logo
DWP confirms exactly when it will launch huge benefits crackdown that means banks can identify fraudsters

DWP confirms exactly when it will launch huge benefits crackdown that means banks can identify fraudsters

The Sun20 hours ago
THE Government has confirmed when it's planning to bring in controversial new powers aimed at cracking down on benefits fraudsters.
Banks will be drafted in to help identify benefits cheats and convicted fraudsters could be stripped of their driving licences under the new Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) plans.
1
New Government documents have revealed it's planning to bring the measures under the Public Authorities (Fraud, Error and Recovery) Bill in April 2026.
The DWP has said it will be the "biggest fraud crackdown in a generation".
It's estimated the new powers could save taxpayers £1.5billion over five years.
Last year, an estimated £7.4billion was lost to benefits fraud - around 2.8% of total welfare spending.
A further £1.6bn (0.6%) was overpaid due to unintentional errors by claimants, while £0.8bn (0.3%) was overpaid because of errors by the DWP.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has been trying to boost the public purse after it was revealed she needs to plug a £50billion hole in public finances.
The new measures mean banks will help to identify customers who might have breached benefit eligibility rules, such as exceeding the £16,000 savings limit for Universal Credit.
They will share limited data with the DWP but can't provide transaction details, so officials won't be able to see how benefit claimants spend their money.
The DWP also won't gain direct access to claimants' bank accounts, but it will receive cases flagged for investigation.
Financial institutions face penalties if they overshare information beyond what's permitted.
DWP will have access to YOUR bank accounts to tackle debt as Brits told 'get back to work' in major push on unemployed
Airlines and other third-party organisations might also have to provide information to help detect benefit claims made from abroad that could violate eligibility rules.
According to the Government documents, any information "will not be shared on the presumption or suspicion that anyone is guilty of any offence".
However officials will gain authority to recover money directly from fraudsters' bank accounts.
As well as this, persistent benefit fraudsters who fail to repay their debts could face driving bans lasting up to two years.
DWP minister Liz Kendall has pledged to clamp down on benefit cheats, saying back in March: "The social security system that we inherited from the Conservatives is failing the very people that it is supposed to help and is holding our country back.
"The facts speak for themselves. One in 10 people of working age are now claiming a sickness or disability benefit. Almost one million young people are not in education, employment or training - one in eight of all our young people."
The DWP has said it will have strong safeguards in place, including new inspection and reporting mechanisms.
DWP staff will also receive comprehensive training before using the new powers.
However campaign groups have warned the powers could invade claimants' rights to financial privacy and it could also lead to legitimate claimants being wrongly investigated.
In a letter to Kendall last year, the directors of Big Brother Watch and Age UK described the plans as "mass financial surveillance powers" which they said would "represent a severe and disproportionate intrusion into the nation's privacy".
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Train passengers face ‘outrageous' fare hike
Train passengers face ‘outrageous' fare hike

Telegraph

time2 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Train passengers face ‘outrageous' fare hike

A potential 5.5 per cent rise in England's train fares next year has been described by public transport groups as 'outrageous'. July's Retail Prices Index (RPI) measure of inflation – which is often used to determine increases in the cost of train travel – will be announced on Wednesday. The Government has not confirmed how it will determine the cap in regulated fare rises for 2026, but this year's 4.6 per cent hike was one percentage point above RPI in July 2024. Banking group Investec has forecast this year's July RPI figure will be 4.5 per cent, which means fares could jump by 5.5 per cent. Bruce Williamson, spokesman for pressure group Railfuture, said 'it would be outrageous' if fares rose by that much. He added: 'What would be the justification for jacking up fares above inflation? There isn't any. 'It's ripping off the customer, driving people off the trains and onto our congested road network, which is in no-one's interest.' Mr Williamson said he would support the Government marking its nationalisation of train operators by freezing fares. He continued: 'One would hope that there would be some efficiency savings and economies of scale that you get from having a more integrated railway. 'But of course, I strongly suspect that if there are any savings to be had, they'd be swallowed up by the Treasury and not passed back to the passengers, which I think is wrong.' Ben Plowden, chief executive of lobby group Campaign for Better Transport, said: 'Rising fares are not just burdening passengers, they are putting people off rail travel. 'Our survey found that 71 per cent of people would be more likely to take the train if fares were cheaper. 'Public support for nationalisation plummets if fares continue to rise, so as the Government progresses plans for Great British Railways (GBR), it must take the opportunity to reform fares and make rail travel more affordable.' GBR is an upcoming public sector body that will oversee Britain's rail infrastructure and train operation. About 45 per cent of fares on Britain's railways are regulated by the Westminster, Scottish and Welsh Governments. They include season tickets on most commuter journeys, some off-peak return tickets on long-distance routes, and flexible tickets for travel around major cities. The Department for Transport (DfT) said there will be an update on changes to regulated fares later this year. Operators set rises in unregulated fares, although these are likely to be very close to regulated ticket increases because their decisions are heavily influenced by governments. A DfT spokesperson said: 'The Transport Secretary has made clear her number one priority is getting the railways back to a place where people can rely on them. 'The Government is putting passengers at the heart of its plans for public ownership and Great British Railways, delivering the services they deserve and driving growth. 'No decisions have been made on next year's rail fares but our aim is that prices balance affordability for both passengers and taxpayers.'

