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Disability benefit cuts impossible to support, 42 Labour MPs tell Starmer

1 day ago
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More than 40 Labour MPs have warned the prime minister that planned disability cuts are “impossible to support” and have called for a pause and change in direction.The letter from parliamentarians spanning the new intake and veterans, and from the left and right of the party, sets Keir Starmer up for the biggest rebellion of his premiership when the House of Commons votes on the measures next month.There has already been widespread concern among Labour MPs about proposed changes including a significant tightening of eligibility for personal independent payments (Pips), saving about £5bn annually.They would also involve cuts or freezes to incapacity benefits for people who apply for universal credit but are judged unfit to work.According to internal Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) forecasts, the planned disability benefit cuts would affect 700,000 families who are already in poverty.

A vote on the proposals is expected in June, and a number of MPs are concerned they are being asked to approve the plans without proper knowledge of the consequences.The letter has so far been signed by 42 Labour MPs, putting the government on course for its biggest rebellion yet.The proposals, set out in a government green paper, have “caused a huge amount of anxiety and concern among disabled people and their families”, according to the letter.“The planned cuts of more than £7bn represent the biggest attack on the welfare state since George Osborne ushered in the years of austerity and over 3 million of our poorest and most disadvantaged will be affected,” it says.“Whilst the government may have correctly diagnosed the problem of a broken benefits system and a lack of job opportunities for those who are able to work, they have come up with the wrong medicine.

Cuts don’t create jobs, they just cause more hardship.”The letter calls on ministers to delay any decisions until they see full assessments on the impact of any cuts, and for “a genuine dialogue with disabled people’s organisations to redesign something that is less complex and offers greater support, alongside tackling the barriers that disabled people face when trying to find and maintain employment”.It goes on: “We also need to invest in creating job opportunities and ensure the law is robust enough to provide employment protections against discrimination.Without a change in direction, the green paper will be impossible to support.”Among the signatories are some MPs on the left of the party such as Diane Abbott and Kim Johnson, but also a series of more centrist backbenchers, and there are 14 from the 2024 intake, including Lorraine Beavers, Cat Eccles, Terry Jermy, Peter Lamb and Simon Opher.

The benefit changes, set out by Liz Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, in March, would tighten eligibility criteria for Pips so that people need to score four points in at least one activity to qualify for the daily living allowance.Also, while the basic rate of universal credit for those in, or looking for, work would rise by about £15 a week from April 2026, the incapacity benefit would be cut for new claimants judged as unfit for work.Support would be frozen for existing claimants.People under the age of 22 wanting the health top-up of universal credit would no longer qualify under plans being consulted on.Kendall said her department would spend up to £1bn a year extra on helping people back into jobs.

When the plans were set out, Debbie Abrahams, the Labour MP who chairs the Commons work and pensions committee, warned against “balancing the books on the backs of sick and disabled people”.While a series of individual backbenchers have voiced their serious concerns about the plans, the letter makes plain the scale of that concern, even if the language of being unable to support the plans holds out the possibility of abstention as well as voting against.Starmer’s government has so far only experienced small Commons revolts, in part because of the very robust No 10 response the first time it happened.Downing Street suspended seven MPs from the Labour whip shortly after the general election in July when they voted in favour of a Scottish National party amendment to scrap the two-child benefit limit.A DWP source said: “At the heart of these reforms is a determination to help more people into work.

We understand that there are concerns.“The secretary of state is engaging and talking to colleagues, explaining why these reforms will help transform people’s lives.”
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Australia’s best small museums: celebrating apples, bottles, country music, dinosaurs …

In the small country town of Tingha in northern New South Wales sits a supermarket seemingly frozen in time: the Wing Hing Long and Company Store. Its shelves are lined with old products – canned food from the 90s, shoes from bygone eras, boxes of soap with retro graphics and bottles of spray-on starch. “It’s almost like you’re stepping back in history,” says artist Simone Rosenbauer. “It’s so amazing!”None of the products are for sale: this supermarket, established by storekeeper Ah Lin in 1881 to service the region’s tin-mining boom, is now a living museum – conserved by the local council after it closed in 1998 after nearly 120 years of business.The Wing Hing Long and Company Store is one of 41 rural museums Rosenbauer documented as part of her ambitious project Small Museum, which took her across every state and territory photographing community-run museums and interviewing the people behind them

