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Universal Credit: Tories risk return to ‘nasty party’ warns Government’s former homelessness adviser

“To remove that £20 a week – it’s too punitive, it’s not the right thing to do, and I think they just go back to being the nasty party.”

Joe Mellor by Joe Mellor
January 20, 2021
in News

The Tories risk regaining their reputation as the “nasty party” if they end the £20-a-week rise in Universal Credit, the Government’s former homelessness adviser has warned.

It comes as yesterday Caroline Lucas the MP for Brighton Pavilion said: “This follows a whole series of catastrophes in terms of the way they’ve been dealing with some of the people who need the support the most and I’m thinking of the whole fiasco around free school meals.

“It does seem that they lurch from one crisis to the next. The narrative that is being written up, really, is that this is a nasty party again. That this is a party that is perfectly happy for the price of the Covid pandemic to be paid for by some of the poorest people who are least able to do so.”

Now Dame Louise Casey said that if the increase is withdrawn at the end of March as planned it would be “too punitive” for families struggling during the coronavirus pandemic.

Her warning comes as Chancellor Rishi Sunak is under growing pressure from Conservative MPs to extend the increase – originally intended as a temporary measure following the outbreak last year.

They include a number of the so-called “red wall” Tories who captured a series of Labour strongholds in the North and Midlands as Boris Johnson swept to victory in the 2019 general election.

Economy

They have argued that with lockdown restrictions required for far longer than was originally envisaged, people need continuing support while the economy begins to recover.

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On Monday, six Conservative MPs defied the party whips to vote for a symbolic Labour motion calling for the increase to be retained.

Mr Sunak, however, is reported to be deeply reluctant as he seeks to begin to repair the damage caused to the public finances by the pandemic.

In a BBC interview, Dame Louise said that while she understood his reluctance to say his “chequebook is forever open”, he needed to consider the effect it would have on people’s lives.

‘‘The Treasury need to step back and not feel this constant responsibility to close the books all the time and fight and fight and fight,” she said.

“They need to step back and think if we really want to rebuild Britain, what type of economic policy do we need to put in place that will … not take the knees out from under people.

Punitive

“To remove that £20 a week – it’s too punitive, it’s not the right thing to do, and I think they just go back to being the nasty party.”

Dame Louise said the country had been “torn to shreds” by the pandemic and called on ministers to draw up plans to deal with the fallout.

“The wounds it’s inflicted on the country are far deeper and greater than anything I’ve ever seen in my lifetime in terms of ordinary folk having to claim Universal Credit, ordinary people having to turn to food banks, ordinary people becoming homeless,” she said.

“I think we will need to have a big plan to deal with the wounds inflicted by this pandemic once everybody’s vaccinated.

“And I think the Government needs to turn its attention to that now, and not leave it until the summer.”

Related: Full list of MPs who abstained on vote to cancel cuts to Universal Credit

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