The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Ministers ‘to reduce wait of six weeks’

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The controvers­ial six-week wait for Universal Credit payments could be cut to five weeks or less, it has been reported.

The Department for Work and Pensions declined to comment on a Sky News report suggesting the change could come early next week, but minister Damian Hinds stressed the Government was “continuall­y looking to improve the system”.

A source close to Work and Pensions Secretary David Gauke played down suggestion­s he was acting in response to intensive behind-the-scenes discussion­s with as many as two dozen rebel MPs.

Mr Gauke has been meeting a range of MPs, including many from the new intake who came into Parliament in June, to explain the policy, the source said.

With Chancellor Philip Hammond due to deliver his Budget next Wednesday, Sky quoted an unnamed “Government source familiar with the plans” as saying there would be “some movement” on the wait time in the early part of next week.

Mr Gauke has previously warned MPs that any reduction in the wait time would have cost implicatio­ns.

Responding to reports of imminent concession­s, Mr Hinds said: “I won’t be commenting on Budget speculatio­n but we have made clear that no one has to wait for six weeks before they get their first full payment because they can get an advance which is interest-free and recovered over six months.

“We have always said we are continuall­y looking to improve the system and the bottom line is that Universal Credit is working and getting more people into work.”

 ?? Picture: Getty. ?? Work and Pensions Secretary David Gauke.
Picture: Getty. Work and Pensions Secretary David Gauke.

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