2 days ago
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Colbert on Trump administration’s ethos: ‘Take full responsibility and dump it on somebody else’

Late-night hosts dug into the chaos at Newark airport leading to a cascade of cancellations, Donald Trump’s alleged Hollywood tariffs and the visit of the Canadian prime minister, Mark Carney, to the White House.On Tuesday’s Late Show, Stephen Colbert looked into the cascade of delays at Newark airport this week, causing the cancellation of hundreds of flights. The culprit was a terrifying 90-second blackout during which air traffic controllers temporarily lost radar and communications with the aircraft under their control, making them unable to see, hear or talk to them. “Those are three fairly important things,” Colbert deadpanned.The blackout was caused by a fried piece of copper wire

2 days ago
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Michael Pitt arrested for alleged sexual assault and attack on ex-girlfriend

Boardwalk Empire actor Michael Pitt has been arrested on sexual assault and domestic violence charges.According to the New York Post and Variety, the 44-year-old has been accused of multiple assaults by an ex-girlfriend stemming from four incidents taking place between 2020 and 2021.She alleges that Pitt sexually assaulted and attacked her with a cinderblock and a wooden plank at the actor’s Bushwick, Brooklyn, home. He is also accused of strangling her.The actor, whose credits also include Dawson’s Creek and films such as The Dreamers, Seven Psychopaths and Funny Games, pleaded not guilty after his arrest on Friday and is now out on bail

2 days ago
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Art Fund to launch £5m project for UK museums to share their collections

A £5m project in which 20 museums will share their collections and expertise with each other could revolutionise the touring model in the UK.Going Places has been developed by Art Fund, the charity that secures art for public collections while providing financial support for museums, and will involve local people when the nationwide project launches in May 2026.Billed as “the UK’s largest ever collaborative touring project”, several institutions will work together on themed exhibitions while pooling resources and sharing expertise.Museums that wanted to take part met up and underwent a “matchmaking” process where they identified themes that interested them before splitting into groups.Museums Worcestershire, OnFife and Penlee House Gallery and Museum in Penzance will collaborate on exhibitions focusing on the female artists in their collections

2 days ago
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Jon Stewart on Trump ignoring the constitution: ‘It’s not optional’

Late-night hosts recapped Donald Trump’s refusal to commit to defending the constitution and blaming Joe Biden for his hits on the economy.From his Monday night perch on The Daily Show, Jon Stewart attempted to bring a new, level-headed approach to handling the daily torrent of Trump administration news. “I’m trying very hard in this new Trump ‘flood the zone’ media ecosystem strategy to not get too high or low. To not take the bait,” he said.But as evidenced by Trump’s latest interview with Meet the Press, “to get to substantive policy questions, you have to face down the fire hose of his nonsense and bullshit that moves you off track”, Stewart noted

3 days ago
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No Way Out: the 1987 thriller that prophesied a deeply corrupt US government

In 1987, right before he became the biggest movie star in the world with a five-year hot streak that included Field of Dreams, Dances with Wolves and The Bodyguard, Kevin Costner headlined two films that offered very different visions of America. The Untouchables assembles a group of plucky misfits to dole out frontier justice against those who would seek to extort the American dream – it’s brash, gung ho and morally transparent. A guaranteed classic.Far more interesting, though, is No Way Out, Roger Donaldson’s 1987 political potboiler that’s equal parts pulpy spectacle and damning critique of the US project. Functioning as a bridge between the conspiracy flicks of the 70s and the erotic thrillers of the 90s, the film starts with a sex scene in the back of a limo (complete with a perfectly timed cutaway to the Washington Monument) and ends with an unforgettable flourish

3 days ago
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US-UK trade deal imposes conditions on ownership of British steel plants

about 3 hours ago
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Metro Bank risks backlash over £60m bonus scheme for chief executive

about 5 hours ago
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‘Tone deaf’: US tech company responsible for global IT outage to cut jobs and use AI

about 13 hours ago
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Leave them hanging on the telephone | Brief letters

1 day ago
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England Lion McCann fires up Notts but champions Surrey struggle

42 minutes ago
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Pollock a proud Lion after ‘nailing it’ for Northampton and England

about 1 hour ago