Political reporter
Political correspondent

The Sir Kir Stmper called the current profit system “uncertain”, “uncertain” and “unfair”, and that the government cannot “look away” and do not “look away.
Addressing Labor MPs on Monday evening, the Prime Minister said that the current welfare system was “the worst in all the worlds”, which discourages people from working while producing “spilling bills”.
Comments come as work and Pension Secretary Liz Kendal prepared to set changes in the welfare system and cut the profit bill in the coming weeks.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has printed Several billion pounds in welfare and other government departments in front of the spring statement.
There is restlessness on the plans within the party, Labor MP Rachel Maskel warned against “Drackian Cuts” that the risk is “pushing people with disabilities into poverty”.
Maskal told the BBC that he had raised “deep, deep concern” among Labor MPs.
He said: “I see in the past what labor has achieved at this place and believes that we can catch our values, make sure we are helping people and not harming people.”
Another Labor MP, Neil Duncan-Jordan also expressed concern, told Newsnight: “If we are going to make poor people poor, there will be many MPs who will not be able to sign up on it.
“It seems that it can be a run again of penance and I am worried about it.”
However, other sections of the parliamentary labor party are calling for changes.
Britain Working Group Gate of 36 Labor MPs has said that the government has a “moral duty” that can help people to work for a long time.
In the letter to Kendal, MPs said that the country faced “difficult options” to overcome the “economic inactivity crisis”.
Speaking at a meeting of Labor MPs on Monday night, Sir Kir said: “We have found ourselves in the worst position in all the world – with wrong encouragement – discouraging people from working, taxpayers financing a spiral bill.
“A futile generation, one-eight youth are not in education, employment or training, and people who really need that security trap, still do not always get the dignity they deserve.
“It is unstable, it is uncertain and it is unfair, people think in their bones.”
“So, it needs to offer us to the top and bottom of the country: if you can work, we will pay the work – if you need help, that safety trap will be for you.
“But this is the labor party – we believe in the dignity of work and we believe in the dignity of every worker.”
Many MPs who left the meeting said that they were satisfied with the Prime Minister’s words.
One said that he admitted that welfare reforms were to be done and were assured that he had said that it was to be done with labor values and through the dignity of work.
However, another said that the components were frightened and need to be supported.
He said that there was little belief that reducing benefits such as personal freedom payments, which help people keep their freedom, had the ability to increase cost.
In a letter to Reeves, a dozen donations have argued that “there are very few evidence to suggest to increase employment results by cutting profit”.
Donation – Civil advice, scope and meaning – including disability rights UK urged her to “think about disability benefits again”.
He said: “There are people with disabilities who are out of work who want to work while giving correct support. And for some disabled people, work is not appropriate.
“Changes in welfare should begin here. Not with the cut.”
But Minister Kovid -19 epidemic and taxpayer are concerned about the increase in the number of people claiming profit since cost.
As of January, 9.3 million people aged 16 to 64 in the UK were financially passive – an increase of 713,000 since the epidemic.
The Department of Work and Pension says that some 2.8 million people are financially passive due to long -term disease.
Last year, the government spent £ 65bn on the benefits of the disease and the figure is expected to increase to tens of billions before the next general election.
Some improvement in welfare system Has already been announced And the work includes plans to use 1,000 tasks to help long -term unemployed.
In its letter, the Gate Britain Working Group stated that the cost of impressive between long -term sick and disabled is “very beyond the economic requirement”.
“This is a moral duty,” the letter said.
The letter stated that Group – Most of which were first elected in the last July general election – was designed for “press for fundamental change in our welfare system to support the work”.
“We believe that improvement in our broken system is not only necessary, but is actually a progressive effort,” the letter said.
Talking to Sky News on Sunday, Chris Filp, home secretary of the conservative Chhaya, said that many people were being signed from being ill.
He said that there is a need to make the profit system difficult and suggested that it was very easy for people to receive welfare payments.
“I think it has gone far away and it is spending American Arabs and billions of pounds in a year,” he said.