Latest news with #DaisyCooper


Times
4 days ago
- Business
- Times
PMQs live: Keir Starmer defends winter fuel U-turn
Like the chancellor today, the prime minister refused to say what he would do about the two-child benefit cap. Responding to a question from Kemi Badenoch, Sir Keir Starmer echoed Rachel Reeves in saying he is 'determined we will drive down child poverty'. He spoke of the task force on the matter and said the government's strategy will be set out 'in due course'. At prime minister's questions, Kemi Badenoch accused the chancellor of 'rushing' her plans on winter fuel payments because she 'just realised when winter is'. The Conservative leader said the winter fuel payment had been 'set in stone' three weeks ago, then the prime minister U-turned two weeks ago before the chancellor's comments today on the level of means testing for the payment being increased for this winter. She asked how many of the 10 million people who lost payments will get them back. Starmer said that his government had 'stabilised the economy' and would look at eligibility for the payments and how to pay for it. The Liberal Democrats have called for the chancellor to apologise to pensioners over the government's winter fuel payment reversal. Daisy Cooper, the Lib Dem MP and Treasury spokeswoman, said: 'This whole debacle has caused needless misery for millions of pensioners. 'We will look at the details of the changes at the spending review next week. In the meantime the chancellor should apologise to all those pensioners who had to freeze this winter because of this senseless policy.' The pensions minister has claimed the winter fuel payment changes last winter did not have adverse health impacts on pensioners. Asked what excess deaths were predicted, Torsten Bell told the work and pensions committee: 'First of all, we saw negative excess deaths, so fewer deaths than normal. That's obviously due to a wide range of factors. 'But if we look at the cohorts particularly affected by changes in the winter fuel payments, we see no differential effects on their health outcomes over the course of last winter. That's obviously partly because there's lots of wider support.' Bell pointed to the extension of the household support fund, raising the state pension above inflation and plans for a warm homes programme. 'We do want to help more pensioners in future,' he said. The chancellor's announcement of funding for northern transport projects has been welcomed by regional leaders and unions. Steve Rotheram, the Liverpool City Region mayor, said: 'This is a massive vote of confidence in our region and shows what's possible when national and local government pull in the same direction. 'It's not just about better connections — good transport is an engine of growth. It helps people get to work, supports new homes and businesses and builds the foundations of a fairer, more productive economy.' The Aslef union said: 'Aslef welcomes investment towards a fully integrated public transport system across Great Britain. We await the chancellor's announcements for heavy rail in the spending review next week.' By Oliver Wright, Policy Editor For Britain's steel industry it is not so much the level of American tariffs that hurt — it is the uncertainty. Ever since Sir Keir Starmer and President Trump 'signed' their much-vaunted trade deal last month their US clients have been waiting for the agreement to come into effect. New orders have completely dried up as US purchasers of British steel and aluminum products wait to buy their goods 'tariff-free', rather than at the 25 per cent rate currently imposed. • Read in full: Britain may have signed trade deal far from being delivered Rachel Reeves is 'scrambling to salvage her failing economic plan' after her reversal on the winter fuel payments, the Conservative Party has said. After the chancellor's speech, Gareth Davies, shadow Treasury minister, said: 'Rachel Reeves is scrambling to salvage her failing economic plan after the prime minister has made U-turn after U-turn, punching holes in her credibility. 'She needed to do better than copying and pasting announcements made by the previous Conservative government. 'Britain deserves better. Only the Conservatives believe in sound money, low tax and the ingenuity of our entrepreneurs.' The spending review will have 'more than £300 billion' additional spending over this parliament than the Conservative government planned, the chancellor said. Rachel Reeves said: 'The previous government made a lot of commitments. What they didn't do is put the money in to be able to deliver them. That is the big difference about what we are doing. 'I will be setting out in a spending review where you can see every pound allocated, investment for three years for day-to-day spending, investment for five years for capital spending. 'We will then be publishing a ten-year national infrastructure plan. That is a world away.' Further transport spending announcements would be made at the spending review, she said, as well as commitments on energy, digital infrastructure and housing. Rachel Reeves insisted she would set out how to pay for any increase in the threshold for winter fuel allowance at the next budget. Asked whether she would tell the public if she planned to fund her commitments by raising taxes or cutting spending on other departments, the chancellor said: 'As we have been clear, on winter fuel we will set out how we will fund that at the next fiscal event. 