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Sir Keir Starmer's watered down welfare bill has passed its final stage in the Commons, after another concession was made to MPs.
The Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payments Bill passed by 336 votes to 242 on Wednesday night - a majority of 94. Politics latest: Starmer and Macron agree on need for new small boat 'deterrent' In a bid to thwart further opposition to the bill following last week's climbdown, the government said it would not try to introduce any more reforms to personal independence payments (PIP) until a review by work and pensions minister Sir Stephen Timms on the assessment process has concluded.
Sir Stephen said he wanted to finish his review by next autumn, but that the government would not agree to complete the review in 12 months as some MPs wanted. Marie Tidball, the Labour MP who had called for the 12-month limit, later signalled she was happy with the government's compromise.
Ministers also agreed to her calls to have a majority of the taskforce looking at PIP to be disabled or from disability organisations, and for the outcome of the review to come before any PIP changes. It will also be voted on by MPs.
A total of 47 Labour MPs have rebelled against the government to vote against its welfare reforms. Mother of the House Diane Abbott, former minister Dawn Butler, Andy McDonald, Stella Creasy and Jonathan Brash were among those in the "no" lobby.
Meanwhile, MPs rejected a separate amendment by Green MP Sian Berry, which called for the basic rate of universal credit to increase by 4.8% above inflation each year until 2030. A total of 39 Labour MPs voted for scrapping the clauses that halved Universal Credit for new claimants - the only major cut left in the bill after the government made its concessions.
The passing of the bill will come as a relief to Sir Keir Starmer, who last week was forced into a humiliating climbdown over his flagship welfare package in the face of significant opposition from his own MPs. Read more:What is a wealth tax?UN criticises Starmer's welfare reforms Prior to the vote last Tuesday, the government offered significant concessions including exempting existing personal independence payment claimants (PIP) from stricter new criteria and only freezing and cutting the universal credit health top-up for new applications.
As the vote last week unfolded, it offered further confessions amid concerns the bill could be voted down - notably, that changes in eligibility for PIP would not take place until a review he is carrying out into the benefit is published in autumn 2026. They ended up voting for only one part of the plan: a cut to Universal Credit (UC) sickness benefits for new claimants from £97 a week to £50 from 2026/7.
A total of 49 Labour MPs voted against the bill - the largest rebellion in a prime minister's first year in office since 47 MPs voted against Tony Blair's Lone Parent benefit in 1997, according to Professor Phil Cowley from Queen Mary University..