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Prime Minister's Questions: David Cameron and Ed Miliband clash on work programme Prime Minister's Questions: Cameron and Miliband clash on work programme
(35 minutes later)
David Cameron and Ed Miliband have clashed over the government's welfare-to-work programme aimed at helping the long-term unemployed. PM David Cameron and Ed Miliband have clashed over the government's welfare-to-work programme aimed at helping the long-term unemployed.
Official figures showed the work programme had missed its main target for getting people sustained jobs.Official figures showed the work programme had missed its main target for getting people sustained jobs.
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    Mr Miliband said the programme was "failing" because the government had failed to deliver economic growth.
    Mr Cameron insisted the programme was working and accused Labour of leaving a "poisonous" unemployment legacy.Mr Cameron insisted the programme was working and accused Labour of leaving a "poisonous" unemployment legacy.
    He said: "Over 800,000 people have taken part in the work programme, of those over half came off benefits. And over 200,000 got into work because of the work programme."He said: "Over 800,000 people have taken part in the work programme, of those over half came off benefits. And over 200,000 got into work because of the work programme."
    The scheme was dealing with the "hardest cases" of long-term unemployed people, he said, and although further progress was needed it was "the right programme".The scheme was dealing with the "hardest cases" of long-term unemployed people, he said, and although further progress was needed it was "the right programme".
    Mr Cameron was also asked about the report from the Leveson Inquiry, which is due to be published on Thursday. Under the scheme, firms and charities are paid to help find jobs for the long-term unemployed.
    The prime minister said the "status quo" was "unacceptable" and needed to change. 'Rats in a sack'
    He pledged to work across party boundaries and said he wanted to see an "independent regulatory system which can deliver and in which the public will have confidence". Figures released on Tuesday showed only 3.53% of people on the programme had found a job for six months or more - missing the coalition's 5.5% target.
    Mr Miliband said the Leveson report provided a "once in a generation opportunity for real change" and backed an all-party approach. Mr Miliband accused cabinet ministers of being "at each other like rats in a sack" over the economy and problems with the flagship employment scheme.
    It will be followed by a statement from Foreign Secretary William Hague on the UK's position with regard to Palestinians' request to the UN general assembly to be upgraded from permanent observer to "non-member observer state". "His welfare reform programme is failing because there isn't the work and his economic strategy is failing," Mr Miliband said of Mr Cameron.
    Israel and US oppose the move, which is due to be voted on later this week. "He has a work programme that isn't working, a growth strategy that is not delivering and a deficit that is rising.
    They are concerned that the Palestinians are trying to seek full statehood via the UN, rather than through negotiation as set out in the 1993 Oslo peace accords under which the Palestinian Authority was established. "It is a government that is failing, a prime minister that is failing and it is the British people that are paying the price for his failure."
    France, Switzerland and Denmark have all given their backing to the Palestinian position in the last 24 hours. But Mr Cameron said his government was dealing with the people "Labour left on the scrap heap".
    Other topics which have came up during Prime Minister's Questions included the flooding seen this week in England and Wales. Labour was now "officially the party of something for nothing," he said, because it failed to back reforms to welfare.
    The work programme was "good value" for the taxpayer and was succeeding in getting people into work, he added.
    The government has said it expects the scheme to help 2.4 million people back into work over five years.
    Providers can earn between £3,700 and £13,700 per person helped into work, depending how hard it is to give support to an individual, with an initial payment of between £400 and £600.
    Leveson Inquiry
    Joining the work programme is mandatory for people aged over 25 when they have been out of work for a year and for under-25s after nine months. People in certain circumstances, like young offenders, must join after a shorter period of time.
    Mr Cameron was also asked about the report from the Leveson Inquiry into the culture and ethics of the press, which is due to be published on Thursday.
    He said: "The status quo is unacceptable and needs to change."
    He pledged to work across party boundaries and said he wanted to see an "independent regulatory system that can deliver, and in which the public will have confidence".
    Mr Miliband said the Leveson report provided a "once-in-a-generation opportunity for real change" and backed an all-party approach.
    Other topics which came up during Prime Minister's Questions included the flooding seen this week in England and Wales.
    Mr Cameron paid tribute to the emergency services and "good neighbours" who had helped those affected by the floods and expressed his sympathies for those who had lost their lives.
    But he defended government cuts to spending on flood defences.
    "The government is planning to spend over £2 billion over the next four years.
    "That is 6% less than over the previous four years, but we believe by spending the money better and by leveraging from private and other sectors we can increase that level of flood defence spending.
    "The spending that is already under way will protect an additional 145,000 homes between now and 2015 but if we can go further, of course we should," he said.