'We will set out how everything will be paid for at the budget in the autumn but it's important that everything that we do is funded, because that's how people know that we can afford it.' The chancellor dodged a question on the two-child benefit cap, saying she would not make unfunded spending commitments. Reeves said the cap was 'inherited' from the previous government and would cost more than £3 billion to reverse. 'I won't make spending commitments without explaining where money will come from,' she said. However, she insisted that the government was 'determined to reduce child poverty' and that it is a 'moral mission'. Work has already started with breakfast clubs and more money in childcare, she said, adding that the child poverty task force will report in the autumn before the government sets out further plans. By Chris Smyth Winter fuel payments will be restored this winter but wealthier pensioners will not get them, ministers have said. Rachel Reeves promised that 'more people will get winter fuel payments this winter', suggesting she would set out details of changes to eligibility at the spending review. She said a 'means test' would be introduced by the winter, despite concern that ageing government computer systems would struggle to adapt thresholds in time. Torsten Bell, the pensions minister, ruled out restoring universal payments to all pensioners. The level of the winter fuel payments means testing will increase this winter, the chancellor said. Reeves said she had to make 'difficult decisions' last year to 'restore sound public finances', but they are now on 'firmer footing'. She said she had also listened to concerns about the level of the means test. 'We will be making changes to that,' she said. 'They will be in place so pensioners are paid this coming winter. We will announce the details as soon as we possibly can. 'People should be in no doubt that the means test will increase and more people will get winter fuel this winter.' The government's deal with the United States will bring tariffs down to zero, the chancellor has said. Asked about steel tariffs for Britain being 25 per cent while the rest of the world is on 50 per cent, Rachel Reeves said the news of Britain's exemption had been 'welcomed by UK steel'. She said that was due to the work of Jonathan Reynolds, the business secretary, and the prime minister with the US. 'We have done a deal that will bring tariffs down to zero,' she added. 'We are still the only country that has done a deal with the US.' Spending on police will be increased in the spending review next week, the chancellor said. It comes after the commissioner of the Met Police, Sir Mark Rowley, wrote to the prime minister warning that police will face 'stark choices' about which crimes they investigate if the Treasury went ahead with cuts. Daisy Eastlake from The Times asked Reeves which crimes the government was happy for police to ignore. Rachel Reeves said: 'We will be increasing spending on police in the spending review next week. That is not a choice I would recognise.' Income tax, VAT, and National Insurance will not be increased, the chancellor said. Asked if she would reiterate the government's commitment on those taxes, Rachel Reeves said: 'I already said the commitment not to increase the key taxes working people make are promises that we stand by.' Rachel Reeves insisted Labour's manifesto commitments on policing, housing and energy were not at risk. Asked whether that was the case, the chancellor said: 'We made those commitments and we stick to them. The commitments in our manifesto were fully costed and fully funded.' It comes after reports that the home secretary, housing secretary and energy secretary are yet to reach settlements with the Treasury. The chancellor sought to paint a picture of investment before expected cuts in the spending review. On top of the increase in day-to-day spending, funded in part by the tax hikes Rachel Reeves set out in the autumn budget, she said looser borrowing rules would help support a £113 billion investment package. She said: 'Britain faces a binary choice: investment or decline, and I choose investment because I believe in an entrepreneurial and an active state and I reject wholeheartedly the old-fashioned, dogmatic view that the only good thing a government can do is get out of the way.' Connectivity is a 'critical factor in unlocking the potential' of towns and cities outside London, Reeves said. This is the 'biggest ever investment by a British government in transport links in city regions and surrounding towns', the chancellor said, before detailing each recipient of investment. This investment in transport will support British supply chains, Reeves promised, with new trains, buses and trams meaning orders for steel made in Britain. 'The government was presented with a choice to allow British Steel in Scunthorpe to close or intervene. 