"People's legitimate need for support should decide spending levels, not the other way round. Forcing ministers into a situation where they choose between political embarrassment, or meeting vulnerable people's living costs, may mean that people with a disability, or who are struggling to meet housing costs, do not get the help they need. We need to see further specific details about how the cap will work, but deciding whether to increase support for people struggling to pay rent or who have a disability should be based on people's need, not on political calculations."
Following the announcement from George Osborne that they'll a seven day delay before Claimants start receiving benefits Ms Guy said: "Seven days is a long time to wait before being caught by the safety net. This could mean families who have fallen on hard times being unable to eat or heat their homes, relying even more on food banks which are already breaking under the strain of demand, or turning to payday lenders.
"The Chancellor must explain if people moving in and out of temporary or low paid work, or on zero-hours contracts, will be penalised if their work dries up and they face seven days with no income. The uncertainty this creates for people in precarious employment completely undermines the stability Universal Credit is intended to provide. The Spending Round 2013: Policy Costings document shows there is great deal of uncertainty about the effect these policy changes will have on the time that people will spend off benefits. Now that the Social Fund has been abolished, and with food banks running dry, the Government must explain how it will support families through this time to cope without any income."
As the Chancellor announced more cuts to local government budgets Ms Guy said: "Council budgets are already on a knife-edge and the Chancellor is taking an enormous risk by cutting them even further. In 2015-16, Universal Credit will be at a critical stage and massive cuts to council budgets will limit the support that councils can give to people as new benefits are rolled out. Restricting councils' ability to help implement welfare reforms is short-sighted and could have long-term damage if councils are unable to provide the backstop that is so desperately needed at a time of policy upheaval and cash shortage.
"Citizens Advice has long argued that welfare should be simpler, but the blizzard of changes that ministers are making cannot succeed without a strong safety net to help people affected. More than a third of enquires to Citizens Advice Bureaux are about benefit problems, and cutting local government's budget even further will pull the rug from under the very people the Government is relying on to make a success of its flagship welfare reforms. People are having to absorb a raft of benefit changes which could cost more in the long run if poorly implemented, and cutting councils' budgets so severely risks undermining Universal Credit and other new policies."
Responding to the news of further cuts to the Ministry of Justice budget Ms Guy said: "Cutting the Ministry of Justice's budget by a further 10%, increases the likelihood of the emergence of a two-tier justice system. The Government's plans to cut legal aid will dramatically reduce people's access to legal support and could create a two-tier justice system, with a fair hearing available only to people with high enough incomes. Citizens Advice campaigns for fairness, and the unprecedented cuts to justice put at risk the fundamental principle of the rule of law. Ministers' reforms and the additional cuts announced today will narrow access to fair treatment and undermine the UK's renowned justice system."
As the Chancellor announced more cuts to local government budgets Ms Guy said: "Council budgets are already on a knife-edge and the Chancellor is taking an enormous risk by cutting them even further. In 2015-16, Universal Credit will be at a critical stage and massive cuts to council budgets will limit the support that councils can give to people as new benefits are rolled out. Restricting councils' ability to help implement welfare reforms is short-sighted and could have long-term damage if councils are unable to provide the backstop that is so desperately needed at a time of policy upheaval and cash shortage.
"Citizens Advice has long argued that welfare should be simpler, but the blizzard of changes that ministers are making cannot succeed without a strong safety net to help people affected. More than a third of enquires to Citizens Advice Bureaux are about benefit problems, and cutting local government's budget even further will pull the rug from under the very people the Government is relying on to make a success of its flagship welfare reforms. People are having to absorb a raft of benefit changes which could cost more in the long run if poorly implemented, and cutting councils' budgets so severely risks undermining Universal Credit and other new policies."
Responding to the news of further cuts to the Ministry of Justice budget Ms Guy said: "Cutting the Ministry of Justice's budget by a further 10%, increases the likelihood of the emergence of a two-tier justice system. The Government's plans to cut legal aid will dramatically reduce people's access to legal support and could create a two-tier justice system, with a fair hearing available only to people with high enough incomes. Citizens Advice campaigns for fairness, and the unprecedented cuts to justice put at risk the fundamental principle of the rule of law. Ministers' reforms and the additional cuts announced today will narrow access to fair treatment and undermine the UK's renowned justice system."
As the Tories have criticised Labour for wanting to include pensioner benefits in their benefit cap, Ms Guy said on capping universal pensioner benefits: "Reducing universal pensioner benefits, such as winter fuel payments, may be uncomfortable but is right. When people, especially low paid families and those struggling to find work, are feeling the squeeze in these tough economic times, this is a discussion that can't be side-stepped. Britain needs a sustainable welfare budget that continues to be a safety net for vulnerable people, whether young or old and in real need."