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Labour civil war as MPs turn on Keir Starmer – ‘absolutely disgraceful!’ .hh

Plans to reduce welfare spending are dividing MPs, with a backbench rebellion threatening to further destabilise the party

Prime Minister Keir Starmer And Energy Secretary Ed Miliband Visit A Business In Lancashire

Sir Keir Starmer is facing backlash from MPs over plans to cut benefits (Image: Getty)

Sir Keir Starmer’s pledge to be “ruthless with cuts” on welfare spending has sparked anger from some Labour MPs.

Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall will introduce changes to the welfare system in the spring after warning that it must be made “more sustainable” to avoid continuing to pay the “costs of failure”.

The UK welfare system is projected to exceed the Conservatives’ cap of £137.4billion for 2024-25 by £8.6billion. The Prime Minister has said Labour would be “ruthless with cuts” to benefits spending if necessary to balance overall government expenditure.

However, dissenting backbenchers do not think cutting back on welfare spending fits with Labour’s traditional position.

“It’s absolutely disgraceful,” Kim Johnson, Labour MP for Liverpool Riverside, told The Telegraph. She accused ministers of “attacking some of the most vulnerable in our society and picking the pockets of those most in need”.

Some worried MPs, fresh-faced and keen to please their constituents, said they view the prospect of reduced benefits spending as the latest in a series of unpopular policies they have to justify to angry voters.

READ MORE: State pensioners born before 1959 can add £5,644 to pension with DWP benefit [REPORT]

Prime Minister Keir Starmer Chairs Cabinet Meeting

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Liz Kendall is preparing to introduce changes to benefits spending this spring (Image: Getty)

“A lot of MPs are bracing themselves, if I’m honest,” one said. Another recounted emails detailing the “terror” of their electorate, one of whom told them: “This will have a devastating impact on me if it affects me, I’m already on the breadline. I couldn’t lose anything else.”

Ms Kendall attacked out-of-control benefits spending as a failure of the outgoing Tory administration. She accused them of failing to tackle the record number of people out of work due to long-term health conditions.

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She even suggested that some recipients of health and disability benefits were “taking the mickey” after 49% of those surveyed by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) thought they would never work again.

The survey also found that 27% said they might be able to work in the future but only if their health improved. That rose to 44% for those suffering from mental health problems.

“I think what the survey shows … is that despite all the myths, a lot of people who are currently on sickness or disability benefits want to work,” the minister told ITV.

“Many of them have either just lost jobs they desperately miss, or really want to get back to work once they’ve got their health condition under control.

“So I think there are many more people who want to work. I have no doubt, as there always have been, there are people who shouldn’t be on those benefits who are taking the mickey and that is not good enough – we have to end that.”

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Tempers recently flared over government proposals to curb benefit fraud by allowing the DWP to recover money directly from fraudsters’ bank accounts. DWP staff would also be able to obtain bank statements from people they believe are capable of paying back welfare debts but are refusing to do so.

Paula Barker, Labour MP for Liverpool Wavertree, warned that automating the benefit fraud detection process could cause a repeat of the Horizon Post Office-style injustices, when subpostmasters were wrongly convicted of fraud, theft and accounting crimes.

Backbenchers have also called for “meaningful tweaks” to Rachel Reeves’s inheritance tax raid on farmland. More than 1,000 tractors descend on Westminster on Monday in protest against the move.

During a debate on the measure, Sam Rushworth, Labour MP for Bishop Auckland, said: “If you inherit a £5million farm you’re not a millionaire, you’re the custodian of agricultural land with the responsibility to farm it to produce food for the nation.

“[Farmers are not] asking for a full U-turn, but they are asking for some meaningful tweaks that will help the policy to better target the goals it intends to achieve.”

Treasury minister James Murray said the Government had committed £5billion to farming over the next two years, £60million to help farmers affected by wet weather last year, and £2.4billion over two years to help build “crumbling flood defences”.

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