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No 10 defends stance on Birmingham bin strikes after Unite votes – UK politics live | Politics

No 10 defends government’s stance on Birmingham’s bin strike, saying its priority has been interests of residents

Downing Street has defended the government’s stance on the Birmingham bin strike. Asked about the Unite union’s criticism of Angela Rayner’s department, and its failure to support the striking workers, a No 10 spokesperson said the government’s priority had “always” been the interests of the city’s residents.

The spokesperson said:

As you know, Unite’s industrial action caused disruption to waste collection.

We have worked intensively with the council to tackle the backlog and clean up the streets for the residents for public health.

We remain in close contact with the council and continue to monitor the situation as we support its recovery and transformation.

I think it’s important to look back to the context of this dispute: Unite is in dispute against Birmingham city council’s decision to reform unfair staff structures, which were a major cause of unequal pay claims and left the council liable to hundreds of millions of pounds in claims, and that was a key factor cited in the council section 114 notice in 2023, declaring bankruptcy.

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Labour must discover ‘second wind’ on welfare reform, says Alan Milburn

Keir Starmer has been urged to intensify efforts to reform welfare by the former Labour cabinet minister Alan Milburn.

In a speech today, Miliburn said Britain “cannot afford the government to give up on welfare reform” because of the rising cost of sickness and disability benefits.

He also praised Liz Kendall’s leadership at the Department for Work and Pensions as “radical and courageous”.

Kendall had to oversee a massive U-turn last week when the government dropped plans to restrict eligibility for Pip (the personal independent payment – a disability payment) only 90 minutes before a vote that the government might otherwise have lost because so many Labour MPs opposed the proposals.

Miliburn, who was an arch-Blairite health secretary in the last Labour government and who is now advising Wes Streeting as a non-executive director at the Department of Health and Social Care, said:

Public spending [in sickness and disability benefits] is projected to rocket by £21bn over the next five years. This is not sustainable, fiscally, socially or economically. While efforts to reform welfare have stalled following the events in parliament last week the government will need to discover a second wind.

Miliburn said the review of Pip now being led by Stephen Timms, the disability minister, “must not duck the challenge of reform”. He went on:

The more it is framed as a means of enabling people to fulfil their aspirations to work rather than simply as a means of saving public money, the more likely it is to succeed.

It is time for a radically new approach where there is an expectation that those who can work should do so – and they should be offered more help to enable them to get a job.

Miliburn was speaking at an event to mark the first anniversary of the publication of a report by the Pathways to Work commmission, a body set up by Barnsley council and led by Miliburn to investigate means of getting more “economically inactive” people into work.

One of its main findings was that 70% of people classed “economically inactive” say they would like to work if they could find a job aligned with their skills and interests.

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