Ministers 'to press ahead with Universal Credit roll-out' despite Tory rebellion
2 min read
Ministers will press ahead with the roll-out of Universal Credit despite a major protest from 12 backbench Conservative rebels, a new report has said.
Work and Pensions Secretary David Gauke is expected to address concerns about benefit claimants missing out on cash as a result of the plans, according to the Daily Telegraph.
The group of MPs have raised concerns about the six-week delay between some claimants switching from the old system to Universal Credit, which can leave them facing serious financial problems.
But the paper says Mr Gauke will announce the accelerated roll-out of the all-in-one payment, from five to 50 job centres a month, later today.
Speaking at a Conservative conference fringe in Manchester yesterday, Mr Gauke insisted a system of advance payments was already in place as a safety net for claimants.
He said: “The reality with advance payments is that if you want one you can get it practically straight away so there is no limit that you have to wait two weeks before you get an advance payment.”
He added: “In the most extreme cases if someone says ‘I am literally down to my last few pounds’ it is possible to do a same day bank transfer so they get it on the day.”
In an interview with the Huffington Post he insisted the continued roll-out was not a “reckless or risky approach”.
“If I looked at it and thought this is a mistake I would be agitating to do something to stop it. But I don’t,” he added.
Meanwhile, Theresa May yesterday signalled there would be no pause in the plans when she told the Andrew Marr show: “We need to roll out Universal Credit.”
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