DWP Winter Fuel Payments call for return for all pensioners
Rachel Reeves could become known as āthe Chancellor who was brave enough to change courseā, a senior Conservative whip has said, suggesting the payment should return.
Standing opposite Commons Leader Lucy Powell in Parliament, Joy Morrissey questioned Ms Reevesā decision to āU-turn on non-domsā but not make alterations to budget decisions affecting pensioners and farmers.
Ms Powell defended the Governmentās record on Thursday and described āanother week of delivering the change that people voted forā, the day after Ms Reeves made a speech about economic growth at Siemens Healthineers in Oxfordshire.
Earlier in January, the Chancellor said in Davos that she would soften the proposed tax regime for people who live in the UK but are otherwise based elsewhere.
It means the temporary repatriation facility, a three-year window where non-doms can pay a discounted rate on foreign income and gains, will be āmore generousā than planned.
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Ms Morrissey told the Common: āAs each week passes, our constituents face more and more negative consequences from the Chancellorās disastrous budget.
āLast week, the ONS (Office for National Statistics) revealed a staggering 47,000 drop in employment in December.
āThis is the sharpest fall in employment since the pandemic.ā
The Conservative deputy chief whip later continued: āI know the Chancellor is proud of being the first female Chancellor, but wouldnāt it be even better if she was known as the Chancellor who was brave enough to change course?ā
She said: āNow, we have seen a glimmer of hope on the Chancellorās U-turn on non-doms, which has caused some of the UKās biggest taxpayers to flee her socialist nightmare. It is a welcome U-turn.
āBut I feel for the Leader of the House and the members opposite.
āI canāt imagine they ever thought they would be explaining why a Labour Government has U-turned on punishing non-doms but not on punishing pensioners.ā
Ms Morrissey urged the Government to ābe boldā and reinstate universal winter fuel payments after the programme was slimmed down to only include claimants of certain means-tested benefits such as Pension Credit.
She also said the Treasury should āspare family farms who have put food on our table from her tax raidā, after Ms Reeves announced plans to bring farms worth more than Ā£1 million into inheritance tax from April next year.
In her response, Ms Powell told the Commons: ā(Ms Morrissey) does raise issues around the economy but I would just gently remind her of a few of the stats in that regard ā inflation is down now thanks to this Government, wages are growing at their fastest rate in three years, weāve created more than 70,000 new jobs since we came into office, and business investment is at its highest levels for 19 years.ā
The Commons Leader said the Border, Security and Immigration Bill is due for debate on February 10, which she said would take āreal action to tackle small boats and smuggling gangsā.
Turning to the Chancellorās speech, Ms Powell said the Oxford-Cambridge Growth Corridor with bolstered transport links and a new town at Tempsford in Bedfordshire would become āthe UKās answer to Silicon Valleyā.
She added that āas a (Manchester) City fan, I can even welcomeā support for redevelopment in the Old Trafford area of Manchester, and said Doncaster Airport in Yorkshire would become āthriving once againā.
On changes to the temporary repatriation facility for non-doms, Ms Reeves said at the World Economic Forum: āWe have been listening to the concerns that have been raised by the non-dom community.ā