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Labour MPs press Keir Starmer to rethink benefits cuts after local elections


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Sir Keir Starmer is facing fresh pressure from his Labour MPs to reverse cuts to the winter fuel allowance after the governmentโ€™s welfare decisions were partly blamed for the partyโ€™s setbacks in Thursdayโ€™s local elections.

The removal of the winter fuel subsidy from 10mn pensioners was a key reason voters told Labour activists they would not support the party in the run-up to last weekโ€™s elections, MPs and party figures said.

The policy, which limits the up to ยฃ300-a-year benefit to only the poorest pensioners, was announced just weeks after Labour took power last year.

Labour MPs and party figures said the move, along with a more recent decision to cut disability benefits, had contributed to the party losing in some of its traditional heartlands to Nigel Farageโ€™s Reform UK.

Some have privately predicted that Starmer will be forced into a partial U-turn on the winter fuel cuts before the end of the year.

One moderate Labour MP said the party had won a โ€œcost of living electionโ€ last July but then had failed to improve the situation for peopleโ€™s cost of living, while actively making it worse for the elderly and disabled.

โ€œThat would be a very tough sell anyway but when coupled with countless millions the government can find to house young men arriving on boats every day, it is unsustainable to say we just canโ€™t afford the winter fuel payment or Pip,โ€ he said, referring to personal independence payments, a form of benefit for the sick and disabled.

โ€œReinstating winter fuel and revisiting Pip changes are the minimum that must be done if we want to prevent a Reform wipeout,โ€ he added.

Another Labour MP who is seen as a supporter of Starmer said: โ€œIโ€™m sure the government is reflecting on the issues that contributed to the losses last week, including winter fuel payments and disability and health benefits.โ€

Labour lost its former stronghold of Runcorn and Helsby to Reform in a by-election while also losing Doncaster council to Farageโ€™s rightwing populist party. Reform also came close to toppling Labour in the North Tyneside mayoralty race.ย 

Starmer has tacked right in recent months in an attempt to counter the rise of Reform, including slashing the overseas aid budget and introducing measures against illegal immigration.

But many Labour campaigners said benefit cuts were a more potent issue in the local elections in the so-called โ€œRed Wallโ€, the former Labour heartlands of the Midlands and northern England.

Over the weekend some MPs have been sharing research suggesting the proposed changes to Pip could have a โ€œdevastatingโ€ effect on some of the most deprived communities in England.ย 

The report from Health Equity North, a group of academics, said the cuts would fall hardest on the north-east and north-west of England. โ€œThe 10 worst-hit constituencies are all Labour-held, and in โ€˜Red Wallโ€™ areas,โ€ it said.ย 

Labour MP Stella Creasy said on Saturday the party should be careful of โ€œmimickingโ€ Reform.

โ€œEvery new Reform councillor is a warning, not a way forward. A warning that mimicking their plans to divide the British public and echo their rhetoric neither delivers votes at the ballot box nor better outcomes for anyone,โ€ she said on Instagram.

Instead, she called for urgent measures to tackle the cost of living crisis, including ending the two-child cap on benefits and ending the cuts to Pip.

Ros Jones, re-elected Labour mayor for Doncaster last week on a sharply reduced majority, warned after her victory about the damage done by Starmerโ€™s cuts to benefits such as Pip and the winter fuel allowance.

One Labour party figure said he expected a partial U-turn over the winter fuel cuts before Christmas with the autumn Budget being the most likely moment.ย 

โ€œNobody in Downing Street now thinks this was a good idea. They all realise it was a mistake. Every single one of them. For now, theyโ€™re saying they wonโ€™t do anything about it but it feels like โ€˜not yetโ€™ rather than โ€˜neverโ€™,โ€ they said.

One option would be to raise the bar for eligibility so that only the richest are excluded, they said. At the moment the subsidy is restricted to pensioners who receive pension credit or other benefits.

Another government aide said it was still โ€œearly daysโ€ but he predicted that Labour would be unable to โ€œhold the lineโ€ on the policy by the end of the year.

But asked if Starmer would U-turn on the policy, a Downing Street official said on Sunday: โ€œIโ€™m not aware of any plans to do that, although people look at stuff all the time.โ€ The Treasury did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Chancellor Rachel Reeves cut the winter fuel allowance last July after the election to bolster the public finances, claiming the previous Conservative government had overspent.

โ€œIt was something the Treasury had been trying to get away with for ages,โ€ said a former senior government figure.

They said Morgan McSweeney, then Starmerโ€™s head of political strategy but now chief of staff, โ€œpretty much hung his head in his handsโ€ when he learned of the decision โ€œbecause he knew what it meant politicallyโ€.



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