Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Labour heads off welfare revolt with big concessions
The Independent
|July 02, 2025
Sir Keir Starmer has suffered the biggest blow to his leadership since coming into power a year ago after he was forced to abandon a key plank of his controversial benefit cuts in order to get them through parliament.

While his welfare reform bill passed its second reading by 335 votes to 260 - a majority of 75 - the prime minister still suffered the largest rebellion of his premiership so far, with 49 Labour MPs voting to reject the legislation.
It came after a last-ditch announcement that plans to restrict eligibility for personal independence payments (PIP) – which had been the central pillar of the government's reforms - were being dropped.
The chaotic move came just 90 minutes before MPs were due to vote on the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill for the first time, when disability minister Sir Stephen Timms announced that changes to PIP originally planned for November 2026 will not take place until after his review of the benefit has concluded.
Sir Keir had already been forced into a U-turn last week when more than 130 Labour MPs signed an amendment that would have effectively have killed the bill off. Among the concessions announced then was a plan to impose tougher eligibility rules only on future PIP claimants, leaving existing recipients unaffected. Critics said this would create a two tier system, while the government's own impact assessment said the change would push 150,000 people into poverty.

Diese Geschichte stammt aus der July 02, 2025-Ausgabe von The Independent.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON The Independent

The Independent
Ruthless England dismantle South Africa in cup opener
Spinner Linsey Smith set the tone in the 10-wicket victory
2 mins
October 04, 2025

The Independent
Ex-nurse hoping to help the Church's medicine go down
While most in the CofE welcome Sarah Mullally breaking its stained-glass ceiling, her appointment may not sit so well with conservative congregations, says Catherine Pepinster
3 mins
October 04, 2025

The Independent
DEI is falling out of fashion
Burberry has sacked its head of inclusion to save money, and it could be the start of a hot new trend
4 mins
October 04, 2025

The Independent
After Crumpsall, can Britain ever feel safe for Jews again?
Crumpsall, of all places.
3 mins
October 04, 2025

The Independent
Why ditching climate change act would damage our nation
You have to hand it to Kemi Badenoch. She has united an extraordinary coalition today.
2 mins
October 04, 2025

The Independent
Tuchel defends leaving out England stars from squad
Thomas Tuchel raised eyebrows by not recalling some of England's biggest individual stars, instead keeping faith with the squad that impressed against Serbia last month (PA)
4 mins
October 04, 2025

The Independent
Church chooses first female Archbishop of Canterbury
Dame Sarah Mullally has told of her joy in making history as the first woman to be named Archbishop of Canterbury while paying tribute to those who paved the way for the moment.
3 mins
October 04, 2025

The Independent
The Tories must become the party of business again
At major sports matches, there is the main event, then sometimes they invite their reserve or junior sides to compete.
4 mins
October 04, 2025

The Independent
Are TV chefs out of season?
Celebrity cooks and primetime television go together like bacon and eggs, so why is food programming down 40%? Andrew Turvil believes social media is where it's all cooking
5 mins
October 04, 2025

The Independent
HOLLYWOOD'S AI-LIST
The creation of artificial intelligence 'actor' Tilly Norwood is a studio exec's dream and an anti-art abomination, but how worried should real thespians be?
3 mins
October 04, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size