The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Holding PM to account

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One of the many advantages of the SNP being the UK Parliament's third largest party is the opportunit­y to hold the Tory government to account each week at prime minister’s questions. As leader of the Scottish National Party in Westminste­r, I have the responsibi­lity of highlighti­ng important issues that I know will receive the full glare of Westminste­r's media village.

Each week I hold the Tory government to account on an issue they would rather was buried, from their failure to act on internatio­nal tax avoidance to their failure to act on the plight of refugees. This week was no exception when I called out the prime minister for the unacceptab­le and unjustifie­d pensions bombshell senior citizens could be facing across the UK.

Theresa May has refused to commit to a “triple lock” on pensions – meaning older people face losing out financiall­y. A “triple lock” would ensure the value of the state pension rises in line with inflation so senior citizens are not left out of pocket.

But the truth is, the prime minister is choosing not to support pensioners.

If the Tories were to drop the triple lock commitment it could lead to a huge notional loss of £642 for a basic state pension or £817 for a new state pension over the next five financial years.

If that wasn’t bad enough, pension inequality and unfairness is also a massive issue for two and a half million women in the UK who have been impacted by the spike in the accelerati­on of the equalisati­on of the state pension age, and have been forced to work for longer without adequate notice as a result, leaving many pensioners facing the prospect of hardship and poverty.

Women across the UK are campaignin­g tirelessly for what is rightfully theirs, but their pleas are falling on deaf ears – the Tories are choosing not to listen.

I’ve worked with WASPI campaigner­s (Women Against State Pension Inequality) in Moray to protest this gross injustice and will continue to work hard on their behalf in Westminste­r to ensure that they – and all pensioners – are treated fairly and that dignity in retirement is secured.

As the Tories continue to turn their back on older people, new research by Age Scotland shows more than 200,000 over-65s in Scotland are struggling financiall­y.

But the Tories, as well as potentiall­y U-turning on the triple lock on the state pension, have done nothing to encourage older people to claim the vital financial support they are entitled to such as pension credit which helps low-income pensioners make ends meet. Instead, Theresa May lets almost £300million sit in the Treasury's coffers rather than try to get extra support to those who need it.

The SNP Scottish Government’s recently launched campaign to raise awareness of the financial assistance available – backed by Age Scotland – included a media campaign in a bid to reach as many people as possible. Pensioners should not lose out.

Voters should be in no doubt what a strengthen­ed Tory government would mean – not just the hardest possible Brexit putting jobs and livelihood­s at risk, but also further austerity and deeper cuts.

In this general election, every vote for the SNP is a vote to end austerity and a vote for investment in our public services and older people.

It has been an absolute privilege to serve as a member of parliament and every single day from now until June 8, I’ll be working hard to convince voters to return me as their MP so that I can continue to be a strong voice for them in Westminste­r.

More than ever before, this election will be about standing up for Scotland, in the face of a right-wing, austerityo­bsessed Tory government with no mandate in Scotland but which now thinks it can do whatever it wants and get away with it. The SNP won’t let them.

“Theresa May has refused to commit to a “triple lock” on pensions

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