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Scrapping two-child benefit cap will be considered, minister says

22 Jul 2024 4 minute read
Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson with her painting of sunflowers, alongside pupils Wyatt, aged 4 (left), and Aicha, aged 4, during a visit to a nursery. Photo Yui Mok/PA Wire

Scrapping the two-child benefit cap will be “considered” by the Government, a Cabinet minister has said amid growing pressure for the measure to be dropped.

Education Secretary Bridget Phillipson on Monday said it would be looked at “as one of a number of ways” to lift children out of poverty.

It comes as Sir Keir Starmer could face the threat of his first backbench revolt over the benefit cap that affects some 1.6 million children – 65,000 of them in Wales.

Against the background of rising child poverty – with more than four million children now living in low-income households – the Prime Minister has been urged by charities, opposition parties and some of his own MPs to abolish the limit.

SNP amendment

The SNP has tabled an amendment to the King’s Speech calling for the cap to be axed and left-wing Labour MPs are expected to weigh in further to the debate on Monday.

Ms Phillipson said the possible scrapping of the limit would be looked at by a new taskforce she is leading with Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall as part of a review of potential policies to reduce child poverty.

She told Sky News: “Too many young people in our country are growing up in poverty. That number increased massively under the Conservatives.

“There are a range of measures that we will need to consider in terms of how we respond to this.”

On ditching the two-child benefit limit, she continued: “Unfortunately it’s also a very expensive measure, but we will need to consider it as one of a number of levers in terms of how we make sure we lift children out of poverty.

“Housing is a big factor… The fact that for lots of families work doesn’t pay in the way that it should, and that increasingly what we see is that children are growing up in poverty where there is at least one person in that household in work.

“We will look at every measure in terms of how we can address this terrible blight that scars the life chances of too many children.”

Public finances

Ministers have so far suggested the state of the public finances means they cannot afford to abolish the benefit limit unless economic growth is secured first.

The cap was introduced by then-Conservative chancellor George Osborne in 2015 and restricts child welfare payments to the first two children born to most families.

SNP Westminster leader Stephen Flynn urged Scottish Labour MPs to back the party’s amendment to remove the cap, which will be debated on Monday.

It is understood to have the support of former Labour leader and now Independent MP Jeremy Corbyn as well as the Green and Plaid Cymru MPs.

Whether the amendment is ultimately voted on is up to Commons Speaker Sir Lindsay Hoyle.

Mr Flynn said ahead of the debate: “The two-child cap was the Tories operating at their worst, so scrapping the cap would deliver on the promise made to the public for real change.”

The debate comes after Labour MP Rosie Duffield said in a Sunday newspaper the two-child benefit cap amounts to “social cleansing” and is an “anti-feminist and unequal piece of legislation”.

“It legislates against women’s autonomy over their own bodies, the exact opposite of anything that could possibly be described as a Labour Party value,” she wrote in an article for The Sunday Times.


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Padi Phillips
Padi Phillips
3 months ago

Just get rid and tax a few billionaires a little more fairly! The hesitation surrounding making this decision makes the UK government look complicit in applying Tory era policies. Surely this is a no-brainer and a priority if Labour wishes to be seen in the light that it’s beginning how it means to carry on.

The refusal to just do it doesn’t bode well for future developments.

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