Miliband vows 'cost of living' help

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 21 September 2013 | 19.21

21 September 2013 Last updated at 07:46 ET

Labour leader Ed Miliband has set out plans to tackle what he calls the UK's "cost of living crisis" after arriving in Brighton for the party conference.

Speaking in the city, he promised to reverse controversial changes to housing benefit and extend childcare.

He also pledged to "make work pay for the workers of Britain".

Meanwhile a senior party figure has said people earning £60,000 were 'not rich' and those earning up to £150,000 would not face tax rises under Labour.

Addressing supporters and members of the public, Mr Miliband said he wanted to "send a very clear signal" that it was wrong that millions of working people in the UK could not afford to bring up their families properly.

"The Labour government will put it right; we will strengthen the national minimum wage, we will make work pay for the workers of Britain.

"Abolishing the bedroom tax. Strengthening the national minimum wage. Childcare there for parents who need it. That's what I mean by tackling the cost of living crisis at this conference. That's what I mean by a government that fights for you," he said.

The Labour leader criticised Mr Cameron's record as one of "tax cuts for millionaires, tax cuts for hedge funds, tobacco lobbyists in Downing Street".

He said "across the country, from all walks of life, people are facing this cost of living crisis" and there was always something that could be done "if you have the political will".

It was the "forgotten wealth creators - the people who put in the hours, who do the work, who do two jobs, who do the shifts" that should be supported, he said.

"That's how we change Britain, that's what a Labour government is going to do, that's how we build One Nation," he added.

The speech came after Rachel Reeves, deputy to shadow chancellor Ed Balls, told the Daily Telegraph people earning £60,000 are not "rich" and a Labour government would only raise taxes for the "privileged few" on £150,000 or more a year.

"I think the focus should be on those privileged few right at the top, and that's not people earning £50,000 or £60,000 a year.

"We don't have any plans or desire to increase taxes amongst people in that band of income," she said.

A Liberal Democrat document leaked earlier this week suggested the party was considering increasing taxes for people earning more than £50,000.

Senior Lib Dem Vince Cable said the proposal was not government policy and he did not know where it had come from.

The average annual earnings of full-time workers in the UK was £26,500 in the year to April 2012, according to figures published by the Office for National Statistics in its annual survey of hours and earnings last November.

Earlier on Saturday, shadow communities and local government secretary Hilary Benn told the BBC Radio 4's Today programme the housing benefit - which critics have called a "bedroom tax" - was a "cruel and unfair policy" which "undermined families and communities" and did not work because there were no smaller properties for people to move in to.

The government argues it ends "spare room subsidies" unavailable in the private sector, and that the £23bn-a-year housing benefit bill must be cut.

The BBC's political correspondent Ben Wright said it was "one of the first policies of what is going to be a pretty crucial conference" for Mr Miliband.

He said there was a "slightly glum mood" within Labour at the moment, with critics within the party saying it urgently needs clear policies and to be doing better in the polls to have any chance of winning the next election.

Meanwhile, Ms Cooper told the Guardian childcare would be a "top priority" for Labour's 2015 general election and it should be seen as just as important as infrastructure investments such as transport.

She said Labour would guarantee all parents of primary school children "wraparound" childcare from 8am to 6pm.

At present some schools offer breakfast clubs and after-school clubs to help working parents, but Labour says many of these have closed due to government cuts.

Labour deputy leader Harriet Harman told the Independent she is "determined" mothers and fathers should be entitled to transfer part of their flexible parental leave to grandparents, enabling them to return to work.

Responding to Labour's plans in the Guardian, Treasury minister Sajid Javid said: "Despite promising 'discipline' on borrowing, Ed Miliband has shown he is too weak to deliver. Nothing has changed - it's the same old Labour."


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