



MPs will vote on plans to scrap winter fuel payments for millions of pensioners - as Chancellor Rachel Reeves said plans were underway that could help more people keep the benefit.
It’s understood the controversial change will be debated in the Commons, followed by a vote next week. It had previously been thought MPs wouldn’t get a chance to vote on the measure until October’s budget.
It risks the biggest rebellion yet for Keir Starmer ’s government, with anger among many Labour MPs over the benefit being means tested, and restricted to only those pensioners who qualify for pension credit. But Labour’s huge majority means it’s unlikely to be overturned.
Meanwhile, Ms Reeves announced the Department for Work and Pensions would change how pension credit is handed out, to ensure everyone who qualifies for it will still receive winter fuel payments. There are roughly 800,000 people in Britain who qualify for pension credit but do not claim it.
Speaking at her first Treasury Questions since taking office, Ms Reeves confirmed pensioners receiving housing benefit will automatically get any pension credit they’re due.
She said: “The DWP will also bring together the administration of pension credit and housing benefits, so that pensioner households currently receiving housing benefit also receive any pension credit that they are entitled to – something that the previous government deferred for years despite knowing that the poorest pensioners were missing out.”
The Chancellor defended the move as she repeatedly told MPs that increases to the basic state pension mean that people will be "£900 better off" than a year ago, adding the Labour Government is committed to increasing it further in the coming years. But she faced warnings from her own MPs and those on the opposition benches about the potential consequences of stopping winter fuel payments for people in England and Wales who are not in receipt of Pension Credit or other means-tested benefits.
The policy is expected to reduce the number of pensioners in receipt of the up to £300 payment by 10 million, from 11.4 million to 1.5 million, saving around £1.4 billion this year.
Ms Reeves said she would not speculate on next month's Budget after the Conservatives urged her to guarantee that she will not increase taxes on pensions.
She told the Commons: "I understand that members from across the House will have questions on the tax system for me today. I remind them that tax announcements will be made in the Budget on October 30, alongside an independent forecast from the Office of Budget Responsibility."
The Chancellor blamed the previous Conservative administration for leaving a "£22 billion black hole" due to "unfunded spending commitments" with "no idea how to pay for them".
She said: "When I became Chancellor I took an immediate audit of the spending situation to understand the scale of that challenge, and I made difficult decisions to put the public finances on a sustainable footing. They were tough decisions, but they were the right decisions.
"This includes the decision to make the winter fuel payment better targeted so pensioners who need it most will get it alongside pension credits."
Labour MP Rachael Maskell warned the average rent rise in York of 11.9% exceeded the state pension rise by £380 this year.
She said: "With the loss of the cost-of-living payments and winter fuel payments, an increase in the energy price cap and cost of living, pensioners are frightened about how they're going to keep warm this winter - as am I."
The York Central MP asked Ms Reeves how she will protect pensioners who are above the Pension Credit threshold in order to "prevent cold, ill health or worse this winter".
Ms Reeves replied: "The basic state pension is worth £900 more than it was a year ago and will go up again in April next year because of the triple lock, which we have committed to for the duration of this Parliament."
She added the Government is working with local authorities to boost the take-up of Pension Credit.
The triple lock guarantees the state pension will rise by inflation, average wage growth or 2.5%.
Labour MP Paula Barker (Liverpool Wavertree) said the charity Age UK reports there are around one million pensioners who "just miss out" on the winter fuel payment, noting: "These are people living on modest incomes within £50 of the poverty line, who will miss out due to a tiny occupational pension - including many in Liverpool Wavertree."
She asked whether Pension Credit will be backdated, with Ms Reeves confirming it can be for up to three months.
Conservative former minister Dame Harriett Baldwin said Ms Reeves has made a "chilling political choice to balance the books of this country on the very frailest shoulders" by making changes to the winter fuel payment.
Wendy Morton, another Tory former minister, said thousands of pensioners in her Aldridge-Brownhills constituency are "worried at the prospect" of losing their winter fuel payment "on which they rely".
She asked Ms Reeves: "Will she reconsider and reverse her decision?"
The Chancellor referred to increases to the state pension, adding: "But it is important that we ensure that the 800,000 people who missed out on Pension Credit under the previous Conservative government now get access to that support, because those are the poorest pensioners, and at the moment they are living in poverty because the previous government failed to sign them up to Pension Credit."
Liberal Democrat MP Steve Darling earlier said 21,000 pensioners will be impacted by the cut in his constituency of Torbay, in Devon.
He said: "Whilst many of us would acknowledge that you were left with a massive financial challenge when coming into this House, one remains extremely concerned for residents who have reached out to myself and many colleagues with their major concerns about being able to make ends meet as we enter into the winter period.
"They have had no time to save for this, and therefore it's a complete shock to them.
"What assurances can you give us that you'll be supporting those who are most vulnerable, and if it's failing to achieve this, what assurances can you give that you will scrap these proposals?"
Ms Reeves referenced the work to improve uptake of Pension Credit in her reply.
Be the first with news from Mirror Politics
WHATSAPP GROUP: Be first to get the biggest bombshells and breaking news by joining our Politics WhatsApp group here.
NEWSLETTER: Or sign up here to the Mirror's Politics newsletter for all the best exclusives and opinions straight to your inbox.
PODCAST: And listen to our exciting new political podcast The Division Bell, hosted by Mirror political editor John Stevens and Express political editor Sam Lister, every Tuesday and Thursday.