
THE Labour government could face a parliamentary showdown on its Waspi “betrayal” as opposition parties rally to force a vote.
Despite a high-profile campaign which won full backing from Labour under Jeremy Corbyn’s leadership, and support from a host of future cabinet ministers since — including Work and Pensions Secretary Liz Kendall and the Prime Minister himself — Ms Kendall on Tuesday ruled out any compensation for women born in the 1950s who had lost out as pension ages were raised to that of men in a process that began in 1995.
Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman Rebecca Hilsenrath, who judged in March that errors had been made and recommended a £10.5 billion government compensation package, told Times radio she “didn’t expect” a public body to admit it “got it wrong but then refuse to make it right for those affected.”

There are only two things that stand between workers and the musket’s volley today - the ballot and the union, asserts MATT KERR