Rachel
Reeves accused of balancing books on back of UK’s poorest
Labour is
braced for a backlash from its MPs over welfare cuts called ‘appalling’ by a
food bank charity
Heather
Stewart and Pippa Crerar
Wed 26 Mar
2025 19.58 GMT
Rachel
Reeves was accused of balancing the books at the expense of the poor in her
spring statement, as official figures showed three million households could
lose £1,720 a year in benefits.
The
chancellor confirmed welfare cuts of £4.8bn, but insisted the government’s
priority was to restore stability to the public finances in the face of rising
global borrowing costs.
Economists
warned Reeves could be forced to come back with more tax rises in the autumn,
with the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) saying that any tariffs imposed
by Donald Trump may upend their forecasts.
As if to
underline the uncertain outlook, Trump announced a punitive 25% tariff on all
car imports to the US just hours after Reeves spoke. He insisted the move would
be “permanent”.
Paul
Johnson, the director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies thinktank, earlier
said there would now be “six or seven months of speculation about what taxes
might or might not be increased in the autumn”.
“There is a
cost, both economic and political, to that uncertainty,” he said.
Ministers
are bracing for a backbench rebellion against the benefit cuts, which are
expected to be put to a vote in May. It is speculated that as many as three
dozen MPs could refuse to support the government, alongside possible frontbench
resignations. However, with Labour’s huge majority, the proposals are expected
to get through.
Impact
assessments of the welfare reforms published alongside the spring statement
reflected the toll of an additional £500m in last-minute savings that were
forced on the government.
They showed
an additional 250,000 people being pushed into relative poverty as a result of
the cuts to the personal independence payment (Pip) and incapacity benefit.
Paul
Kissack, the chief executive of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, accused the
chancellor of “putting the burden of the changing world on the shoulders of
those least able to bear the load”.
“The
government needs to protect people from harm with the same zeal as it attempts
to build its reputation for fiscal competence,” he added.
But in
defence of the cuts, Reeves recounted to MPs the chaos that had followed Liz
Truss’s mini-budget.
She said
“there is nothing progressive, there is nothing Labour, about working people
paying the price of economic irresponsibility”.
In a speech
that stressed the importance of shoring up the public finances in a rapidly
changing world, she pledged £2.2bn for defence spending and claimed Labour was
making progress in rebooting economic growth.
Though the
OBR halved its forecast of GDP growth in 2025 to 1% from 2% at her October
budget, Reeves hailed the fact that it had revised up its expectations for
future years, after judging that Labour’s planning and housebuilding reforms
will be good for growth.
The welfare
reforms were part of a £14bn package of measures aimed at rebuilding £10bn of
headroom against Reeves’s self-imposed fiscal rules, in five years’ time.
These
included a fresh crackdown on tax avoidance and a tight spending squeeze later
on in the parliament which is very likely to lead to cuts in unprotected
government departments, teeing up a fractious spending review in June.
Ruth
Curtice, the director of the Resolution Foundation thinktank, said while Reeves
was right to balance the books, she was “wrong to do so on the backs of low- to
middle-income families, on whom two-thirds of the welfare cuts will fall”.
Helen
Barnard, the director of policy at the food bank charity Trussell, said: “The
insistence by the Treasury on driving through record cuts to disabled people’s
social security to balance the books is both shocking and appalling. People at
food banks are telling us they are terrified how they’ll survive.”
Reeves used
her autumn budget to increase taxes by £40bn, including the controversial rise
in employer national insurance contributions, which comes into force next
month, alongside a flood of rising costs for consumers, including higher
council tax and energy bills.
The
chancellor insisted she would not have to raise taxes on a similar scale. “We
have now wiped the slate clean, and we’ll never have to do a budget like that
again,” she said.
Reeves
blamed global factors for the deterioration in the fiscal outlook since
October. “The global economy has become more uncertain, bringing insecurity at
home, as trading patterns become more unstable and borrowing costs rise for
many major economies,” she said.
Challenged
about the welfare cuts at a Downing Street press conference, she stressed that
the impact assessments did not include the effects of £1bn in spending on
back-to-work measures.
“We’re
putting £1bn in for targeted employment support to get people back to work,”
she said.
“So I’m
confident that our plans, far from increasing poverty, will actually result in
more people having fulfilling work, paying a decent wage to lift themselves and
their families out of poverty.”
The OBR
suggested the changes would lead to an extra 1.3m homes being built, which
Reeves said would put Labour within “touching distance” of its 1.5m target by
2029.
The OBR said
the resulting boost to GDP would bring in an extra £3.4bn to Treasury coffers.
Using a favoured phrase of Gordon Brown’s, Reeves called this “the proceeds of
growth”.
Yet the OBR
made clear that if Trump unleashes a global trade war when he announces tariffs
next week, on what the White House is calling “Liberation Day”, it would blow a
fresh hole in the public finances.
The OBR
warned that its worst case scenario of a tit-for-tat trade war could “almost
entirely eliminate” the headroom against Reeves’s fiscal rules, by denting
economic growth.
However, the
chancellor urged the public to “see where we get to” with the US. “Increased
tariffs between our economies will damage both of our economies, and we will
continue to make that case for free and open trade,” she added.
Reeves and
her team are braced for a backlash against the welfare cuts from Labour MPs,
who will be asked to support them in May’s vote.
The Labour
MP Neil Duncan-Jordan said that the “last minute scramble” to tweak the cuts in
line with OBR forecasts had “shattered any illusion of a moral case for cuts”.
The Poole MP
added: “We are talking about people’s lives here – my constituents are
frightened. This policy will fuel the social determinants of poverty that
ultimately create further pressure on the services the chancellor is trying to
cut.”
Connor
Naismith, the MP for Crewe and Nantwich, first elected last year, was among
those to say they would vote against the government.
“I didn’t
come into politics to inflict this on the most vulnerable people in our
society, and I cannot vote for changes which will have this impact,” he posted
on X.
“I know many
colleagues are similarly concerned about these proposed changes and are
continuing to make the case to ministers that we should change course.”
Several
other Labour MPs challenged Darren Jones, the chief secretary to the Treasury,
over welfare cuts at a meeting afterwards with a group of backbenchers.
One said the
discussions were “brutal” and that Jones faced “lots of people kicking off over
Pip”. Of about two dozen Labour MPs present, more than half a dozen criticised
the cuts and as many as four indicated that they would vote against them,
according to people present.
Other Labour
MPs said the hostile questions came from people who are routinely critical of
the government.
Peter Lamb,
who was among those who criticised the cuts, told the Guardian he was worried
that ministers had not appreciated the impact of the change.
“Frontbenchers
genuinely do not appear to be aware that the changes to Pip will mean there are
those with a high level of need who will no longer be able to access the
support they need for daily living,” the Crawley MP said.
The Liberal
Democrat welfare spokesman, Steve Darling, who is registered blind, said: “This
is incredibly insulting and shows the government just doesn’t understand the
challenges facing people with disabilities.”
Mel Stride,
the shadow chancellor, accused ministers of having “reneged on their promises
to the British people” in the election and said the country was “weaker and
poorer” as a result of their actions.
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