Labour MPs David Winnick, Michael Meacher and Kelvin Hopkins have been in Buckinghamshire today, visiting the PM’s official country residence – and protesting against the Bedroom Tax. The three MPs called on Cameron to pay the Bedroom Tax on his 10 spare bedrooms at Chequers:
And here’s the letter they delivered to the PM:
The Rt. Hon. David Cameron MP,
Prime Minister,
Chequers,
Near Ellesborough,
Aylesbury,
Bucks.
5 April 2013.
Dear Prime Minister,
We have come to protest at the unjust and cruelly vindictive bedroom tax which you have imposed on 660,000 households in publicly rented housing across the country, up to two-thirds of which are estimated to include a disabled member. You have decided to penalise them because you argue that they all have more bedrooms than they need. As a result these families, amongst the poorest in Britain, will be forced to pay from their own subsistence income extra rent amounting to either about £11 a week or about £20-25 a week or, if they cannot afford this extra rent, will be forced out of their homes to find smaller accommodation which is simply not available currently on anywhere near the scale required.
You, on the other hand, are provided by the State for your family’s use with a second home set in 1,000 acres with 10 bedrooms. You have also constantly claimed that “we are all in this together”. In that case we would ask you to show as much compassion towards Britain’s poorest as you have been shown generosity.
We would further ask you, do you not therefore think in these circumstances it would be reasonable, given that most of your 10 bedrooms will remain unoccupied for most of the time, that you make an equally proportionate contribution out of your own income towards the costs of the State in the administration of Chequers?
Yours sincerely,
David Winnick MP Rt. Hon. Michael Meacher MP Kelvin Hopkins MP
More from LabourList
Kemi Badenoch: Keir Starmer says first Black Westminster leader is ‘proud moment’ for Britain
‘Soaring attacks on staff show a broken prison system. Labour needs a strategy’
West of England mayor: The three aspiring Labour candidates shortlisted