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David Cameron defends tax credit cuts in Commons David Cameron defends tax credit cuts at PMQs
(about 1 hour later)
Jeremy Corbyn and David Cameron have clashed over tax credit cuts and steel industry job losses in the Commons. David Cameron has defended proposed cuts to tax credits and warned the House of Lords not to challenge them.
The Labour leader said people would not believe the PM's "assurances" over tax credits given his insistence during the election that they would not be cut. The prime minister said cutting tax and welfare while raising pay was the "right approach" and MPs supported it.
But the PM said cutting tax and welfare while raising pay was the "right approach" and MPs had supported it. Amid reports peer may try to block them, he said it was the historic right of elected MPs to decide such matters.
Mr Corbyn urged the PM to intervene to save steel jobs. The PM said he had a plan for a "strong and viable" sector. But Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said people would not believe the PM's "reassurances" and accused him of "cutting people's ability to survive".
The exchange over tax credits comes amid attempts by MPs and peers from all parties to try and get the government to amend its proposed changes to tax credits - due to take effect in April. The exchange over tax credits at Prime Minister's Questions comes amid attempts by MPs and peers from all parties to try and get the government to amend its proposed changes to tax credits - due to take effect in April.
A government source has accused peers of "provoking a constitutional showdown" by tabling a so-called "fatal motion" in an attempt to halt the cuts. The government has said that this would be an "unprecedented challenge" to the authority of Commons. But the BBC's political editor Laura Kuenssberg said there was no sign of any concessions over the issue, with ministers "digging in".
The cross-bench peer who is intending to table the motion, Molly Meacher, has said that she has been placed under "awful pressure" to withdraw motion halting cuts to tax credits David Cameron's warning to the Lords
The prime minister used a question from Conservative MP Jacob Rees-Mogg over the respective powers of the Commons and the Lords to issue a thinly veiled warning to peers minded to challenge the policy on tax credits.
Mr Cameron said the 1911 Parliament Act enshrined the right of the Commons to have the final say over budgetary and financial matters, pointing out that MPs had already backed the tax credit changes in two separate votes.
"I think the House of Lords should listen to that very carefully and recognise it is for this House to make financial decisions and it is for the other House to revise other legislation," he said.
A government source has accused peers of "provoking a constitutional showdown" by tabling a so-called "fatal motion" in an attempt to halt the cuts.
The cross-bench peer who is intending to table the motion, Molly Meacher, has said that she has been placed under "awful pressure" to withdraw her motion halting cuts to tax credits.
Jeremy Corbyn's tactics
The Labour leader used his first three questions to probe the prime minister over tax credits. As an opening gambit, he brought up the Tory MP Heidi Allen's much-publicised critique of the policy and asked what part of it the PM disagreed with.
Mr Corbyn then went on - as part of his technique of crowd-sourcing questions from the public - to quote a self-employed woman who had written to him to say that she and many others relied on tax credits to help them establish a business in the early years.
He asked whether the PM "did not see the value of giving support to people trying to improve their lives rather than cutting their ability to survive properly?"
The Labour leader then quoted what he said was Mr Cameron's assurances during the election campaign that tax credits would be protected, suggesting the PM had had a "strange change of mind" on the issue since then.
"Is there any reason this change has come about or any reason why we should believe the PM on any assurances he gives?" he asked.
Steel and other matters
The two leaders also clashed over job losses in the steel industry, with Mr Corbyn accusing the government of not having any industrial strategy and demanding intervention to save threatened plants.
The prime minister said he had a plan for a "strong and viable" sector, tackling energy costs and other factors, but he said he would not fix the global price of steel.
He went on to accuse Labour of "self-righteousness" - suggesting that steel production had fallen by 50% during its time in government.