'I was not prepared to tolerate a situation where our steel capacity was undermined. I was not prepared to see another working-class community lose its pride. We intervened, we saved British Steel and jobs.' Rachel Reeves blamed 14 years of Conservative governance for the disappointments in the upcoming spending review. 'Not every department will get everything they want next week,' the chancellor admitted. 'I had to say no to things I want to do too.' It was not about her fiscal rules, she insisted, but the result of '14 years of mistreatment' of public services and the economy. The 'stability' that her fiscal rules supported and the choices she made at the budget in October had helped make improvements such as interest rate cuts, Reeves said. Nigel Farage and Reform UK are 'itching' to repeat the same 'reckless borrowing' as Liz Truss, Rachel Reeves warned. 'No one should need to be told about the dangers of reckless borrowing,' the chancellor said, pointing to the former Conservative government. 'Working people paid the price.' 'Be in no doubt, Nigel Farage and Reform are itching to repeat that exact same experiment. To pursue fantasy economics all over again.' 'The results would be the same,' she said. 'I will never take those risks, Labour will never take those risks.' A regional investment summit will be held this autumn, Rachel Reeves announced. 'I've been a Leeds MP for 15 years and I am painfully familiar with big promises that come to nothing,' the chancellor said. 'I know that brilliant talent is to be found right across our country. I know a prosperous UK depends on the economic strength of all its parts.' The summit will be hosted alongside the West Midlands mayor, Richard Parker, and the business secretary, Jonathan Reynolds. Next week's spending review will be 'targeted squarely' on renewal of Britain, the chancellor said. Reeves said the review would invest in security, health and economic growth and deliver on 'the promise of change to make you and your family better off'. The 'central challenge' the government faces is improving living standards and renewing public services, Rachel Reeves has said. 'I know how hard the last few years have been,' the chancellor said as she began her announcement. She added that underinvestment was the central barrier to growth. Before the chancellor's address, the mayor of Greater Manchester said: 'Good transport powers good growth.' Andy Burnham claimed the area was 'growing faster than the UK economy' at 3.1 per cent average annual growth in the first decade of devolution. 'The government is backing us and our message is we are backing you, we're backing the chancellor.' Today's announcement comes a week before the spending review on June 11, when cuts to department budgets are expected. Rachel Reeves will try to divert attention to the areas which will get a boost with today's transport announcement. Fears are already growing of the cuts that will affect public services and Sir Mark Rowley, head of the Metropolitan Police, has written to the prime minister to warn that some crimes will be ignored if police forces are hit. Some projects being backed today, such as the development of a mass transit network in West Yorkshire, formed part of the former prime minister Rishi Sunak's 'Network North' plan, intended to compensate for the decision to scrap the HS2 line north of Birmingham. After coming to power in July, Labour started a review of those projects, arguing they had not been fully funded. The chancellor will announce £15.6 billion to be spent on projects which are expected to include: • £2.4 billion for the West Midlands to fund an extension of the region's metro from Birmingham city centre to the new sports quarter• £2.1 billion to start building West Yorkshire Mass Transit by 2028• Greater Manchester will receive £2.5 billion for projects including new tram stops in Bury, Manchester and Oldham and an extension of the tram network to Stockport• £1.5 billion investment in South Yorkshire will include £530 million to renew the region's trams• The East Midlands will receive £2 billion to design a mass transit system between Derby and Nottingham• The West of England will receive £800 million, including £200 million to develop mass transit links between Bristol, Bath, South Gloucestershire and North Somerset Rachel Reeves will warn that Britain has become reliant on 'too few places' for economic growth as she promises £15 billion for transport links in the north and Midlands to spur growth and combat the threat of Reform. The chancellor will set out a dozen local transport projects designed to encourage growth in red wall areas where Nigel Farage is breathing down Labour's neck, promising to give 'every region a fair hearing' on bids for public cash. She will confirm a rewrite of Treasury investment rules designed to divert money away from the southeast towards areas that ministers say have been 'locked out' of public cash and left behind economically. • Read in full: Rachel Reeves pledges investment to boost north

South Wales Argus
20-05-2025
- Business
- South Wales Argus
Chancellor sidesteps calls to reverse cuts to winter fuel allowance and benefits
