Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rener has said that one vote on the government’s welfare bill will move forward on Tuesday, yet a large number of Labor MPs oppose measures.
More than 130 MPs, including 120 labor backbenchers, have signed an amendment to eliminate the proposals, leading to an embarrassing defeat to the government.
Senior ministers, including Chancellor and Health Secretary, are trying to convince the round MPs to give up their protest.
Speaking in the Commons, the shadow Chancellor Sir Mel Strid asked Rener if she could defend the bill and explain why she felt that many of her colleagues were “wrong”.
Rener replied that the bill would help people work, and end the eligibility of eligibility for seriously disabled.
“We will not walk on the way and will not stand and leave millions of people who are trapped in a failed system left behind by him and his colleagues,” he said.
He accused the welfare policy of being “no plan and no idea”.
Speaking after the Prime Minister’s questions, a spokesperson of a downing street said that Sir Kir recognized the power to feel, but said that in a failed system, leaving millions of people was “not a moral or progressive thing”.
Government of government Universal loan and personal freedom payment bill Changes that will qualify for the benefit of disability and disease.
The ministers have said that the bill is important to slow down the increase in the number of people claiming profit.
However, the labor critics of the Bill have argued that the impact of measures has not been adequately assessed, which they say will push a large number of poverty.
Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch has said that his party may be ready to return the bill, which can provide the government to reduce the welfare budget and take more people to work, without increasing taxes – a list of situations that will not be likely to accept the government.
The bill was raised on the question of the Prime Minister, where – because the Prime Minister is at the NATO summit in the Netherlands – Rener and Sir Mail stood for their leaders.
In view of the level of opposition to the bill from the labor rank, there is speculation that the government will be forced to draw votes to avoid defeat.
Sir Mail asked whether this was the case, Rener unevenly responded: “We will move forward on Tuesday.”
Struid stated that Labor Backbencher had referred to “earlier” with the payment of winter fuel, Government’s U-turn last month,
He then reiterated the offer of his leader to the government to return his bill and save them from defeat, until the minister may commit to reducing the overall welfare bill.
Rener responded to an attack on Sir Mail, who served as the Work and Pension Secretary in the previous orthodox government.
“He demands a program to help people help work – what really this bill does – when he left one of the eight youths out of the economy.
“He further demands welfare savings, the person who was in charge was a completely balloon in the form of welfare bills. They say that the welfare bill cut – they failed.”
Sir Mail said that the government’s bill would fail to prevent the number of contenders from increasing and the tax grows in the autumn.
He asked Rener if he could rule with tax growth. He said that criticism was the “slightly rich” coming from a party that introduced the “biggest tax growth”.
Rener is the latest in a series of ministers, stating that they will proceed with welfare changes.
However, as it stands, the number seems difficult for the government and for the last few days senior ministers have been playing round labor MPs who assure them to return the bill.
So far, only one Labor MP, Samantha Niblet has taken its name in the list of MPs supporting the amendment.
At PMQS, Liberal Democrat deputy leader Daisy Cooper asked Rener to guarantee that “not a single person will lose a penny” Career’s allowance review The recommendations were met and recommendations were implemented.
The review was announced after more than 134,000 care was forced to pay thousands of pounds in more payments.
Rener said that the government is “taking steps” on this issue.