Keir Starmer U-Turns on Winter Fuel Allowance After Backlash
Prime Minister Keir Starmer has been forced into a major policy U-turn, promising to expand the winter fuel allowance scheme after a storm of Tory-style Labour rebellions and dismal poll results. The scheme, slashed early in Starmer’s premiership and cutting support for millions of pensioners, is set to be reversed—potentially benefiting nine million elderly Brits.
Winter Fuel Allowance Expansion on the Cards
- More pensioners to regain eligibility for winter fuel payments following earlier cuts.
- Changes to be revealed in the Autumn Budget 2025, raising doubts over whether help arrives this winter.
- Labour MPs, unions, and opposition leaders slam initial cuts amid soaring cost-of-living crisis.
- Deputy PM Angela Rayner pushes for new tax hikes to fund the expanded support.
- New poll shows Reform UK now eight points ahead of Labour, adding pressure on Starmer.
The Cuts That Sparked Outrage
After forming government in 2024, Labour restricted the winter fuel allowance to pensioners on Pension Credit only, slashing recipients from over 11 million to just 1.5 million. The brutal cost-saving measure sparked fury among pensioner groups and voters, seen as a major factor in Labour’s nosedive in popularity.
Insiders say growing unrest within the party and plummeting poll numbers—Reform UK now leading by eight points—forced the rethink.
Starmer’s Commons Announcement
During PMQs on Wednesday, Starmer admitted the scheme would expand again:
“As the economy improves, we want to ensure more pensioners are eligible for winter fuel payments.”
The full details are slated for a “fiscal event,” likely the Autumn Budget. But Downing Street refused to confirm if the changes will come in time for winter 2025/26.
Political Fallout and Public Backlash
- Conservative Kemi Badenoch: “The U-turn was inevitable. He is desperate.”
- Lib Dem Ed Davey: Demands confirmation the policy will be fully reversed.
- Labour backbenchers: Call for total restoration of universal winter fuel allowance.
- Public reaction: Social media labels the original cuts as “cruel” and “economically short-sighted.”
Power Struggles Behind the Scenes
Tensions bubble in Labour’s top ranks with Deputy PM Angela Rayner reportedly pushing Chancellor Rachel Reeves for up to eight new tax rises to fund welfare expansions. Proposals included:
- Reinstating the pensions lifetime allowance.
- Hiking taxes on dividends and additional rate taxpayers.
- Increasing corporation tax on banks.
Though these plans were not adopted, the leaks reveal a brewing clash over balancing welfare generosity with fiscal discipline.
Will Help Arrive in Time for Winter?
With no guarantee the changes will take effect before winter 2025/26, vulnerable pensioners may face another brutal cold season without support. A Prime Minister’s spokesperson stressed:
“We obviously want to deliver this as quickly as possible… but it must be affordable and fully funded.”
For now, millions wait anxiously as winter looms.