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A Labour MP has broken ranks over the government’s £5bn benefit cuts, saying they will have a “devastating” impact on coastal communities like his.

Chris Webb, the newly elected MP for Blackpool South, said the measures announced by the work and pensions secretary on Tuesday were “not what any of us stood on in the manifesto”.

Politics live: Has shine come off Labour?

He told Sky News the government had “forgotten” coastal communities like Blackpool, which has the lowest male life expectancy in Britain and where nearly half of children live in poverty.

Mr Webb, who is the first of Labour’s new 2024 MPs to publicly criticise the reforms, said he was concerned they had been “rushed” to coincide with the timing of next week’s spring statement – echoing criticism from Tory shadow chancellor Mel Stride.

And he warned Liz Kendall’s welfare changes – in particular the tightening of the eligibility criteria for one of the main types of benefit, personal independence payments (PIP) – could push more children below the breadline.

“This is a devastating blow for people already using food banks, already waiting for mental health support,” he said.

“And in places like these coastal towns that have been forgotten these past 14 years, there just isn’t the jobs to get these people back into work.”

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Govt ‘rushed’ welfare reforms

Claimants in limbo until spring statement

Addressing MPs in the Commons yesterday, Ms Kendall said the government would not freeze PIP, as reports had previously suggested, but would tighten the eligibility criteria.

It’s unclear how many people will be impacted, with the Office for Budget Responsibility’s full costings report not due until the spring statement on 26 March.

Ministers have said as well as providing much-needed savings, there is a moral case for cuts, as one in eight young people are not in education, training, or employment.

But Mr Webb said without the necessary mental health support, it would be difficult for young people to find the employment they are being encouraged to take up – with waiting lists reaching between 18 months and two years.

He also argued jobs had been prioritised in the South East and Manchester, with “nothing for coastal communities”.

Read more:
How is PIP changing?

All the welfare reforms explained
The town where a third are not in work

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Benefits cuts explained

‘This will make people worse off’

While Mr Webb said he understood the need to make savings, he believed this could be done via other means.

He suggested a wealth tax, and following Germany in approving a change to constitutional borrowing rules to allow much more defence spending.

“If you’re saying a young person needs to get to work, I don’t see a plan where that mental support will increase in time,” he said.

“These changes aren’t going to be enacted until 2028/29, so there may be a plan alongside this to do it – but at the minute, I’m not convinced by that, and this will make people in my constituency worse off.

“If I’m to support these measures, I need to see a clear strategy so that I can tell my constituents, my friends, my neighbours, and family – there is something coming.”

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112 crypto companies urge Senate to protect developers in market structure bill

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112 crypto companies urge Senate to protect developers in market structure bill

112 crypto companies urge Senate to protect developers in market structure bill

Coinbase, Kraken, Ripple, a16z and others pressed the Senate to add explicit protections for developers and non-custodial services in the market structure bill.

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After six months of planning, Reform’s immigration policy is as clear as mud

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After six months of planning, Reform's immigration policy is as clear as mud

Reform’s plan was meant to be detailed. Instead, there’s more confusion.

The party had grown weary of the longstanding criticism that their tough talk on immigration did not come with a full proposal for what they would do to tackle small boats if they came to power.

So, after six months of planning, yesterday they attempted to put flesh on to the bones of their flagship policy.

Politics latest: Farage rows back on pledge to deport illegal migrant women and girls

At an expensive press conference in a vast airhanger in Oxford, the headline news was clear: Reform UK would deport anyone who comes here by small boat, arresting, detaining and then deporting up to 600,000 people in the first five years of governing.

They would leave international treaties and repeal the Human Rights Act to do it

But, one day later, that policy is clear as mud when it comes to who this would apply to.

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Nigel Farage launched an airport-style departures board to illustrate how many illegal migrants have arrived in the UK. Pic: PA
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Nigel Farage launched an airport-style departures board to illustrate how many illegal migrants have arrived in the UK. Pic: PA

I asked Farage at the time of the announcement whether this would apply to women and girls – an important question – as the basis for their extreme policy seemed to hinge on the safety of women and girls in the UK.

He was unequivocal: “Yes, women and children, everybody on arrival will be detained.

“And I’ve accepted already that how we deal with children is a much more complicated and difficult issue.”

But a day later, he appeared to row back on this stance at a press conference in Scotland, saying Reform is “not even discussing women and children at this stage”.

Read more:
Farage has a new ‘leave’ campaign – here’s how it could work

He later clarified that if a single woman came by boat, then they could fall under the policy, but if “a woman comes with children, we will work out the best thing to do”.

A third clarification in the space of 24 hours on a flagship policy they worked on over six months seems like a pretty big gaffe, and it only feeds into the Labour criticism that these plans aren’t yet credible.

If they had hoped to pivot from rhetoric to rigour, this announcement showed serious pitfalls.

But party strategists probably will not be tearing out too much hair over this, with polling showing Reform UK still as the most trusted party on the issue of immigration overall.

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Crypto trader ups MEXC ‘bounty’ to $2.5M after in-person KYC request

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Crypto trader ups MEXC ‘bounty’ to .5M after in-person KYC request

Crypto trader ups MEXC ‘bounty’ to .5M after in-person KYC request

The “White Whale” increased his social media pressure campaign to $2.5 million after claiming that MEXC requested an in-person KYC verification in Malaysia.

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