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Sunday, June 21, 2015

The Guardian view on benefits reform: Labour needs a compelling response

With the latest cuts likely to hit the poorest and most vulnerable the hardest, this could be the issue that makes or breaks the Labour party for the next five yearsAll through the austerity years, the unravelling of the Greek economy – now seemingly heading for another interim deal – has served as a convenient backdrop for George Osborne’s own drive to hack back the state. The British banks are not about to fail, nor are British pensioners about to suffer the plight of millions of their Greek counterparts, but some pretty severe belt-tightening is coming here too. On Saturday, tens of thousands of demonstrators marched through British cities, including a quarter of a million in London and Glasgow, in a show of support for the other side of the argument: that austerity should be ended now. Meanwhile, Labour has been fumbling for a response for five long years. The construction of a coherent, persuasive narrative on welfare reform, and what part it should play in deficit reduction, must be at the top of the in-tray for the party’s next leader.The Conservative attack on Labour’s opposition to the coalition government’s cuts played a big part in reinforcing their claim that the longest and deepest recession in modern times was all down to excessive state spending. And barely had the anti-austerity protesters got home on Saturday than Mr Osborne and the work and pensions secretary, Iain Duncan Smith, were declaring their commitment to go full throttle with more austerity measures. In a joint article in the Sunday Times, they declared that they had reached agreement on the £12bn cuts pledged before the election, despite speculation that Mr Osborne was under pressure from other senior Tories, including Mr Duncan Smith, to back off for fear of the reputational harm that more cuts might bring. Continue reading...


READ THE ORIGINAL POST AT www.theguardian.com