Reeves scraps winter fuel payments for 10m pensioners to fund public sector wage rise
Rachel Reeves is to scrap winter fuel payments for 10m pensioners and ditch a cap on social care costs, it has been announced.
The Chancellor’s decision leaves millions of retirees worse-off and means tens of thousands of elderly Britons now face the prospect of selling their homes to foot their care bills.
It came as Ms Reeves announced she would make £5.5bn in savings this year as she claimed the Tories had left a £22bn hole in the public finances.
The bulk of this includes a £9.4bn pay settlement that will be made to public sector workers this year.
However, this does not include a 22pc settlement for junior doctors announced on Monday.
Planned savings include restricting winter fuel payments to people already claiming means-tested benefits.
In a major departure from previous Labour manifesto pledges, Ms Reeves said it was “fair and right” to withhold the payment from millions of pensioners.
Labour had called for payments to be restricted in 2015, when Ed Miliband was leader and Ms Reeves was shadow work and pensions secretary. However, Jeremy Corbyn pledged to keep it.
Last month, a Labour spokesman insisted they had “no plans” to change the policy.
Scrapping the payments means almost 10m pensioners are set to lose out for the first time. Ms Reeves will also order departments to make in-year savings.
Currently, all 11.4m pensioners receive an extra £200 to help heat their homes every winter, with people aged over 80 receiving a blanket £300 payment.
Charities condemned Ms Reeves’ decision warning that 2m pensioners on low incomes would be hit hardest. The changes to winter fuel payments will come into effect from November.
Age UK estimates that more than 800,000 older people living on very low incomes – under £218.25 a week for single pensioners and under £332.95 for couples – are already missing out on pension credit. They will now lose money that currently helps to pay their energy bills.
It also said 1m pensioners, whose weekly incomes are less than £50 above the poverty line, will also be hit hard by the loss of the payment.
Caroline Abrahams, the charity director at Age UK, warned that millions of pensioners would face a “horrible ‘eating or heating’ dilemma.”
Challenged at a press conference on whether she was “picking on pensioners”, Ms Reeves said “in the circumstances I found myself in these are the fair and right decisions”.
Ms Reeves’ move is expected to hit the majority of pensioners and save £1.4bn this year and £1.5bn next year. It means only 1.5m households will receive the payments going forward.
