GORDON Brown is bracing himself for a Commons showdown tomorrow night over Labour’s plans to “con” nine million pensioners of half a billion pounds in benefits.
Although the basic state pension of £92.25 a week is set to rise by 2.5 per cent, Chancellor Alistair Darling decided not to apply the hike to the other top-ups such as the new state second pension that make up the total take-home package.
The move will hit millions, and with inflation now standing at 3.5 per cent, the Liberal Democrats claim it amounts to a cut in real terms.
Party leader Nick Clegg is hoping to persuade Labour backbenchers to join a vote against the freeze in a Commons motion tomorrow night.
He told the Sunday Express last night: “It amounts to a huge pensions betrayal. “You’ve got nine million pensioners receiving letters telling them what’s going to happen to their pension from April and they think they’ve been promised a rise from Brown, but in fact when you look at the small print what they’ll see is actually a real terms cut.
“It’s about half a billion pounds less for those nine million pensioners than they should be entitled to.
“That’s short-changing nine million pensioners to the tune of about £60 each for this coming year.
“It’s outrageous that Brown and Darling are trying to describe a cut as a rise.”
In a swipe at Labour’s election slogan, he added: “This is not a future fairer for all, this is a deception.”
He said that £60 “was not a small amount”.
He said: “We got a letter from a pensioner couple in Sheffield who found it so difficult to heat their home on a cold day, they travel the bus around Sheffield just to stay warm.
“Tell that couple that £60 is not a lot, particularly with the cold weather and the bills that couple have to face.”
However, pensions minister Angela Eagle said: “Pensioners are not losing out. To suggest so is irresponsible scare mongering.
“We will be putting an extra £1bn into pensioners’ pockets this year. We chose to target our help to reach as many pensioners as possible, with an above earnings increase in the basic State Pension, and I make no apology for that."
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