The Herald

Two-child benefit cap vow by Tories

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THE Conservati­ves will keep the two-child benefit cap if they win the next election, the Prime Minister has said.

Charities have called for the abolition of the cap, which restricts Universal Credit support to two children in a family, pointing to record levels of child poverty in the UK.

Writing in The Sun On Sunday, Rishi Sunak committed his party to keeping the policy.

He said: “Working families do not see their incomes rise when they have more children. Families on benefits should be asked to make the same financial decisions as those supporting themselves solely through work.”

The commitment follows Mr Sunak’s speech on Friday, in which he set out reforms of the welfare system to reduce the number of people receiving benefits, and bring spending down.

The number of people claiming at least one health-related benefit has soared since the pandemic, with one in 10 people now receiving support, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies.

In his Sun On Sunday article, the Prime Minister said: “There is nothing compassion­ate about consigning people who could work to a life trapped on benefits.

“We will change the system so that we are giving people a hand up rather than a hand-out.”

Campaigner­s have criticised Mr Sunak for using “hostile rhetoric” and launching a “full-on assault on disabled people” with his plans for welfare.

Last week also saw the launch of a campaign to lift a million children out of poverty by 2030, backed by human rights lawyer Cherie Blair and former children’s commission­er Anne Longfield.

Scrapping the two-child benefit cap features among the campaign’s demands, a policy supported by the current children’s commission­er.

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