Universal Credit will be axed if Labour are voted into power in the next election, promised Jeremy Corbyn as he unveiled a manifesto of “real change”.
The party have vowed to immediately introduce a series of “emergency reforms” initially before ending the controversial benefits system at the end of their parliamentary term if they are voted into power on the December 12 election.
Universal Credit has come under fire for driving people into poverty – earlier this month, The Trussell Trust cited the five-week wait for a first payment as a main driver in the 23 per cent rise in the number of emergency food parcels they gave out in 2019.
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Wirral West candidate and Labour’s Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary Margaret Greenwood told The Big Issue that it was evidence like this that led to the party’s manifesto pledge to spend £8.4 million reforming the welfare system.
“We’ve just looked at so much of the evidence and felt that it was very important to scrap it,” she said. “We recognise that you can’t change a big programme like that overnight. Our plan is to scrap Universal Credit by the end of a parliament but immediately we have an emergency package of measures that we will implement straightaway – these include tackling the worst aspects of it. We’ll be getting rid of the five-week wait, we’ll be getting rid of the two-child limit which is driving families into poverty and child poverty.”