Oral Answers to Questions Debate

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Department: Department for Work and Pensions

Oral Answers to Questions

Richard Burgon Excerpts
Monday 21st March 2022

(2 years, 1 month ago)

Commons Chamber
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Mims Davies Portrait Mims Davies
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Across Rotherham, our jobcentre teams are really helping to employ people and get those vacancies filled. I have been in jobcentres where people have quite often been unemployed for a very long time; the experience of being offered a job, there and then, changes their lives. We are working locally and nationally with employers on local recruitment days, jobs fairs and sector-based work academies, all as part of the commitment to get half a million claimants into work by the end of June.

Richard Burgon Portrait Richard Burgon (Leeds East) (Lab)
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18. What steps her Department is taking to support people with the increase in the cost of living.

Thérèse Coffey Portrait The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions (Dr Thérèse Coffey)
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The Government are providing support worth over £21 billion across this financial year and the next to help families with the cost of living. Through the Department for Work and Pensions, that includes cutting the universal credit taper rate and increasing work allowances.

Richard Burgon Portrait Richard Burgon
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Most benefits and the state pension will rise by just 3% in April, but inflation could be over 8%, so that is a real-terms cut of 5% for people who are already having to choose between eating and heating. Given that, how on earth does the Secretary of State think it acceptable to target the incomes of the poorest in our society like this? Will she commit today to action so that nobody’s benefits are cut during the deepest cost of living crisis in decades?