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Sir Keir Starmer has defended cutting the winter fuel allowance for 10 million pensioners as he faces pressure to rethink the move.

The government announced last month the universal payment to pensioners, worth between £100 and £300 a year, would be restricted to just those who receive pension credit.

Sir Keir and Chancellor Rachel Reeves have been heavily criticised for the move, including by some Labour MPs and Age UK.

But the prime minister said on Monday: “We have found a £22bn black hole in the economy. And we’ve got to fix it.

“What we’re not going to do is pretend it isn’t there or paper over it. That’s what the last government did, and it made it worse. That means we’ve got to make tough choices.

“I don’t want to cut the winter fuel allowance. I don’t think anybody in the government wants to do that. But we’ve got to fix the foundations of our economy.”

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He said after fixing the foundations of the economy “we can build a build a better future that pensioners and so many other people voted for in this election”.

“This is a tough decision, not a decision I want to make, but I’m absolutely determined will stabilise the economy and fix the foundations,” he added.

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Labour MP Jessica Asato, newly elected in July, wrote to Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall last week calling for changes to the policy, specifically to increase the number of people who can claim it.

The Conservatives and Lib Dems have hit out at the plan, with Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey calling it the government’s “first big mistake”.

Both parties had called for a vote on axing the payments but the government has refused to hold one.

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The UK’s leading charity for older people, Age UK, has written to Ms Reeves with a detailed plan suggesting the allowance should be paid to two million more pensioners who are on other benefits, including housing benefits, council tax support, attendance allowance and carers’ allowance.

On Sunday, Commons leader Lucy Powell told Sky News’ Sunday Morning With Trevor Phillips the move was necessary as the economy could have crashed if the government had not found the savings.

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Nasdaq crypto chief pledges to ‘move as fast as we can’ on tokenized stocks

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Nasdaq crypto chief pledges to ‘move as fast as we can’ on tokenized stocks

The US Nasdaq stock exchange is making SEC approval of its proposal to offer tokenized versions of stocks listed on the exchange a top priority, according to the exchange’s crypto chief.

“We’ll just move as fast as we can,” Nasdaq’s head of digital assets strategy, Matt Savarese, said during an interview with CNBC on Thursday, when asked whether the SEC could approve the proposal this year.

“I think what we have to really evaluate where the public comments come back in and then answer and respond to the SEC questions as they come through,” Savarese said. “We hope to kind of work with them as quickly as possible,” Savarese said.

Savarese says Nasdaq isn’t “upending the system”

The proposal, submitted by Nasdaq on Sept. 8, is requesting to allow investors to buy and sell stock tokens — digital representations of shares in publicly traded companies — on the exchange.

Savarese emphasized that Nasdaq is not trying to overhaul the way stocks are invested in when asked whether he expects other major exchanges to follow suit.

Nasdaq, SEC, United States
Nasdaq’s head of digital assets, Matt Savarese, spoke to CNBC on Thursday. Source: CNBC

“We’re not looking at upending the system; we want everyone to come along for that ride and bring tokenization more into the mainstream,” he said.

“We want to do it in that responsible investor-led way first, under the SEC rules themselves,” he added.

It was only in October that Robinhood CEO Vlad Tenev said that tokenization will “eventually eat the whole financial system.”

The crypto industry is divided on tokenized equities

Savarese emphasized that Nasdaq is aiming to be an innovator in the ecosystem, noting that the exchange was the first to transition markets from paper-based trading to electronic systems.

Related: DATs bring crypto’s insider trading problem to TradFi: Shane Molidor

Tokenizing stocks has been one of the most significant talking points in the crypto industry this year.

On Sept. 3, Galaxy Digital CEO Mike Novogratz said the company became the first Nasdaq-listed company to tokenize its equity on a major blockchain following its launch on the Solana network.

The conversation around tokenized equities has also drawn skepticism from the crypto industry.

On Oct. 1, Rob Hadick, general partner at crypto venture firm Dragonfly, told Cointelegraph that tokenized equities will be a significant benefit to traditional markets, but may not be a boon to the crypto industry as others have predicted.

Hadick said that if tokenized stocks use layer-2 networks, it creates “leakage” as value and may not flow back to Ethereum or the broader crypto ecosystem as much as hoped.

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