Western Morning News

Pressure to maintain Universal Credit rise

- HARRIET LINE

BORIS JOHNSON will come under intense pressure to extend the £20-a-week uplift to Universal Credit when Labour forces a Commons vote on the planned cut.

The Prime Minister has been warned by his opposite number, Sir Keir Starmer, that millions of families will be £1,000 a year worse off if the Government scraps the increase.

Labour leader Sir Keir said that failing to give families a “helping hand” through the coronaviru­s pandemic would “slow our economic recovery as we come out of it”.

The Government temporaril­y increased the benefit to help families through the Covid crisis, but the uplift is due to expire in April, potentiall­y hitting the incomes of six million families.

Labour will use its opposition day debate in the Commons this afternoon to force a vote on the plans. Conservati­ve MPs are expected to abstain. The motion states: “This House believes that the Government should stop the planned cut in Universal Credit and Working Tax Credit in April and give certainty today to the six million families for whom it is worth an extra £1,000 a year.”

Sir Keir said: “Families across the UK have spent the past year worried for their loved ones, their jobs and their family’s security. Millions of people have had to juggle child care with working from home, have seen jobs or incomes cut or been excluded from self-employed support.

“If we don’t give a helping hand to families through this pandemic, then we are going to slow our economic recovery as we come out of it. We began 2021 with one of the worst death tolls in Europe and the deepest recession of any major economy.

“Without action from Government, millions of families face a £1,000 per year shortfall in the midst of a historic crisis. We urge Boris Johnson to change course and give families certainty today that their incomes will be protected.”

The Government is also facing pressure from charities, with Action For Children saying the case against cutting it “couldn’t be clearer” with unemployme­nt set to peak in the summer, while Javed Khan of Barnardo’s said the Government must make the £20-a-week increase permanent to “help stop hundreds of thousands of people falling into poverty”.

Shadow work and pensions secretary Jonathan Reynolds, meanwhile, said the cut would leave “unemployme­nt support at a 30-year low in the midst of a jobs crisis and threaten our economic recovery”.

In a letter to his opposite number Therese Coffey, he said: “For the Government to abstain on whether people can afford to pay their bills would force unnecessar­y uncertaint­y on already struggling families.

“On behalf of the Labour Party I offer you our support if you chose to put aside party politics and work with us to support families through the pandemic.”

In a statement released by the Conservati­ves, Ms Coffey said Labour would “scrap Universal Credit” and “leave millions of people with an uncertain future”.

“This Conservati­ve Government has consistent­ly stepped up to support low income families and the most vulnerable in society throughout this pandemic and will continue to do so,” she added.

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