Benefit sanctions fall under Labour
Benefit sanctions fall under Labour

Telegraph

time32 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Benefit sanctions fall under Labour

Benefit sanctions have fallen sharply under Labour after a jump in the number of claimants who say they are too sick to look for work. Figures published by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) show that 109,570 people claiming Universal Credit had their payments docked in May for failing to comply with benefit rules. This is down from just over 124,000 sanctions just before Labour took power in July and a peak of 137,000 under the Tories in 2023. The overall sanctions rate has fallen from 6.2pc to 5.3pc since Sir Keir Starmer won a landslide victory in July 2024. The fall comes after the proportion of people claiming benefits where sanctions can be applied fell to a record low, amid a surge in mental health claims from people who say they are too sick to work. Just 26.6pc – or two million people – can now be subject to sanctions when claiming Britain's main employment benefit. This means three quarters of people now have no conditions tied to their welfare. This is in stark contrast to 2017, when a series of benefit reforms spearheaded by George Osborne meant 64.8pc of people on benefits faced having them docked if they failed to attend a work placement, or did not show up for a job interview. Lockdown saw a surge in the number of people who stopped looking for work owing to ill health, with millions now parked on sickness benefits that have no requirement for people to look for work. Roughly 1,500 people a day have been signed off on incapacity benefits with no work requirements since Labour took power. Disability benefit claims are also rising, with the Government forced by backbenchers to shelve key reforms designed to reduce the financial burden on the state and encourage more people to go back to work. Millions of older welfare claimants who have been parked on benefits for years have also been moved onto Universal Credit as Labour completes a shift away from a series of legacy benefits. Official figures published last week showed that the number of working-age Britons who have been parked on joblessness benefits that do not require them to look for work has climbed by a million since Labour took power. There are currently 3.7 million Britons – or almost half of those currently claiming Britain's main unemployment benefit – who are now not required to look for a job. That is up from 2.67 million in July 2024, following Labour's landslide victory. By contrast, the figures published by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) showed that the number of people who have to look for a job as a condition of receiving their benefits fell from 1.65 million to 1.6 million over the same period. Reforms to the benefits system that would have tackled a lockdown-related surge in benefit payments linked to mental health were shelved following a backlash from Left-wing Labour MPs. The Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) has highlighted that just one in 20 people who have been out of work for more than a year ever go back to work. The tax-and-spending watchdog has also predicted the cost of footing Britain's sickness and disability benefits bill will approach £100bn a year by the end of the decade. A government spokesman said: 'We know that people face huge barriers to work – which is why we are overhauling jobcentres as part of our Get Britain Working Plan to give people the personalised support they need to get ahead. 'But as we shift the department's focus from welfare to work, it is right that there are obligations to engage with employment support, look for work and to take jobs when they are offered.'

Alex Salmond's Strichen widow suing Scottish Government over sexual harassment probe
Alex Salmond's Strichen widow suing Scottish Government over sexual harassment probe

Press and Journal

timean hour ago

  • Press and Journal

Alex Salmond's Strichen widow suing Scottish Government over sexual harassment probe

Former first minister Alex Salmond's Strichen widow is suing the Scottish Government over its botched handling of an investigation into sexual harassment allegations levelled against him. Moira Salmond, 88, has appointed a team of lawyers to restart Mr Salmond's case against the government he once led. Mr Salmond had been in the process of suing the government over its handling of an investigation into sexual harassment complaints against him. The Alba Party founder died of a heart attack in North Macedonia in October last year, aged 69. He previously lodged a claim in the Court of Session alleging misfeasance – the wrongful exercise of lawful authority – by civil servants. 'With this court action, that evasion of responsibility ends,' Mr Salmond said at the time. Nicola Sturgeon and Alex Salmond. Image: PA. Moira Salmond's determination to proceed is said to be driven by the publication of ex-first minister Nicola Sturgeon's memoir, Frankly. Alex Salmond was acquitted of 13 charges in 2020, including an accusation attempted rape. It came after a successful legal case against the Scottish Government when a judge ruled its initial probe into Mr Salmond's conduct had ben 'tainted by apparent bias'. Ms Sturgeon's book includes several references to her former mentor. Central to these is her denial of a 'conspiracy' to destroy the former first minister – an accusation repeatedly levelled by Mr Salmond prior to his death. Alex Salmond's widow Moira Salmond (centre) at the public memorial service for the former first minister. Image: PA 'He impugned the integrity of the institutions at the heart of Scottish democracy – government, police, Crown Office. 'He was prepared to traumatise, time and again, the women at the centre of it all,' Ms Sturgeon wrote. Alex Salmond's widow 'distressed' by Nicola Sturgeon memoir Moira Salmond said the comments had caused her distress. She said: 'Attacks by the living on the dead will seem to many as deeply unfair. My wish, and sincere hope, is that these attacks will now stop.' A family friend told the Sunday Mail: 'Moira is upset and angered by the continued attempts to smear Alex in the book – much of which is ridiculous and inaccurate. 'It has only strengthened her resolve to make sure that the full truth comes out and that Alex's name is cleared.' They added: 'Her case against the Scottish Government is now live, the legal team is in place, the finance in place and this will be going ahead, no question of that. 'Alex may not be here to defend himself but his family are determined to stand up to those who continue to attack him. Moira Salmond is said to be 'determined' to defend the former first minister. Image: PA 'There is an adjustment period ongoing until September where updates can be made by either side to their paperwork, it takes time but the ball is rolling. Anyone who thinks this is just going to go away is wrong.' Friends of the former SNP leader say the stress of the case was a factor in his death. The Scottish Government has been approached for comment.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store