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The government will not follow the advice of the previous Tory administration when it comes to slashing the welfare bill, a minister has said following reports the chancellor is eyeing up £3bn worth of cuts.

Work and pensions minister Alison McGovern said the UK was “paying the price of failure” from the previous government, with around 1.8 million people out of work who say they want a job.

Ahead of the budget, the government is looking to raise up to £40bn through tax hikes and spending cuts, to the alarm of some ministers who are concerned by the scale of the chancellor’s plans.

There have been reports that the Department for Work and Pensions is one target for cuts, with Rachel Reeves seeking to slash around £3bn from the welfare bill over the next four years by restricting access to sickness benefits.

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According to The Daily Telegraph, Ms Reeves hopes to achieve this by following the previous government’s plans to reform work capability rules by tightening eligibility, so that around 400,000 more people who are signed off long-term would be assessed as needing to prepare for employment by 2028/29 – a move that would reduce the benefits bill by an estimated £3bn.

Asked whether those who are not currently in work could expect to see their benefits cut, Ms McGovern said there had “always been rules” in the UK’s social security system, with a “duty on both sides”.

“People who are receiving social security have a duty to comply with those rules and the government has a duty to help people,” she said.

But she appeared to distance herself from the suggestion that Labour would follow the Conservatives’ blueprint, telling Sky News: “Like all departments, the Department for Work and Pensions has to make savings because the financial situation our country is in is not good at all.

“But I don’t think we should follow the advice of a Conservative government that failed over 14 years – so we will bring forward our own proposals.”

Before the election, The Tories pledged to reform the disability benefits system and target it at those most in need by tightening the criteria for work capability assessments.

They also proposed to pass on the responsibility for issuing sick notes from GPs to specialist work and health professionals.

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Rishi Sunak also pledged to take benefits away from people who were fit to work but did not accept job offers after 12 months, and to tighten the work capability assessment so those with less severe conditions would be expected to seek employment.

It is understood the chancellor will commit to the plan to save £3bn over four years, but Liz Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, will decide how the system will be changed in order to achieve this.

The reforms will also include overhauling job centres, delivering a “youth guarantee” to ensure young people are either working or learning, and devolving power to local leaders.

Read more:
The 800,000 people who have fallen into ‘economic inactivity’
Surge in young people claiming disability benefits, research suggests

Ms McGovern said it was the government’s ambition to get 80% of people into work, which would translate to more than two million extra people in the Labour market.

She said this could be achieved in part by reforming job centres, which she called “the most unloved public service”, adding: “The system we have means that people go into a job centre, they see somebody for ten minutes, tick the box and you’re off.

“And that has got to change because we’ve had 14 years of failure when it comes to our economy and getting people into work.”

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Farage accused of wanting to ‘take UK backwards’ – as Brexit blamed for small boats crisis

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Farage accused of wanting to 'take UK backwards' - as Brexit blamed for small boats crisis

Nigel Farage will be accused of wanting to “take Britain backwards” by vowing to scrap trade agreements between the UK and EU, as the government seeks a permanent deal to cut checks on food and drink.

The Reform leader wants to ditch the prime minister’s Brexit reset package, unveiled earlier this year, which covers areas including fishing, defence, a youth experience scheme, and passport e-gates.

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It also includes a temporary deal to reduce the red tape on imports and exports of some fruit and veg, meaning no border checks or fees are paid – and the government wants to make it permanent when it expires in 2027.

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Is the UK-EU deal really that good?

The minister tasked by Sir Keir Starmer with improving UK-EU ties is Nick Thomas-Symonds, who will use a speech later today to say Mr Farage “wants Britain to fail”.

Writing in The Telegraph in May, the arch-Brexiteer said Labour’s deal takes the UK “back into the orbit of Brussels”, and vowed a Reform government “would undo all of this legislation”.

Speaking in central London, Mr Thomas-Symonds will say undoing it would slash “at least £9bn from the economy, bringing with it a risk to jobs and a risk of food prices going up”.

The Cabinet Office minister will accuse him of offering “easy answers, dividing communities and stoking anger”.

A Reform UK spokesperson has dismissed the incoming criticism, claiming “no one has done more damage to British businesses than this Labour government”, pointing to tax rises on firms and the unemployment rate.

Nick Thomas-Symonds is on Sky News Breakfast – watch live from 7.15am.

Cabinet Office minister Nick Thomas-Symonds
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Cabinet Office minister Nick Thomas-Symonds

‘Farage’s Brexit caused the small boats’

The Labour minister’s criticism will come a day after Mr Farage revealed his controversial plans to stop small boat crossings, vowing any such arrivals – including women and children – would be detained and deported.

“If we do that, the boats will stop coming within days, because there will be no incentive to pay a trafficker to get into this country,” he told a news conference on Tuesday.

Reform would repeal the Human Rights Act and leave the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), saying they have allowed foreign offenders to challenge their own deportations through the courts and remain in the UK.

Mr Farage said such treaties are “outdated”, and that the British public were in a state of either “despair” or “anger” about illegal immigration.

Nigel Farage unveils his controversial deportation plans on Tuesday. Pic: PA
Image:
Nigel Farage unveils his controversial deportation plans on Tuesday. Pic: PA

Labour dismissed the proposals as “unworkable”, while the Tories said he’d stolen their ideas.

Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey was more personal, suggesting Mr Farage himself was responsible for the massive rise in small boat crossings.

“The truth is, it was Farage’s Brexit that caused the small boats,” Sir Ed said. “Before Brexit, we could send back any illegal immigrants coming over in a small boat.”

Read more:
Why Farage’s small boats plan is not really about policy
How Farage’s new ‘leave’ campaign could work and impact you

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Davey: Farage wants to ‘follow Putin’

Did Brexit make things harder?

Brexit ended UK participation in the so-called Dublin agreement which governs EU-wide asylum claims. It means people should be processed for asylum in the country at which they first entered the bloc.

Sky News previously revealed how former immigration minister Chris Philp, now shadow home secretary, admitted it made returning illegal immigrants harder.

But Britain’s membership of the EU did not stop all asylum arrivals. And many EU countries where people first arrive, including Italy, do not apply the Dublin rules.

Sir Ed said the government was now reduced to doing individual deals with countries to tackle the issue.

Labour are banking on a one in, out deal with the French, which will see the UK send asylum seekers to France in exchange for ones with links to the UK.

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Trump Jr. joins Polymarket board as prediction market eyes US comeback

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Trump Jr. joins Polymarket board as prediction market eyes US comeback

Trump Jr. joins Polymarket board as prediction market eyes US comeback

Donald Trump Jr. has joined Polymarket’s advisory board as 1789 Capital invests in the platform, tying the prediction market more closely to US politics.

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Japan wrote the first stablecoin rulebook — so why is the US pulling ahead?

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Japan wrote the first stablecoin rulebook — so why is the US pulling ahead?

Japan wrote the first stablecoin rulebook — so why is the US pulling ahead?

“Japan prizes systemic stability above innovation speed, while the US is signaling a bigger market-opening play,” said Startale Group’s Takashi Tezuka.

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