
Starmer's disability benefits U-turn risks pleasing no one
This isn't the first time Keir Starmer has had to yield to political pressure from within his own party to change course – there have been some major about-faces already during the first year of his premiership.
But this might end up being the one that people remember, that historians point back to as the moment his authority crumbled and his government went wrong.
The first reason is that despite watering down his proposed welfare reforms, Starmer still faces what could be the biggest rebellion by Labour MPs since he took over as leader, when the legislation comes to a vote on Tuesday evening.
While the changes are believed to have won over the majority of the 120-odd MPs who had signed a wrecking amendment, dozens of Labour parliamentarians remain who simply won't back the reforms on principle.
The hardcore opponents say that cutting support for the disabled and vulnerable is un-Labour and not why they went into politics. A significant chunk of the Labour vote will agree with them.
The official government analysis released on Monday, showing that the reforms will still push 150,000 people into relative poverty across the UK, rather than 250,000, will add to their argument.
So will media coverage of people with debilitating long-term health conditions losing out on benefits they would previously have received – even if those currently getting support are no longer at risk of losing it.
Campaigners will keep up the pressure in public, and likely in the courts, over what they say will be a two-tier benefits system.
Meanwhile, the Tories will argue that the cuts to the ballooning welfare bill fall short of what's needed to get spending under control.
In short, if no one is happy with the outcome, there isn't much upside for the Prime Minister.
The U-turn also leaves Rachel Reeves scrambling to find £3bn more, now that the cuts won't be as deep as expected.
The Chancellor was already facing questions about how she was going to stick within her fiscal rules, which prevent her from boosting borrowing, and also keep her promise not to raise more taxes.
At the Budget later this year, she is widely expected to have to do one or the other – since more cuts are now seen to be politically unacceptable to Labour MPs.
That all leaves Reeves' own future in doubt – and she's the only Cabinet minister so indispensable to the Starmer project that he's taken the unusual step of saying he wants to keep her in her job until the end of the Parliament.
The episode has left Labour MPs in despair at the standard of political leadership from 10 Downing Street.
The Prime Minister's top advisers and the party whips have blamed each other, and negative briefings have emerged about Starmer's chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, and his relationship with his boss.
Unhappy MPs have claimed the Prime Minister and his government are aloof and don't listen to outside voices that could help them avoid mistakes.
When he took power, Starmer made a virtue of his qualities as a good manager rather than a political performer. His critics now say the prime minister's lack of political instinct has let him down.
For Scottish Labour MPs—some of whom have broken with the government for the first time over this issue—the political damage is even greater. With less than a year until the Holyrood elections, this gives the SNP more ammunition.
It all has the whiff of a government heading into its final chapters, rather than just getting started only a year after a landslide general election victory.
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Reuters
an hour ago
- Reuters
Starmer wins vote on UK welfare reform but suffers damaging rebellion
LONDON, July 1 (Reuters) - British Prime Minister Keir Starmer won a vote on his welfare plans on Tuesday at significant political cost as he suffered the biggest parliamentary rebellion of his premiership and was forced to back down on key parts of the package. After his lawmakers pushed him into a series of embarrassing U-turns to sharply scale back plans to cut benefits, lawmakers in the House of Commons gave their initial approval to a package of measures Starmer says are vital to securing the future of the welfare system. But the scale of the rebellion - with 49 Labour lawmakers voting against the reforms - underlined the prime minister's waning authority. A year after winning one of the largest parliamentary majorities in British history, Starmer has seen his personal approval ratings collapse and been forced into several policy reversals by his increasingly rebellious lawmakers. "It's been a bumpy time tonight," work and pensions minister Liz Kendall told reporters after a session of parliament when lawmakers took turns to mostly criticise the planned changes. "There are definitely lessons to learn from this process." Starmer came into office last year promising his big parliamentary majority would bring an end to the political chaos that defined much of the Conservative Party's 14 years in power. But the revolt over the welfare bill underlines the difficulty he has pushing through unpopular changes. In the run-up to the vote, ministers and party enforcers known as "whips" had been locked in frantic last-ditch lobbying of undecided members of parliament to try to win their backing. In a further concession to rebels about two hours before the vote, the government said it would not finalise changes in eligibility for a key benefit payment until a review into the welfare system had been completed. Paula Barker, a Labour member of parliament, called the attempt to pass the plans "the most unedifying spectacle that I have ever seen". In the end, the government suffered by far the biggest rebellion of Starmer's premiership, eclipsing the 16 members of parliament who opposed an infrastructure bill earlier this month. Mel Stride, the opposition Conservative Party finance policy chief, described Starmer's team as "a government that's lost control", only able to pass the legislation by having "ripped the heart of it out". Labour lawmaker Henry Tufnell said by agreeing to the concessions Starmer had shown "he's willing to take on board these criticisms that people have raised." Almost 90 disability and human rights groups before the vote urged lawmakers to vote down the legislation. The proposed reforms are designed to reduce the cost of Britain's growing welfare bill, which the government has described as economically indefensible and morally wrong. Annual spending on incapacity and disability benefits already exceeds the country's defence budget and is set to top 100 billion pounds ($137 billion) by 2030, according to official forecasts, up from 65 billion pounds now. More than half of the rise in working-age disability claims since the COVID-19 pandemic relates to mental health conditions, opens new tab, according to the Institute for Fiscal Studies think-tank. The government had initially hoped to save 5 billion pounds ($6.9 billion) a year by 2030 by tightening rules for people to receive disability and sickness benefits. But after the government conceded to pressure from its lawmakers, it said the new rules would now apply only to future applicants, not to the millions of existing claimants as had been proposed. Analysts estimated the savings would likely be closer to 2 billion pounds. It was not clear how the additional last-minute change would impact the hoped-for savings in the welfare reform package. Opposition politicians said the government would now have to raise taxes or cut government spending elsewhere to balance the public finances in the annual budget later this year. The government has said there would be no permanent increase in borrowing, but has declined to comment on possible tax rises. While Starmer is under no immediate threat, and the next election is not expected until 2029, his party now trails behind Nigel Farage's populist Reform UK in opinion polls. John Curtice, Britain's most respected pollster, said this week that Starmer was the most unpopular elected prime minister in modern British history, and that voters still did not know what he stood for a year after he was elected.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
A humiliating day for Keir Starmer in parliament
It has been a month of U-turns for Keir Starmer's Labour government … but none have been quite as dramatic as this. Helen Pidd heads to parliament on the day the Commons is due to vote on the government's flagship welfare bill, amid a furious rebellion among Labour MPs on its proposed disability cuts. She hears from a series of Labour MPs – from those in support of the bill to those against, and those still undecided – after a week in which the government has offered concession after concession to rebels to try to get its legislation over the line. Yet, as political correspondent Kiran Stacey reports, even as the debate started, senior figures in government were worried they might still lose, prompting the biggest concession of all. So where does this leave Keir Starmer's authority only a year into office, and where can his beleaguered government go from here?


North Wales Chronicle
2 hours ago
- North Wales Chronicle
F1 boss Stefano Domenicali: British Grand Prix should ‘stay forever on calendar'
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