Reeves denies welfare cuts will increase poverty amid warning poorest set to be £500 a year worse off – UK politics live | Politics

Reeves says she’s ‘absolutely certain’ welfare changes will not push more people into poverty

Rachel Reeves was on Sky News earlier. Asked about the DWP analysis saying the benefit cuts will push another 250,000 people into poverty, Reeves said this would not happen, because that analysis did not take account of the impact of more people getting into work. She made this argument at her press conference yesterday, but was even stronger in her words this morning.

She said:

I am absolutely certain that our reforms, instead of pushing people into poverty, are going to get people into work.

And we know that if you move from welfare into work, you are much less likely to be in poverty.

That is our ambition, making people better off, not making people worse off, and also the welfare state will always be there for people who genuinely need it.

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Reeves says she won’t accept free concert tickets again

In an interview with ITV’s Good Morning Britain, Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, said she would not accept free tickets for concerts again in the future.

Asked about the controversy about her decision to accept two corporate tickets for a Sabrina Carpenter concert at the O2, she repeated the line that she used at her press conference yesterday – that a family member wanted to attend the concert (presumably one of her children, but she did not say that), and that she accepted tickets for a corporate box because security concerns meant it was not deemed safe for her to get normal tickets for the auditorium.

Asked why she did not pay for the tickets, which have been described as being worth £600, Reeves said that tickets like this were not available for sale.

She went on: “I don’t have any intention of doing this again.”

Asked if she was admitting she made a mistake, she replied:

I’m just saying I wouldn’t do it again. I felt I was doing the right thing. But I do understand perceptions.

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