Major WASPI update – new battle for compensation | Politics | News
Lawyers representing the so-called WASPI women are launching a new bid to win compensation for women affected by the hike in the state pension age. Labour announced in January they would not receive cash but campaigners insist around 3.5 million women were not properly informed of the decision to bring their pension age in line with menโs.
The legal team representing Women Against State Pension Inequality will raise “legal errors” with the Government and will give its lawyers 14 days to respond. They are prepared to take their battle to the High Court.
The Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman has recommended payouts of between ยฃ1,000 and ยฃ2,950 for each of those affected.
Angela Madden, who chairs the campaign, said: โThe Government has had the opportunity to do the right thing for WASPI women.
โInstead, they have made a political choice to ignore well established democratic processes, which is irrational, unfair and risks alienating even more voters.
โWomen affected by the Governmentโs failures have waited long enough. If ministers will not listen to the independent ombudsman, their own MPs and millions of people across the country, we will make them listen in court.โ
A spokesperson for the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) said: โThe Secretary of State set out the Government’s position in his oral statement to Parliament, including acceptance of maladministration and apology to the women affected.
โOur focus now is on delivering an action plan to implement lessons learned in how DWP communicates state pension matters going forward.โ
Helen Whately, the Conservatives’ Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary, said: โLabour campaigned on WASPI compensation, posed for the photos, signed the pledges, told women they stood shoulder to shoulder with them.
โKeir Starmer and his frontbench used WASPI women as a political prop to win votes and moral authority. Now they are in Government, those promises have been betrayed, like so many others that Labour promised the world to.
โThis episode exposes a deeper problem with this Government. Labour is happy to say one thing when it suits them, but once the election is over, it becomes clear their promises arenโt worth the paper they are written on. It is cynical politics at its very worst.โ
