Labour’s new welfare changes are practical and compassionate – so why not loudly say so? | Polly Toynbee
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2026/jan/29/labour-welfare-changes-politics-stephen-timmsUniversal credit to rise faster than inflation, benefit hurdles eased, extra help for children and young people … I bet you had no idea
It’s the good this government does that can make you hold your head in your hands and sigh. Ask people what they think of Labour policy on benefits and they will probably talk of seizing the winter fuel allowance from freezing pensioners. Or that £5bn snatched from disabled people, until Labour’s own MPs prevented it. These were the signifiers that set the wrong tone early on. Late, far too late, abolishing the two-child limit has not made the same impression on public perceptions, despite the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) this week reporting it as being behind what could be the greatest ever fall in child poverty in a parliament.
The government fails to herald its progress in reversing the worst the Tories did to benefits. Why? I’m not sure if it is ineptitude or a political decision not to trumpet its many progressive policies.
Polly Toynbee is a Guardian columnist
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