Mel Stride roasted over his ” no undue delay” posture on compensating the 3.5 million 50swomen who had waited a decade to get justice

Mel Stride

Not one MP in Parliament came to the rescue of Mel Stride, the work and pension secretary, when he made his initial statement on the Parliamentary Ombudsman’s report which concluded that there was maladministration over the delay in communicating the six year delay to women in the 1950s and either Parliament or the DWP should compensate them.

Essentially it was a holding statement with the minister emphasising that it was a complex 100 page report which he had to consider very carefully.

“The ombudsman has noted in his report the challenges and the complexities of this issue. In laying the report before Parliament, the ombudsman has brought matters to the attention of the House and we will provide a further update to the House once we have considered the report’s findings.”

He also tried to drag in the judicial review, then pursued by Back to 60, for the reason for the delay in the Ombudsman’s report, citing that the two courts the High Court and the Court of Appeal had presented as fact that the DWP had not acted unlawfully ( no one said they had) over maladministration. The trouble is he got it wrong, the hearings which I attended, were about discrimination in the past not maladministration. As Marcia Will Stewart, the lawyer from Bimberg Peirce, said in 2019 “Our judicial review had nothing to do with maladministration investigation, whatever others may say”. And as she was bringing the case I prefer her analysis to Mel Stride’s.

Liz Kendall

Indeed Mr Stride’s only other friend in Parliament was Liz Kendall, Labour’s Opposition spokesman, who said:

“This is a serious report that requires serious consideration. The ombudsman has rightly said it is for the Government to respond but that Parliament should also consider its findings.

“Members on this side of the House will look carefully at the report too and continue to listen respectfully to those involved, as we have done from the start.” ( in other words we don’t want to lose your vote in case you think we are siding with Tories).

Tories were not Stride’s best friends

But it was the Tories who, while polite, were not his best friends. None of them defended the government’s delay and all pressed for a decision. It started with Caroline Noakes, who chairs the Women and Equalities select committee, who said:

““I recognise this is an interim update but I would gently press (Mr Stride) that Waspi women have been waiting five years for the ombudsman, they won’t want to wait for a select committee inquiry into this report in order to see action from the Government.”

Soon it became clear that many other Tories, mindful of holding on to their seats, did not want unnecessary delays. Tory MPs representing Stroud, Scunthorpe, North Norfolk, Eastbourne, Waveney, Weston super Mare, Amber Valley and the Isle of Wight were among many who made it abundantly clear they would not brook this being pushed into the long grass.

Bob Seely

Bob Seely, the MP for the Isle of Wight, while praising the government for keeping the triple lock, had every reason to be concerned – he has the largest number of 50swomen in his present constituency and foul wind combined with their lack of support ( even if the Island now gets two seats) could sweep him away.

But the government faced its greatest attack from the Scottish National Party who members slammed ministers. Patricia Gibson, their official spokesman and MP for North Ayrshire and Arran, hit out at ” timid Labour” and ministers.

“We in the SNP stand shoulder to shoulder with these women, who have been abandoned and betrayed by the UK Government and the future Labour Government. Will the Secretary of State tell the House what it will take to compensate these women? Do we need another TV drama to embarrass and shame the Government into doing the right thing? “

Other SNP MPs cited deaths of the women in their constituencies and the anger among the women. Ian Blackford, the former Westminster SNP leader said: “Can we imagine what would happen in this place if it was announced that private sector pensions were being put back by six years? Rightly, there would be outrage, and there should be outrage about what happened to the WASPI women.”

Joanna Cherry picked up on Mel Stride and Labour muddying the waters over raising the judicial review

“The WASPI campaign has asked me to emphasise its annoyance about how often Government Ministers, when talking about these issues, attempt to muddy the waters by referring back to the unsuccessful litigation to reverse the increase to the state pension age, or to claim direct discrimination. That was not litigation by the official WASPI campaign, and I am sure that its members were annoyed to hear a senior Labour Front Bencher doing the same thing on the radio last night.”

Labour backbenchers took a much stronger line than their front bench demanding a timetable for the implementation of compensation starting with Marsha de Cordova, representing Battersea.

“The Secretary of State has said that he wants to continue to look in detail at the findings of the report, but surely he should be able to make an unambiguous commitment to compensation for these women.”

Imran Hussain, representing Bradford East said: “Will he at least accept that every time a Minister stands up and says “undue delay” or “due process” they really mean that they have no intention of addressing the problem, and are saving face and kicking the can down the road?

