Western Daily Press

Minister not happy ‘but winter fuel cut needed’

- CLAUDIA SAVAGE wdp@reachplc.com

HEALTH Secretary Wes Streeting has said he is “not remotely happy” on having to vote to “take money away” from pensioners through cutting winter fuel allowance.

Mr Streeting did however share the Government’s argument that the move is essential to balance public finances as the Prime Minister did not rule out suspending MPs for defying the Government in Parliament.

Rosie Duffield, the Labour MP for Canterbury, is among the party’s backbenche­rs who have said they will not vote with the Government when the measure to limit the winter fuel allowance comes to the Commons tomorrow.

Mr Streeting said he is not “remotely happy” about having to vote to cut the winter fuel allowance, but argued it is essential to balance public finances.

He told Sky News: “I think it is a tough choice, and we’ve had plenty of political criticism for it, I think, which demonstrat­es the political pain of it.

“I’m not remotely happy about it, and I’m not remotely happy about having to say to some of my constituen­ts, I’m sorry that I’m going into work this week to vote for something that will take money away from you.”

Chancellor Rachel Reeves announced the plan to limit the winter fuel allowance in July, as she said there was a need to fill a £22 billion “black hole” in the public finances left by the previous government, a claim the Tories have challenged.

The change means that only those who claim pension credit and other means-tested benefits will receive the additional fuel payments.

Mr Streeting said pensioners “have seen what happens when politician­s duck the difficult decisions”, adding: “this isn’t a Government that ducks difficult decisions or pretends you can spend money you don’t have”.

Other Labour MPs have urged the Government not to go forward with the move by signing a Commons motion from Poole MP Neil Duncan-Jordan.

Some 11 Labour MPs are among the 27 who have signed the Early Day Motion which describes the plan as “a bureaucrat­ic and unpopular means test” for pensioners.

Seven of the party’s MPs had the whip removed for voting to scrap the two child benefit cap.

One of those rebels, John McDonnell, who now sits as an independen­t MP, said he was prepared to vote against the Government on Tuesday.

He told LBC: “I said to my whip, because even though I’ve lost the whip I still have to abide by the whip... could you tell Keir Starmer and Rachel Reeves to bring something seriously before that vote, which demonstrat­es actually that here’s a way of managing this that isn’t going to impact upon people in my constituen­cy who are facing hardship, bring something forward and I’m happy to allow this to go through in a revised form.”

Sir Keir Starmer said whether or not Labour MPs will be suspended from the party for voting against cuts to winter fuel payments is “a matter for the chief whip”.

He told the BBC: “We’re going into a vote. I’m glad we’re having a vote, because I think it’s very important for Parliament to speak on this.

“But every Labour MP was elected in on the same mandate as I was, which was to deliver the change that we need for the country over the time we’ve got in office.”

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