Mel Stride
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Female |
---|---|
Age | 63 |
Web site | melstridemp.com |
Date of birth | September 30,1961 |
Zodiac sign | Libra |
Born | United Kingdom |
Office | Member of Parliament of the United Kingdom |
Party | Conservative Party |
Job | Politician |
Education | Portsmouth Grammar School |
University of Oxford | |
St Edmund Hall | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 556740 |
Mel Stride Life story
Melvyn John Stride is a British Conservative Party politician, who has been the Member of Parliament for Central Devon since 2010. Stride currently serves as Financial Secretary to the Treasury and Paymaster General.
Benefit claimants not seeking work to face mandatory work placements
... The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, Mel Stride, said: " Our message is clear: if you are fit, if you refuse to work, if you are taking taxpayers for a ride - we will take your benefits away...
Welfare cuts worth billions planned by ministers
... Both Chancellor Jeremy Hunt and Mel Stride, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, have spoken in recent months of their desire to get more people off benefits and into work...
Rishi Sunak under pressure from ministers to raise housing benefit
... Housing Secretary Michael Gove and Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride have written to the prime minister and the chancellor demanding an increase in Local Housing Allowance rates...
Jeremy Hunt to confirm national living wage to rise to £11 an hour
... At a fringe event on Sunday, Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride said the government was already looking at the Work Capability Assessment " so it reflects the way the modern world works" including increased opportunities for home-working...
Date set for next £300 cost-of-living payment
... Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride said: " The best way we can boost bank balances is by bearing down on inflation, but as we get there, we are ensuring the most vulnerable households are cushioned from high prices with a further cost-of-living payment...
The big questions on the future of the triple lock
... But the Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride won t commit to that...
Triple lock: State pension could go up less than expected next year
... But Mel Stride said he could not commit to using it for the calculation...
Angela Rayner stalls on triple lock pensions commitment
... The same month, Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride said a commitment to maintain the triple lock would " almost certainly" be in the next Tory manifesto...
The big questions on the future of the triple lock
By Chris MasonPolitical editor, BBC News
A sprinkling of question marks are being thrown around what in Westminster is called the " triple Lock ".
It is A Promise that dates back to The Coalition Agreement in 2010 - When the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats came together in government.
On, they committed to what they actually called the " triple guarantee".
" We will restore the earnings link for the basic state pension from April 2011, with a 'triple guarantee' that pensions are raised by The Higher of earnings, prices or 2. 5%, " they said.
Combatting pensioner poverty and acknowledging older folk have fewer ways to increase their income was the justification.
Oh, and there is also The Power of The Grey vote.
Older folk are more likely to vote than Young People , so if you're a politician, you mess with pensioners at your peril.
The political consequences of that promise, though, made in the scramble of Five Days of assembling a government in May 2010, have been - and will continue to be - Long lasting.
Arguments have since raged about inter-generational fairness.
Are younger people let down by the political system, and older people prioritised?
Oh, and the triple Lock is mighty expensive, not least because each year's rise is baked in.
Thirteen years on, three big questions about its future linger.
Question 1 - What to do about the triple Lock now?What should the government do this autumn in deciding how much The State pension should go up next April?
Up to now, When earnings have been higher than either prices or 2. 5%, it is a figure representing total earnings that has been used. But The Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride won't commit to that.
And sources in government are letting it be known that they are contemplating something a little lower.
The Argument is made that this year's total earnings figure is distorted by some one-off payments that were agreed to resolve strikes in The Public sector - and a figure that discounts this would be more reasonable.
A rise of 8%, rather than 8. 5%, for example, would save the Treasury hundreds of millions of pounds.
It has been argued, by folk I have spoken to in government, that there is the legal underpinning to do this.
And, indeed, there is.
It is the. This says " in each tax year The Secretary of State shall carry out a review of The General level of earnings in Great Britain , taking into account changes in that level which have taken place since his last review".
In other words, that you could look at earnings across the whole year, rather than the figures for May to July, which includes these extra payments.
But that is The Law . And here is the politics: The Convention is to use the overall earnings figure, and not doing that could be interpreted by some as breaking The Spirit of the triple Lock .
Which brings us to….
Question 2 - What to do about the triple Lock at and after The Next general Election ?Neither the Conservatives nor Labour have committed to keeping the triple Lock come The Next general Election .
Here is the bind they are both in: It is very expensive.
And some argue it is unfair to younger generations.
But it is mighty difficult for politicians to take stuff away, particularly if you fear your opponent will not.
I suspect that if the Conservatives keep it, Labour will too. If the Tories tweak it, Labour may well follow suit.
But what about the Long term? That brings us to….
Question 3 - Is the triple Lock sustainable?Enter again The Work and Pensions Secretary Mel Stride , who has told The Bbc it is not sustainable in the " very, very Long term".
Usually at Westminster, folk talking about the " very, very Long term" mean a week on Friday. I exaggerate, but only a bit.
Politics, by its very nature, is very often very short term.
Mr Stride was actually talking decades ahead and projections from the government's official forecaster, which point to its astronomical costs in decades to come if it is maintained.
The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) have also looked into this too - and
You can hear Jonathan Cribb from the IFS talking to us about this on the latest edition of the
But Lord Hague, the former Conservative leader, wrote in The Times that the triple Lock is " a very fierce sleeping dog that hates anyone to tread on its paws".
The politics of Waking Up that pooch, This Side of the Election - doing anything radical about the triple Lock - looks mighty difficult for either main Westminster party.
Related TopicsSource of news: bbc.com