Other criticism came from Jeremy Corbyn and John McDonnell, the former shadow chancellor, told him:” we have no confidence in the Department for Work and Pensions to resolve its basic failure of decades ago..”

It will not have been a pleasant experience for Mel Stride who was probably glad Parliament closed for the day after this statement. He would be extremely stupid not to take note but MPs will have to keep up the pressure to get any compensation out of this government. Only the fear of being swept out of power will make them do anything, but whether it be enough money will be another matter.

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11 thoughts on “Mel Stride roasted over his ” no undue delay” posture on compensating the 3.5 million 50swomen who had waited a decade to get justice

  1. It would be nice to leave a contribution but to be honest since losing my home 3 years after i should have started getting my pension I have struggled to survive every month with nothing spare for any extras. I cant believe that £1000 to £3000 is even being considered when that is an insult… I am disgusted at the British govenment who are happy to let the country fail at every turn because of the way they have treated and are still treating those who vote for them… The sooner I am out of it the better.. I await the day I die and the struggle is over.

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    • Hello Anne, your comment breaks my heart. Each day that these minister delay making a decision more of us die.

      i have never wanted them to reverse the age for women to receive their State Pension.

      What I do want is an emergency session and an apology, from the government and the DWP on the desion of maladministration.

      Then I would like them to pay back the 5 years State Pension they stole from me. Unfortunately that’s not going to happen. I’ve lost approximately £48,000.

      £1,000-£3,000 is beyond an insult, I paid more than that in my last year working on tax & NI.

      Enough is enough do the right thing now!!..

      Like

  2. This has been a complete fiasco from start to finish and has had a devastating impact on the poor WASPI women. While some have already died, others are struggling in hardship or have been forced to sell their homes. Heartless, I think it’s quite possible that the Gov is dragging it out on purpose to avoid paying out until it is a matter for the next Gov to contend with. As we all know, justice delayed is justice denied…

    Mel Stride has gone a great job of what the Gov is an expert in: deny, delay, deflect and dismiss….just like the NHS, as I too found out at enormous personal cost: https://patientcomplaintdhcftdotcom.wordpress.com/

    Like

  3. There needs to be an investigation in to the whole campaign, warts and all. as it looks as if it was Tory controlled to ensure damage limitation. The investigation has been flawed from the outset and was taken on by one group, with no consultation with other groups. Many MPs still need educating on the history of the campaign. The statements about the court cases were false! The process itself was discriminatory. 

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  4. Only for my daughter I would be homeless how long before we can get this government in court there work instruction was not to send letters which is disgusting we should have been notified they have discriminated 51 years contributions I payed and my pension is less than my husbands we should have retired together and then I had to go back to work with illness life was not easy at all !

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  5. I empathise completely with Anne Hills. However, as my date of birth is after the cut-off date of April 1960, by only a few months, I cannot even hope for compensation for my forty-six years of contributions. (Still no formal notice of a change to the original agreement).

    Having recently, again, been made redundant I last week received my first Universal Credit payment; it totalled £5 less than my rent and council tax will cost. No money for food or other utilities. In other cultures the abandonment and starvation of older people has been referred to as senicide. Is this now a Conservative policy?

    There was no equality in this ‘money-grab’, there was no consideration for the dire consequences it would inflict upon millions of women.

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  6. I think the £1000 or £3000 derisory figures being discussed are disgusting. I have paid into my pension for over 50 years, paid in 50+ years of full N I Contributions and am out of pocket £54,000! Jeremy Vine states our pension is a benefit! No it is not, we have paid in and now I want them to pay out !
    When I started work I was promised my pension at 60 years old, I am still working now at 66 as I can’t afford to stop! Please repay the debt to us 50’s born women.

    Liked by 1 person

    • Hello Lesley,

      Yes, Jeremy Vine needs to get his facts straight. We are not asking for a handout, we are asking for the money which we paid into the system over many decades. Therefore, I don’t understand why the government keeps saying that they can’t afford to fully compensate us. What happened to all the money we paid into the National Insurance fund??

      Like

  7. If they kick the fan down the road long enough we’ll all be long gone, they have had 10 years to resolve this. 
    best wishes. Thanks to all. Best wishes

    Lynne Andrew

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  8. I simply cannot understand why the government has denied the right to die for those who need and want it, yet refuse to give pensions to those who paid for it for decades. They clearly want to delay as long as possible so enough of us die off (just like the Factor 8 Scandal). A couple of thousand compensation for the £50k plus they ‘stole’ from me, not to mention the devasting effect on my life – how dare they? They are only thinking with their wallets – decency and justice have no place in ‘Broken Britain’!

    Liked by 1 person

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