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'WHO VOTED FOR ALL THIS?': British media responds to controversial winter fuel payments cut

In an effort to cut costs, the Labour Party plans to cut winter fuel payments to nearly 10 million pensioners.

A HEATED POLITICAL row has begun in the UK after the British Government approved plans yesterday to cut allowances for fuel during the winter for nearly 10 million pensioners.

The Labour Party said in July that it would be limiting the number of people who can avail of the payment after it warned earlier this month that it needed to slash costs after a £22 billion hole was left in the British economy.

At the time, Chancellor Rachel Reeves said that the payment will remain for only the poorest pensioners in the country.

The changes, which are now set to kick in in the coming weeks, will reduce the number of people who can avail of the payments from 11 million to around 1.5 million, according to conservative estimates.

The public and the media have highlighted how the cuts were not included in the party’s manifesto before the General Election and members of the former Tory Government have criticised the move over its potential impacts on older citizens.

But Labour has been quick to counter these claims by saying that its Government would not have to make such cuts if the Conservative Party were open with the British public about the extent of the money that the party were borrowing while it was in Government.

A vote yesterday afternoon overturned amendments proposed by the Tories to block the cuts. This meant that the controversial plans were approved by the British Government.

During yesterday’s vote some 52 Labour Party MPs abstained from casting a ballot, creating some disquiet among the party whose momentum has shifted since Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced that the upcoming budget would be “painful”.

Some papers chose to focus on the abstentions this morning, with the Financial Times’ front page reporting that Labour’s plan survived a “rebellion”.

FT1109

The Daily Telegraph also reports on the 52 Labour MPs who abstained, writing that they ‘defied’ Prime Minister Keir Starmer.

In a further blow, the paper includes an image of Jason Hoganson, a 53-year-old man convicted of assaulting his ex-partner, who yesterday was released from prison early under new measures by the Labour government to tackle prison overcrowding.

The caption ‘Cheers, Keir’ appears above the image.

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The Daily Mail asks: “Who Votes for All This?” on its front page, in all capitals. It points to the conflicting elements of the Labour Party’s manifesto and yesterday’s vote.

At the top of the page, the paper includes a wrap of what it calls ’68 days of Starmergeddon’ and lists the controversial decisions taken by the Starmer Government since coming to power.

STARMERGEDODN

The Daily Express writes that campaigners contesting the planned cuts will continue to protest the decision made by the British Government yesterday. The paper’s headline reads that the group is “united”.

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Similarly, The Guardian pushes the story forward, with its front-page article writing that Starmer now faces more pressure to make sure further cuts are not made to assistance packages for poorer pensions and citizens.

It writes that the Labour Cabinet face a “ticking clock” to help those less fortunate as the population face the winter months.

Guarda

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    Mute Mary Nugent
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    Apr 4th 2023, 3:34 PM

    A leak?

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    Mute Joanne Stokes
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    Apr 4th 2023, 4:56 PM

    @Mary Nugent: No he wasnt there!

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    Mute David Jordan
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    Apr 4th 2023, 5:28 PM

    @Mary Nugent: Weird Alright.

    “The visit is connected to an ongoing inquiry in Thuringia, Germany”

    Prince Heinrich XIII, a cut leader is also based in Thuringia Germany. His cult, a Reichsbürger, or sovereign citizen movement, planned a coup but they were raided late last year by 3,000 German Police in 130 raids. So I wonder if it’s connected to this:

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2022_German_coup_d%27%C3%A9tat_plot

    They have a weird idea that the German state does not exist and it is still occupied by Allied powers, who turned Germany into a company/cooperation. I know people at the time commenting on the Journal didn’t take them serious, but people used to laugh at that whacky Japanese cult too.

    That said, I can’t imagine a centre right party voluntarily establishing any sort of links with far right elements of the German Reichsbürger movement, or maybe they were infiltrated by Reichsbürger. Well.

    So it might a coincidence, and there’s two ongoing inquires in Thuringia, Germany.

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    Mute Mary Nugent
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    Apr 4th 2023, 5:28 PM

    @Joanne Stokes: email

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    Mute David Jordan
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    Apr 4th 2023, 5:32 PM

    @Mary Nugent: Fount it:

    “German outlet Mitteldeutscher Rundfunk reported that the raid is connected to Mario Voigt — leader of the state parliament group in Thuringia for Germany’s center-right Christian Democratic Union — and his involvement in the EPP’s 2019 European parliamentary elections.

    The local CDU lawmaker was recruited to support the EPP’s digital campaign in 2019. According to reports, the group then awarded a contract to an internet agency based in Voigt’s home state Thuringia, from which he is later suspected of having received money.

    Since September 2022, German anti-corruption officers had been investigating Voigt on suspicion of bribery in business dealings.”

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    Mute Sean Padraig O Brien
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    Apr 4th 2023, 3:30 PM

    What’s going on!

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    Mute Joanne Stokes
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    Apr 4th 2023, 5:00 PM

    @Sean Padraig O Brien: Corruption at its best, watch this space….

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    Mute mcleixlip
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    Apr 4th 2023, 4:50 PM

    And what about the offices of the People’s Party of Europe?

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    Mute ☀David Grogan✈
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    Apr 4th 2023, 9:56 PM

    @mcleixlip: and the European Party of People

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    Mute SPQH
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    Apr 4th 2023, 11:18 PM

    @mcleixlip: The Party office of European peoples

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    Mute Serious Craic
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    Apr 4th 2023, 5:42 PM

    Not a normal party. Chilling.

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