The Chancellor said she would 'never' make a policy commitment without being able to say where the money is coming from after claiming the Government has 'returned stability back' to the UK economy. Ms Reeves also said the Government had to take 'difficult decisions and urgent decisions' following last summer's election as she responded to MPs urging her to change course. Reports have suggested ministers could remove the two-child benefit cap or reconsider its decision to means-test the winter fuel payment for pensioners, as a means of placating rebellious Labour MPs. Ms Reeves told LBC that she is 'listening' to the concerns 'about the level at which the winter fuel payment is removed', which hinted at possible changes to the threshold. Speaking at Treasury questions, Independent MP Rosie Duffield (Canterbury) told the Commons: 'Westminster is once again buzzing with the latest U-turn speculation and briefings over the Chancellor's policies on the winter fuel allowance and the two-child limit benefits cap. 'It's less of a buzz for those visitors to Canterbury Food Bank, however, who last month distributed enough food to make 13,545 meals – a 47% rise on the same period last year. 'Will the Chancellor end the serious anxiety of those experiencing fuel and food poverty now and reverse those policies?' Ms Reeves replied to her former Labour colleague: 'The only reason that we've been able to grow the economy and get those cuts in interest rates, which helped working families in Canterbury and right across our country, is to have returned stability back to our economy and that means never making a policy commitment without being able to say where the money is coming from; that is what got our country into a mess under the previous government. 'So we've set out the policies that we needed to put investment into the NHS and to secure our public finances.' Deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats Daisy Cooper (James Manning/PA) Liberal Democrat Treasury spokeswoman Daisy Cooper said: 'Yesterday the Chancellor said that she understands the concerns that some people have about the limit at which the winter fuel payment is removed. 'In light of that, does the Chancellor now agree that restricting the eligibility so tightly was a mistake?' Ms Reeves replied: 'When I became Chancellor last year we inherited a £22 billion black hole in the public finances not at some year in the future but in the financial year that we were already three or four months into. 'It meant that we had to make difficult decisions and urgent decisions to put our public finances back on a firm footing because unlike the party opposite we will never play fast and loose with the public finances.' Labour MP Brian Leishman (Alloa and Grangemouth) called for a wealth tax. He said: 'To alleviate grinding penury for millions the Chancellor could introduce an annual wealth tax on multimillionaires that would raise approximately £24 billion per annum – yet the Chancellor refuses to entertain this, but does consider cuts to welfare as acceptable. 'Why do 'tough political choices' always seem to impact those who are most vulnerable?' Ms Reeves replied: 'At the budget last year we increased the rate of tax on non-doms, we increased capital gains tax, we increased the carried interest on bonuses and we also introduced VAT on private schools. 'This Government is ensuring that wealthiest pay their fair share because that's a basic Labour principle.' Shadow chancellor Mel Stride pressed Ms Reeves on her future tax proposals, asking: 'Can the Chancellor explain what the economic secretary (Emma Reynolds) meant last week when she said that there will be 'no tax rises on individuals at the autumn budget', and can she similarly confirm that there will be no tax increases on businesses?' Ms Reeves replied: 'In our manifesto we set out that we would not increase taxes on working people – the income tax, national insurance or VAT that they pay – and it's why we also reversed the decision by the previous government to increase fuel duty, which would have had a disastrous effect on working people in our country. 'We will set out all other tax policy at the budget.' Elsewhere in the session, Ms Reeves said the Government believes the UK's new trade deal with the EU will bring down bills for consumers. Labour MP Graham Stringer (Blackley and Middleton South) said: 'The European emissions trading scheme has a carbon price 50% higher than the UK's price. 'What assessment has the Chancellor made of the impact of joining this scheme will have on inflation in this country?' Ms Reeves replied: 'Sometimes the UK carbon price has been higher, sometimes it's been lower than the carbon price in the EU. But what this deal will ensure is a bigger market which on average brings prices down. 'We're confident that the deal secured yesterday will bring more good jobs and will bring down bills for consumers.'


Channel 4
19-05-2025
- Business
- Channel 4
Debate: Is UK-EU deal a ‘Brexit betrayal?'
We spoke to the Deputy Leader of the Liberal Democrats, Daisy Cooper, and also the Shadow Financial Secretary to the Treasury, the Conservative MP Gareth Davies.
