Kate Osborne Urges Budget That Puts Families, Workers and Pensioners First”

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  • Kate Osborne Urges Budget That Puts Families, Workers and Pensioners First

  • Kate Osborne Urges Budget That Puts Families, Workers and Pensioners First

Ahead of tomorrow's budget Kate Osborne writes for Labour home about what families, workers, businesses and pensioners across the country need to see.

Rachel Reeves says this is not a pick and mix budget - but it should be, I want the cola bottles and the fruit salads - but I also want the fried eggs, bananas and strawberry laces.

After decades of ideologically-driven austerity cuts under the previous Tory government, this Budget must deliver fairness and improve the lives of the people in this country.

Let's be very clear the UK is the 6th largest economy in the world - we have the wealth to tackle these crises - we need the political will to do so.

Many letters and emails in my mailbox contain accounts from constituents about the pressures they are facing -  rising costs, insecure work, stretched public services, and a social security system that no longer gives people the protection or dignity they deserve.

We know that despite the drum beating narrative on immigration - the cost of living crisis is the number one issue facing people in the UK - people are still facing increasing costs and 7 million people in Britain are unable to afford essentials like food, energy, and toiletries.

Of course right up to the last minute I will be lobbying the Chancellor, the Prime Minister and Ministers for more for the North East, for a wealth Tax and a windfall tax on profits that would enable billions to be raised to invest in our communities and public services - and this afternoon I will be attending a meeting in Number 11 to continue advocating for the resources we all need.

And I will be lobbying very specifically on a number of things:

The budget must include the removal of the cruel two-child limit on benefits. This policy is now the biggest driver of rising child poverty across the UK.

It is upsetting and simply unacceptable that one in three local children in my constituency  are growing up in poverty. I see the consequences every week. Parents working long hours but are still struggling. Schools providing food, clothing and basic essentials because they know families cannot cope.

Another urgent priority is fair compensation for the WASPI women - the women born in the 1950s who had their State Pension Age raised without proper notice.

South Tyneside in my constituency has one of the highest numbers of WASPI women in the country. Women who worked all their lives, paid in, cared for families, and played by the rules, only to be blindsided by a decision that tore up their retirement plans.

I meet with the campaigners regularly and the years of financial hardship and deep emotional stress they have suffered must be put right.

Another injustice this Budget must also make right and that is Miners Pensions - last month I met with people who live in my constituency who are former miners and members of the British Coal Staff Superannuation Scheme (BCSSS) and there are a number of coalfield MPs who have been fighting to rectify this injustice in Parliament.

The £2.3 billion in the British Coal Staff Superannuation Scheme (BCSSS) investment reserve fund - must be released - this money belongs to the miners.

After decades of service, sacrifice and physically demanding work, our miners deserve nothing less than financial fairness in retirement.

This Budget must extend and even expand the Household Support Fund - it's a vital lifeline to many.

Our Councils were the worst hit through the Tories slashing Local Authority budgets year on year - the fair funding formula the Government announced did not deliver enough for our local Councils and I have been lobbying Ministers for much much more - this Budget needs to deliver that investment.

As Chair of the North East All Party Parliamentary Group, we have secured investment in the North East with the £1.8 billion investment in the North East to include the much-needed Metro expansion to Washington - but we need more.

We must see investment in transport, in sports and facilities for our youth and we must see investment in local services.

We must see higher taxes on those that can pay more, from big gambling companies to banking levies to billionaires. We need fairer taxation, we need growth and as a priority we must tackle the cost of living crisis to improve the lives of the majority every single day.

This Budget must reflect our community’s values of fairness, dignity and compassion.

After years of being let down under the Tories, this Budget is a real chance to change course.

A real chance to tackle the realities of people’s lives and address the cost-of-living crisis - I will keep demanding that we deliver for communities.