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Reeves defends welfare cuts plan after report that over half of cabinet are unhappy – UK politics live


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Reeves defends welfare cuts plan after report that over half of cabinet are unhappy

Good morning. Keir Starmer is likely to spend much of the day preparing for tomorrow’s online summit that he is chairing for European leaders who might be part of the “coalition of the willing” prepared to help contribute to Ukraine’s defence in the event of a peace deal. But Russia’s response to the US/Ukraine ceasefire plan has not been promising, as Jakub Krupa reports on his Europe live blog, where he is covering all today’s developments in this story.

Domestically, it is not much easier for the PM either. This morning we learned that the economy shrank in January. Julia Kollewe is covering all this in detail on the business live blog.

And now we are only a few days away from the publication of the government’s plans to cut sickness and disability benfits by a reported £6bn, which in some respects is an even bigger problem for Starmer because it threatens to blow apart Labour party unity. In a remarkable story for Bloomberg last night, Ailbhe Rea says that at cabinet this week more than half of ministers there urged Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, to rethink these proposals. Rea says:

During the cabinet meeting, ministers voiced their frustration that such difficult welfare cuts are coming so soon after the raid on the aid budget, according to the people. They said how difficult the cuts would be to sell to the Labour parliamentary party.

One person said some ministers are on resignation watch, depending on the shape of the final package. A Labour lawmaker said Anneliese Dodds – who quit as development minister after the aid cut – won’t be the last to leave government as politicians are asked to stomach difficult cuts. A third person noted that Labour was planning a benefit cut that even George Osborne, the architect of the most recent phase of Conservative austerity, didn’t make.

Osborne has been making this very point himself, trolling the chancellor on his Political Currency podast.

But Reeves herself seems in no mood to back down. In an interview on BBC Breakfast this morning, where she was responding to the growth figures, Reeves was asked about the plans for welfare cuts. She replied:

We will set out our plans for welfare reform, but it is absolutely clear that the current system is not working for anyone.

It is not working for people who need support, it’s not working to get people into work so that more people can fulfil their potential, and it’s not working for the taxpayer when the bill for welfare is going up by billions of pounds in the next few years.

So, we do need to get a grip. We need to spend more on national defence, but we need to reform our public services, and we need to reform our broken welfare system.

Here is the agenda for the day.

9.30am: MPs debate private members’ bills, starting with Scott Arthur’s rare cancers bill.

Morning: Rachel Reeves, the chancellor is visiting a defence firm in Fife.

10.35am: Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, speaks at the Association of School and College Leaders conference.

11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

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