The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Accidents happen and benefits are a safety net. The clue’s in the name

Hammond’s £1.5 billion Budget boost for high streets

- By Mandy Rhodes MANDY RHODES IS EDITOR OF HOLYROOD MAGAZINE FOLLOW ON TWITTER @HOLYROODMA­NDY

Scotland’s high streets could be set to benefit from a cash injection from tomorrow’s Budget.

Chancellor Philip Hammond is poised to announce a £1.5 billion boost for small town centre retailers when he delivers his speech to the Commons.

A proportion of the money will come to Scotland but as the issue is devolved it will be up to Holyrood how it is spent.

Yesterday the Scottish Federation of Small Businesses called for it to be used on initiative­s to boost trade, including filling empty spaces in town centres. A spokesman said: “Small businesses are already given a generous package of relief by the Scottish Government. “This may be the time to look at new ways to boost town centres, for example with new measures to turn empty retail units into housing or non-retail premises as it will drive more footfall.”

But SNP MPS will refuse to vote for tomorrow’s Budget if it will make Scotland poorer.

Ian Blackford, the party’s Westminste­r leader, accused the UK Government of “pulling the rug out from under future generation­s”.

He said: “SNP MPS simply cannot and will not support a Budget that will weaken Scotland’s economy or makes our constituen­ts poorer.”

Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard wants to see the Budget used to end the two-child cap on social security payments, which affects 3,800 households north of the

border. Ruth Davidson’s welfare spokespers­on at Holyrood, Michelle Ballantyne – the would-be social security minister if the Tories ever get into Bute House – has sparked outrage by saying it is “fair” that people on benefits should not have more than two children.

When the Tories first mooted the idea of imposing a two-child benefit cap five years ago, it felt like one of those crazy pre-election campaign plans that would wither on the vine as less hysterical approaches to the rising welfare bill were found.

Well, it turned out that even some of the outriders were only slightly more outrageous than the ideas the UK Government was actually working on as it attempted to simplify the benefit system and cut costs with the roll-out of Universal Credit.

Paying benefits fairly is undoubtedl­y complicate­d because people’s lives are complex and so, too, are the politics, not to mention Byzantine ways of processing claims and time delays on pay-outs. But Universal Credit has, so far, been an unmitigate­d disaster.

The idea of a two-child benefit cap may have been a simple one which fed neatly into a particular Conservati­ve sense of pitting the “strivers” against the “skivers”, but when you have to put in place a caveat so inhumane as the “rapeclause” to mitigate it, then surely that should have been the tombstone moment for a government policy which has caused such hardship? But instead it has enthusiast­ic cheerleade­rs such as Michelle Ballantyne and the Scottish Tories at Holyrood waving it on. None of us plans to be poor but sometimes it happens: divorce, redundancy, insecure tenancy, illness, death – things we all face at some point. Too many workers are just one paycheck away from falling below the poverty line and one bill away, one unforeseen emergency, from being seriously sunk.

The benefit cap takes no account of the unpredicta­bility of life, doesn’t recognise the twists and turns that mean you can’t plan for every eventualit­y, and Ballantyne has just thrown red meat at the issue.

Most of the families in receipt of tax credits are in work – they just don’t get paid very much. They don’t have the luxury of planning their family based on permanency because their living arrangemen­ts are built on financial quicksand.

And if they had to wait until they knew beyond any reasonable doubt that they could afford to provide for a third child for the rest of its life without any state help at all, then our already diminishin­g population would just shrink further.

Michelle Ballantyne has six children. Did she carefully plan the conception of each? Did she count on never being out of work, being of good health and always having a well-stuffed financial cushion to land on? The problem for the Tories is, however they try to dress up the two-child cap, however much they describe its accompanyi­ng rape clause as a humane response to an unavoidabl­e benefit claim, their approach to welfare still smacks of privilege, eugenics and an inherent right to decide who is deserving and who is not.

And in this case, unforgivab­ly, it is children who are being targeted and who will suffer.

 ??  ?? Michelle Ballantyne sparked outrage
Michelle Ballantyne sparked outrage
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom