and scrap the rape clause was backed by all Holyrood parties apart from the Tories.

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