Labour have been blaming all their tough decisions, including making the winter fuel allowance means tested, on the previous government. One reader explains why her pension credit will go unclaimed.
Why I won’t claim pension credit
I may or may not be eligible for pension credit, but there is no way I will claim anything unless I am on the breadline. Not because it’s charity (I’ve paid all the taxes). My grandmother in the 1930s was a victim of the vicious and infamous means test. Separated from her husband after he’d spent all the money on other women, she had to bring up her four daughters alone. The youngest slept on two kitchen chairs lashed together. There was no bed for her.
That youngest remembered all her life how a fat woman in a leopardskin coat told her beloved mother that she would have to sell furniture which was too good for poor people before she could have any public assistance. They had an armchair and a mirror, for which they were too low class. They didn’t sell them – the neighbours hid the furniture when the means test people were due.
The family finally clawed themselves out of poverty, thanks to the hard work and aspiration of my mother and her sisters, but in no way helped by the state. Claim money from them? Are claimants treated any better now than my grandmother? They are not. I will not be insulted as my lovely grandmother was. She was worth a dozen of the leopardskin-coated assessors. Or of the industrial-scale jobsworths who think they know better than claimants just because they are poor.
Rose King, Cromer
Checks and balances
Why is this possible – that people like this get into power? Do we not do background checks on these people? Should they not be people who lead by example? That want to do better for the people of the country?