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70-Year-Old Pensioner Fears Harsh Winter Due to Inability to Afford Heating – Labour’s Controversial Plan to Scrap Winter Fuel Allowance for Millions of Retirees Sparks Outrage!H

A pensioner has told how he is ‘scared for the winter’ because he can’t afford to put the heating on, as Labour prepares to scrap the winter fuel allowance from millions.

Simon Moss, a 70-year-old  retired customer service assistant, is facing a harsh winter ahead in his cold housing association bungalow.

He already only goes shopping once a month, has cut out smoking, drinking and holidays as well as smaller luxuries such as Sky TV – and he has two children on Universal Credit who he tries to support as much as possib

He is one of 11.8 million people in the UK who say they don’t have enough to live on, according to a new report from Christians Against Poverty.

They say their clients are typically £273-a-month short of what they need to be able to cover their basics such as food, energy bills and rent.

Mr Moss, from Sunderland, sid: ‘Life is a struggle, I never go out and hardly ever drink anymore.

‘I’m scared for the winter.’

Simon Moss, a 70-year-old retired customer service assistant, is facing a harsh winter ahead in his cold housing association bungalow

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Simon Moss, a 70-year-old retired customer service assistant, is facing a harsh winter ahead in his cold housing association bungalow

He is one of 11.8 million people in the UK who say they don't have enough to live on, according to a new report from Christians Against Poverty

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He is one of 11.8 million people in the UK who say they don’t have enough to live on, according to a new report from Christians Against Poverty

Labour’s plans would see only pensioners on incomes low enough to receive pension credit getting winter fuel payments worth up to £300 this year, despite fears that many will be forced to choose between heating and eating.

Read More

Ten Labour MPs join revolt on stripping winter fuel allowance from pensioners ahead of showdown vote

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Deputy Prime Minister Angela Rayner said the Government would not ‘play fast and loose’ with the nation’s finances as she defended the decision to means test pensioners’ winter fuel payments.

She told BBC Breakfast: ‘We have to make sure that we can fiscally be responsible, so that we can grow our economy, so that we can pay for our public services.

‘And we said that in the run-up to the general election. What we didn’t realise is that absolute mess the Tories had left the… state of the finances, and we’re having to make difficult decisions.’

She said the Government was taking action to support pensioners, with the household support fund extended to ‘help people who maybe are not entitled to pension credit, who are just above that threshold, who may struggle this winter’.

Protecting the state pension triple lock, which looks set to give an above-inflation rise in line with average earnings, also gives ‘some protection’, she said.

She acknowledged it was a ‘difficult choice’ but it was due to the ‘difficult circumstances because of the previous government and what they did’.

It is of little consolation to Mr Moss, who a few years ago found himself in a difficult financial situation and sought help from Christians Against Poverty (CAP).

With the assistance of his CAP Debt Centre Manager, he was able to go debt-free through a Debt Relief Order.

Mr Moss says his pension from various jobs in retail plus his state pension narrowly tips him over the edge of the threshold to not get  the winter fuel allowance

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Mr Moss says his pension from various jobs in retail plus his state pension narrowly tips him over the edge of the threshold to not get the winter fuel allowance

The thought of enduring another winter like the last one but without any help from the government fills the pensioner with anxiety

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The thought of enduring another winter like the last one but without any help from the government fills the pensioner with anxiety

However, despite this relief, managing his finances remains a constant struggle.

Read More

Keir Starmer bows to demands for vote on stripping millions of pensioners of winter fuel allowance

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Mr Moss says his pension from various jobs in retail plus his state pension narrowly tips him over the edge of the threshold to not get the winter fuel allowance.

His weekly income of £219 isn’t enough to cover all his expenses. He has had to make significant changes to his former lifestyle just to stay afloat.

He said: ‘I’ve learned over the past few months to cancel everything I used to have. [There’s] no Sky TV, just Freeview, and I hardly ever go out or drink anymore.

‘I’ve had to give up smoking, which I guess is one good thing.’

He added he takes no holidays, no treats and that his existence is ‘living hand to mouth each day’.

‘It’s a case of constantly robbing Peter to pay Paul,’ he said.

For Mr Moss, the thought of enduring another winter like the last one but without any help from the government fills him with anxiety.

‘Last year, it was freezing. I wasn’t putting the heating on unless I absolutely had to.

‘I was barely using it, and if we get a cold winter this year, I’m dreading it.’

Chancellor Rachel Reeves defends winter fuel payment decision

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