Starmer braced for biggest rebellion of premiership as Labour MPs rail against benefit cuts

Sir Keir Starmer, as an angry Backbench deputy as a worker leader was prepared against the benefit deductions for the greatest rebellion of his time.
The Prime Minister came under a new pressure on Tuesday just a few hours before the parliament voted for welfare reforms, as the two rebel deputies entered the air waves to condemn the controversial bill.
South Shields Deputy Emma Lewell emphasized the evaluation of a government impact that 150,000 people will be poverty by changes and added: “I could never go through the vote lobby to immerse 150,000 people into poverty.”
Florence Eshalomi, the President of the Housing Committee, told BBC: “Should we really make legislation? Hurry policy is a bad policy.”
He refused to say whether he would vote for the government’s bill, but his comments showed that Sir Keir’s U-transformation of £ 2.5 billion could not assign a mass rebellion in the scaled back-cut package.

Lis and Pension Secretary Liz Kendall, the main disabled in the UK, the PIP for the PIP, which restricted the suitability of the PIP on Monday, the workers’ MPs met with Grill. Kendall admitted that the benefit deductions would only save £ 2.5 billion to the taxpayers – not 4.8 billion £ as mentioned earlier – by asking new questions about how Rachel Reeves will balance the books.
And despite the promise of protecting the existing plaintiffs, a backbencher wave began to criticize the suggestions by saying that the plans of Debbie Abrahams, one of the key rebels to force the government’s first concessions.
A disabled Labor Party Deputy Marie Tidball attacked the government angrily due to lack of joining disability groups.
Ve milletvekilleri hükümetin tavizlerinden birine yuvarlandı, Pip’e iş ve emeklilik bakanı Sir Stephen Timms tarafından yönetilen bir inceleme, Timms incelemesi tamamlanana kadar tasarının ertelenmesini talep etti.
Kendall admitted that there were “real concerns” about the welfare reforms of the government: “We listened carefully and as a result we make positive changes.”
However, he said that it is not a way of equality or social justice based on welfare expenditures alone ”.
His refusal to make more concessions, preparing the ground for a great rebellion on Tuesday night, 39 workers’ deputies signed a change trying to kill the bill completely and voted for many more potentially.
Jonathan Reynolds, who defended his plans on Tuesday, said the government said: “In a stronger position than last week, because offers are better”.
Business secretary said that the plans were “facing the future ve and that the reform of the welfare system was“ emergency .. And Sky News said: “The process is talking to his colleagues, listening to them – he has developed the set of offers, no doubt, and as a parliamentary, I think the right way to progress.
“But still you talk to everyone who signed this change, ‘This is a great system, at that moment it really works well.
He said: “This is what we need to be in mind.
Mr. Reynolds refused to say what would happen to those who challenges Sir Keir, who had previously been suspended for rebelling seven deputies on the king’s speech, but some of them were confronted with the suspension of whip, being on the blacklist for government affairs or even election.