Yahoo
29-04-2025
- Politics
- Yahoo
Councils must listen to parents on SEND
The deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats has said councils must work with parents and teachers to deliver for children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND). Daisy Cooper spoke to residents in Westerham, Kent, on Monday in the run-up to Thursday's local elections. Provisions for SEND pupils have been a challenge for councils across the UK, with growing demand and tight budgets. But Cooper told the BBC: "What I've been hearing is that there are parents and teachers who have solutions." She said the Liberal Democrats would create a national body for SEND and ensure funding for children with particularly acute and high level needs was provided. "But locally, what we've been saying is that there does need to be a much greater focus on working closely with parents and teachers," she said. Speaking during Cooper's visit, one parent, Claire, said: "If you can get the special education needs provisions right in the early days, you can save so much wasted money and tribunals. "Fundamentally, you judge a society by how well they look after their most disadvantaged." Another parent told the BBC it was important the council ensured children get a "fair start in life". There are a number of other issues at the front of people's minds as they prepare to cast their vote - the chief among which seemed to be potholes. Voters in 23 local authorities across England will go to the polls on Thursday to choose their new councillors, with mayors also up for election across six regions. It will be the first big electoral test for the parties since last summer's general election, and more than half of the council seats up for grabs are currently held by the Conservatives. Kent County Council has been dominated by the Conservatives for the last three decades. This year, the Lib Dems and other parties are confident of making gains, which could mean no party has an overall majority on the council, leading to a coalition. When asked if her party would enter into a coalition with the Conservatives in Kent, Cooper said: "Look, we're not taking any votes for granted and a decision on whatever happens after Thursday is a decision for local politicians. "We don't give any national guidelines." Meanwhile, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has admitted May's local elections are "going to be very difficult" for the Conservatives. She told BBC Radio 4's Today programme July's general election was a "historic defeat" for the party. "Two-thirds of the seats four years ago we won - there's no way we are going to be able to do that again," she said. Nigel Farage's Reform UK is standing more candidates than the Conservatives and Labour, and is contesting 99.4% of the available seats. The Green Party is aiming for a "record" number of councillors as it looks to increase its power base for an eighth election in a row, party co-leader Adrian Ramsay has said. Follow BBC Kent on Facebook, on X, and on Instagram. Send your story ideas to southeasttoday@ or WhatsApp us on 08081 002250. IN DEPTH: Will this be the 'anyone but the big parties' local election? SIMPLE GUIDE: Everything you need to know about the local elections GET IN TOUCH: Tell us the election issues that matter to you FULL COVERAGE: Catch up on all our election stories Local elections 2025: Is there an election in my area and where can I vote?


BBC News
29-04-2025
- Politics
- BBC News
Lib Dems' Daisy Cooper visits Kent ahead of local elections
The deputy leader of the Liberal Democrats has said councils must work with parents and teachers to deliver for children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND).Daisy Cooper spoke to residents in Westerham, Kent, on Monday in the run-up to Thursday's local for SEND pupils have been a challenge for councils across the UK, with growing demand and tight Cooper told the BBC: "What I've been hearing is that there are parents and teachers who have solutions." She said the Liberal Democrats would create a national body for SEND and ensure funding for children with particularly acute and high level needs was provided."But locally, what we've been saying is that there does need to be a much greater focus on working closely with parents and teachers," she during Cooper's visit, one parent, Claire, said: "If you can get the special education needs provisions right in the early days, you can save so much wasted money and tribunals."Fundamentally, you judge a society by how well they look after their most disadvantaged."Another parent told the BBC it was important the council ensured children get a "fair start in life". What about coalitions? There are a number of other issues at the front of people's minds as they prepare to cast their vote - the chief among which seemed to be in 23 local authorities across England will go to the polls on Thursday to choose their new councillors, with mayors also up for election across six will be the first big electoral test for the parties since last summer's general election, and more than half of the council seats up for grabs are currently held by the County Council has been dominated by the Conservatives for the last three year, the Lib Dems and other parties are confident of making gains, which could mean no party has an overall majority on the council, leading to a asked if her party would enter into a coalition with the Conservatives in Kent, Cooper said: "Look, we're not taking any votes for granted and a decision on whatever happens after Thursday is a decision for local politicians. "We don't give any national guidelines." Meanwhile, Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has admitted May's local elections are "going to be very difficult" for the told BBC Radio 4's Today programme July's general election was a "historic defeat" for the party."Two-thirds of the seats four years ago we won - there's no way we are going to be able to do that again," she Farage's Reform UK is standing more candidates than the Conservatives and Labour, and is contesting 99.4% of the available Green Party is aiming for a "record" number of councillors as it looks to increase its power base for an eighth election in a row, party co-leader Adrian Ramsay has said. IN DEPTH: Will this be the 'anyone but the big parties' local election?SIMPLE GUIDE: Everything you need to know about the local electionsGET IN TOUCH: Tell us the election issues that matter to youFULL COVERAGE: Catch up on all our election stories