Yorkshire Post

We would ‘look at’ ending the benefit cap – Labour

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A LABOUR Government would look at ending the household benefit cap but has not costed the measure, according to the shadow work and pensions secretary.

Debbie Abrahams said the party would consider removing the cap which limits welfare payments for households to £20,000 outside London and £23,000 inside the capital. She told BBC 1’s

said: “We recognise that for some people listening to this that might seem like an awful lot of money but the reality is... the implicatio­ns for people in the poorest circumstan­ces, the implicatio­ns around child poverty which affects children not just while they’re young but for the rest their lives – it affects how their brains develop and everything.”

Pressed on whether the cap would go, Ms Abrahams said: “We would be looking to see how we do that.”

She said the party had not costed the measure yet, but added: “We know that, for example, the court ruling is about £50 million so it’s not an astronomic­al figure.”

On Thursday, the High Court declared the Government’s benefits cap unlawfully discrimina­tes against lone parents with children under two.

Mr Justice Collins ruled in favour of four lone-parent families in their action against the Work and Pensions Secretary over the benefit cap, which limits the income households receive in certain benefits.

The judge announced that the regulation­s are “unlawful insofar as they apply to lone parents with a child or children under the age of two”, as they involve “unjustifie­d discrimina­tion” against parents and children.

The Department for Work and Pensions intends to appeal against the decision.

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