Older people are a might force in elections
Eleven million people could see their state pensions slashed if means-testing is introduced, Labour has claimed as it battles with the for the support of pensioners.
Labour has accused Tory leader Kemi Badenoch of having a “cruel plan to means-test pensions” which it says could “cut hundreds of pounds from the incomes of those in retirement”.
Sir ’s party has been under attack for axing universal winter fuel payments for pensioners and has jumped at the opportunity to turn its guns on the . It has seized on comments in which Mrs Badenoch said her party is “going to look at means-testing”.
Pensioners are the group most likely to support the so Labour will grasp opportunities to peel away voters. According to YouGov, 42% of women aged 65-plus who took part in the last election voted Conservative, compared with 6% of females aged 18-24.
The have accused Labour of “skewing her words for political gain and lying about what she said”.
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But Labour says that because 1.4million pensioner households receive pension credit this “leaves more than 11 million pensioners at risk of having their pension cut”. It adds that for pensioners on “middle incomes” benefits including the “make up around 50 per cent of their total weekly income.”
Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall said: “Badenoch should urgently come clean on how much her plan will hit families.”
But a Conservative spokeswoman said: “We wish the Work and Pensions Secretary well in voting to cut the for over 10,000 pensioners in her constituency, forcing them to choose between heating and eating. This decision has put lives at risk and pensioners will not forget it.”
Sir Keir’s party remains under intense pressure for its treatment of pensioners.
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Writing in the Sunday Express, Dennis Reed of campaign group Silver Voices says the evidence suggests Sir ’s party is waging an “undeclared war on older people”.
He said that the appointment of Torsten Bell as pensions minister filled him with “dread about the future of our , as Bell is a well-known opponent of the ”.
The ensures pensions rise by whichever is highest – inflation, average wage growth, or 2.5%. Mrs Badenoch this week accused rival parties of “pretending we’re cancelling the ” because they are “scared”.
She said: “Labour punished poor pensioners, snatching away winter fuel payments due to poor means testing.”