Close Menu
Newstech24.com
  • Home
  • News
  • Arabic News
  • Technology
  • Economy & Business
  • Sports News
What's Hot

Spotify companions with Netflix for video podcast distribution deal

14/10/2025

Common new automobile prices surpass $50,000 as luxurious gross sales rise nationwide

14/10/2025

House Drive Plans 2026 Competitors for Maneuverable Satellites

14/10/2025
Facebook Tumblr
Saturday, October 18
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Newstech24.com
  • Home
  • News
  • Arabic News
  • Technology
  • Economy & Business
  • Sports News
Newstech24.com
Home»Economy & Business»Labour MPs press Keir Starmer to rethink benefits cuts after local elections
Economy & Business

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

By Admin04/05/2025No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Labour MPs press Keir Starmer to rethink benefits cuts after local elections
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

[ad_1]

Unlock the Editor’s Digest for free

Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter.

Sir Keir Starmer is facing fresh pressure from his Labour MPs to reverse cuts to the winter fuel allowance after the government’s welfare decisions were partly blamed for the party’s setbacks in Thursday’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 week’s elections, MPs and party figures said.

The policy, which limits the up to £300-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 Farage’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 “cost of living election” last July but then had failed to improve the situation for people’s cost of living, while actively making it worse for the elderly and disabled.

“That 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 can’t afford the winter fuel payment or Pip,” he said, referring to personal independence payments, a form of benefit for the sick and disabled.

“Reinstating winter fuel and revisiting Pip changes are the minimum that must be done if we want to prevent a Reform wipeout,” he added.

Another Labour MP who is seen as a supporter of Starmer said: “I’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.”

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

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 “Red Wall”, 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 “devastating” effect on some of the most deprived communities in England. 

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. “The 10 worst-hit constituencies are all Labour-held, and in ‘Red Wall’ areas,” it said. 

Labour MP Stella Creasy said on Saturday the party should be careful of “mimicking” Reform.

“Every 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,” 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 Starmer’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. 

“Nobody in Downing Street now thinks this was a good idea. They all realise it was a mistake. Every single one of them. For now, they’re saying they won’t do anything about it but it feels like ‘not yet’ rather than ‘never’,” 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 “early days” but he predicted that Labour would be unable to “hold the line” 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: “I’m not aware of any plans to do that, although people look at stuff all the time.” 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.

“It was something the Treasury had been trying to get away with for ages,” said a former senior government figure.

They said Morgan McSweeney, then Starmer’s head of political strategy but now chief of staff, “pretty much hung his head in his hands” when he learned of the decision “because he knew what it meant politically”.

[ad_2]

Like this:

Like Loading...
Benefits cuts elections Keir Labour local MPs press rethink Starmer
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Admin
  • Website

Related Posts

Common new automobile prices surpass $50,000 as luxurious gross sales rise nationwide

14/10/2025

GM expects $1.6 billion hit after federal EV tax credit score program ends

14/10/2025

AIA Group Restricted Inventory: Upped Credit score Bets In Reserve Portfolio (OTCMKTS:AAGIY)

03/10/2025
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss
Technology
3 Mins Read

Spotify companions with Netflix for video podcast distribution deal

By Admin14/10/20253 Mins Read

Spotify is bringing its video podcasts to Netflix beginning subsequent 12 months, the corporate introduced…

Common new automobile prices surpass $50,000 as luxurious gross sales rise nationwide

14/10/2025

House Drive Plans 2026 Competitors for Maneuverable Satellites

14/10/2025

البحث عن القيمة .. الطريق لصنع الثروات في سوق الأسهم

14/10/2025

UK opens large new army storage facility

14/10/2025

South Africa clinch place forward of Nigeria however dream stays alive for Tremendous Eagles

14/10/2025

Mozilla’s Firefox provides Perplexity’s AI reply engine as a brand new search possibility

14/10/2025

GM expects $1.6 billion hit after federal EV tax credit score program ends

14/10/2025

Sweden sack Tomasson after Isak and Gyokeres flop once more in opposition to Kosovo

14/10/2025

من العقوبات إلى الاستدامة .. قواعد اللعبة تتغير في التجارة الدولية

14/10/2025
Advertisement

Recent Posts

  • Spotify companions with Netflix for video podcast distribution deal
  • Common new automobile prices surpass $50,000 as luxurious gross sales rise nationwide
  • House Drive Plans 2026 Competitors for Maneuverable Satellites
  • البحث عن القيمة .. الطريق لصنع الثروات في سوق الأسهم
  • UK opens large new army storage facility

Recent Comments

  1. 注册 on New Abroad Purchasers And Important Undervaluation Make Noah A Purchase (NYSE:NOAH)
  2. Samantha Dare on No Neymar in Ancelotti’s squad however Paqueta returns
  3. Clifford Blanda on Philip Morris: Traditionally Low Dividend Yield Justifies A Promote
  4. Jailyn Runolfsdottir on Philip Morris: Traditionally Low Dividend Yield Justifies A Promote
  5. Gardner Prosacco on North-East agency wins £125m Military assist contract
About Us
About Us

NewsTech24 is your premier digital news destination, delivering breaking updates, in-depth analysis, and real-time coverage across sports, technology, global economics, and the Arab world. We pride ourselves on accuracy, speed, and unbiased reporting, keeping you informed 24/7. Whether it’s the latest tech innovations, market trends, sports highlights, or key developments in the Middle East—NewsTech24 bridges the gap between news and insight.

Company
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Terms Of Use
Latest Posts

Spotify companions with Netflix for video podcast distribution deal

14/10/2025

Common new automobile prices surpass $50,000 as luxurious gross sales rise nationwide

14/10/2025

House Drive Plans 2026 Competitors for Maneuverable Satellites

14/10/2025

البحث عن القيمة .. الطريق لصنع الثروات في سوق الأسهم

14/10/2025

UK opens large new army storage facility

14/10/2025

Archives

  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025

Categories

  • Arabic News
  • Economy & Business
  • NEWS
  • Sports
  • Technology
Facebook X (Twitter) Tumblr Threads RSS
  • Home
  • News
  • Arabic News
  • Technology
  • Economy & Business
  • Sports News
© 2025 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

%d