MP hits out over benefits cap

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WARRINGTON South MP David Mowat lambasted Labour MPs for failing to support a benefits cap as part of the Welfare Reform Bill.
Labour Peers voted to remove the cap from the Bill last month, but on Wednesday the House of Commons voted 334 to 251 to impose a cap.
The cap would ensure that no one family could earn more than a total of £26,000 a year once all benefits have been taken into account.
Disability Living Allowance and Working Tax Credits are excluded from the cap. Government figures suggest that this figure is roughly equivalent to a working family having a pre-tax annual income of around £35,000.
Mr Mowat said: “Labour told us they wanted fairness and responsibility in the benefits system. They said that they supported the principle of a cap on benefits, but when they had the opportunity to put words into action, they bowed yet again to their union paymasters.
“No one is going to believe their rhetoric on benefits any more as they have shown themselves to be out of touch and untrustworthy.
“Last week MPs had a very simple question to answer: many families in places like Warrington have far lower incomes than £35,000, despite working long hours. Why should they be picking up the bill for other families to live in some of the poshest parts of London?
“Conservatives understand this and that’s why we have put ourselves firmly on the side of ordinary people.”


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Experienced journalist for more than 40 years. Managing Director of magazine publishing group with three in-house titles and on-line daily newspaper for Warrington. Experienced writer, photographer, PR consultant and media expert having written for local, regional and national newspapers. Specialties: PR, media, social networking, photographer, networking, advertising, sales, media crisis management. Chair of Warrington Healthwatch Director Warrington Chamber of Commerce Patron Tim Parry Johnathan Ball Foundation for Peace. Trustee Warrington Disability Partnership. Former Chairman of Warrington Town FC.

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  1. “The cap would ensure that no one family could earn more than a total of £26,000 a year” Can I just take issue with the use of the word earn when applied to benefits. In what way is a money doled out for doing nothing, “earned”?

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