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MP challenges child tax credit plan that could require women to prove rape | MP challenges child tax credit plan that could require women to prove rape |
(about 1 hour later) | |
The government has been challenged to justify an “incredibly distasteful” proposal in Wednesday’s budget which would require a woman who had a third child as the result of rape to justify her position in order to avoid losing tax credits. | The government has been challenged to justify an “incredibly distasteful” proposal in Wednesday’s budget which would require a woman who had a third child as the result of rape to justify her position in order to avoid losing tax credits. |
The plans to restrict child tax credits to two children for new claimants from 2017 incorporate a number of exemptions, including multiple births, and set out that “the Department for Work and Pensions and HMRC will develop protections for women who have a third child as a result of rape or other exceptional circumstances”. | |
Alison Thewliss, SNP MP for Glasgow Central, who first drew attention to the clause on Twitter on Wednesday afternoon, described what would inevitably result in a woman having to prove to a DWP official that she had been raped as appalling. | Alison Thewliss, SNP MP for Glasgow Central, who first drew attention to the clause on Twitter on Wednesday afternoon, described what would inevitably result in a woman having to prove to a DWP official that she had been raped as appalling. |
“We think the policy on limiting tax credits is appalling anyway, and tantamount to social engineering, but putting a woman who has been raped – and her child – in that position is shocking.” | “We think the policy on limiting tax credits is appalling anyway, and tantamount to social engineering, but putting a woman who has been raped – and her child – in that position is shocking.” |
Thewliss said that the policy had clearly not been thought through. She said: “How are you going to prove it? What if there is no conviction [for the rape] as happens in a lot of cases? There are so many unanswered questions. | Thewliss said that the policy had clearly not been thought through. She said: “How are you going to prove it? What if there is no conviction [for the rape] as happens in a lot of cases? There are so many unanswered questions. |
“What happens if it becomes known in the local community that a woman is receiving tax credits for a third child? What assumptions will be made about that woman and her children? It’s a complete abuse of her privacy.” | “What happens if it becomes known in the local community that a woman is receiving tax credits for a third child? What assumptions will be made about that woman and her children? It’s a complete abuse of her privacy.” |
In Thursday’s business questions in the Commons, Kirsten Oswald, SNP MP for East Renfrewshire, called on the government to allow time for a debate on the “incredibly distasteful” proposal. | In Thursday’s business questions in the Commons, Kirsten Oswald, SNP MP for East Renfrewshire, called on the government to allow time for a debate on the “incredibly distasteful” proposal. |
This was dismissed by Chris Grayling, the leader of the house, who said George Osborne had already made clear it would be “designed in a way to handle difficult cases in the most sensitive possible way”. | This was dismissed by Chris Grayling, the leader of the house, who said George Osborne had already made clear it would be “designed in a way to handle difficult cases in the most sensitive possible way”. |
Lisa Longstaff of the campaigners Women Against Rape described the proposal as “disgusting”. She said: “Asking women to disclose very difficult information and expecting them to be able to prove it – in what is frankly a very hostile environment when the DWP is trying to take your money away – will have appalling consequences.” |
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