Isabel Hardman Isabel Hardman

Do Labour know what they want from welfare reform?

Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall (Getty Images)

Liz Kendall and her ministerial colleagues were forced to offer an hour’s worth of holding statements about the government’s welfare reforms this afternoon when they appeared at Work and Pensions Questions in the Commons. Those reforms are supposed to be coming in a green paper this week, probably tomorrow, but the Work and Pensions Secretary ended up dodging questions on whether she even had collective agreement from her colleagues.

Those questions came from Kendall’s shadow Helen Whately in the topical section. When Whately asked whether there had been collective agreement, Kendall replied that the shadow minister would have to ‘show a little patience’, before mocking the Conservatives for having no plans on welfare reform of their own.

Whately returned, pointing out that she ‘was listening very hard to that answer, and from everything I heard, she still doesn’t have the support of her cabinet colleagues with less than 24 hours to go’.

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