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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Politics
Dan Bloom

Tory minister on £115k complains energy price rise is hitting him 'very significantly'

A Tory minister on a £115,000 salary today complained the cost-of-living crisis is hitting him “very significantly”.

Keir Starmer said the government “just doesn’t get” it as Kit Malthouse said his family is finding it “quite tricky... day-to-day”.

The North West Hampshire MP made the comment on the same day he receives a £2,200-a-year pay rise for MPs.

Speaking in front of a burning fireplace in his home, the father-of-three told LBC Radio: "As you know, I've got children. They need to be fed and that cost is rising.

"My fuel prices are rising quite significantly, and I have to say that in my constituency I'm on oil central heating still, sadly." He added: "We are feeling it very significantly."

MP Neil Coyle, who sits on the Commons Work and Pensions Select Committee said: “Malthouse should apologise for his gross insensitivity and focus on helping his constituents and everyone battling budgets rather than talking about himself.”

Lib Dem Treasury spokeswoman Christine Jardine said: "Just how out of touch are this lot?"

The fact a government minister in the wealthiest 3% of taxpayers is struggling will ramp up furious pressure on Rishi Sunak to announce more help.

Last week the Chancellor made National Insurance thresholds more generous and unveiled a temporary fuel duty cut - but neither will help the worst-paid part time workers with no car as incomes drop by the fastest since records began in the 1950s.

Kit Malthouse said his family is finding it “quite tricky... day-to-day” (LBC)

He has already announced a £150 council tax discount that not everyone is eligible for, and a £200 energy bills discount that only comes in October and must be paid back.

Keir Starmer blasted the Government’s “pathetic” response as National Insurance, energy bills, council tax and inflation all soar - with bills expected to jump again on October 1.

Energy firms’ websites crashed yesterday as people submitted meter readings ahead of today’s £693 surge in annual bills.

Charities said the rise will double the number of ‘fuel stress’ families struggling to pay the gas bill to 5million.

The TUC demanded an emergency budget with general secretary Frances O’Grady saying: “This is a living standards emergency. Last week’s Spring Statement was woefully inadequate.”

And parents told Save the Children they would be giving their children shared baths and cold dinners, or even sending them to bed hungry.

Bethany Fern, a 26-year-old single mum to a seven-year-old and three-year-old from Southport, told the charity: “I'm going to try and cut back even more on what we spend on food and try to freeze more.

Bethany Fern told Save the Children she will be giving her children cold dinners (Save the Children)
Last week the Chancellor unveiled a change to National Insurance thresholds and a temporary fuel duty cut - but neither will help the worst-paid part time workers with no car (REUTERS)

“We’ll be eating a lot more cold meals, triple-checking that plugs are turned off if not being used and limiting TV even more than we already do.

“We already have the heating off a lot, and my children rely on extra layers, duvets and weighted blankets.

“They have to have shared baths or not fresh baths between each other to preserve the boiler from heating water.”

Another single mum-of-three, who works full time, told LBC Radio she keeps her kids warm with hot water bottles, can only afford one meal a day and eats their leftovers.

Heating oil - used by many rural homes and not subject to the price cap on gas and electric bills - has rocketed in price after Russia ’s invasion of Ukraine and peaked at 160p a litre last month.

Minister and father-of-three Mr Malthouse said: “Lots of people in rural areas are suffering from the oil price rise.

"So we are feeling it very significantly.

“I have to confess to you, we did convert last year to electric vehicles, so we are feeling the electric price but not through the petrol. So it is a challenge for everybody."

Mr Malthouse earns £84,144 as an MP following a 2.7% rise today. Together with his salary as Policing Minister he earns £115,824 a year.

He said his family tradition was to have the heating off from April 1 - but with Britain hit by late Spring snow and ice, he had lit a fire in his fireplace.

Mr Malthouse had been asked directly what other “economies” he was having to make in his household.

He insisted Chancellor Rishi Sunak could act again, but warned the UK had “huge debt” and it would only happen “if the economy allows”.

He said: “He is monitoring it on a daily basis, if he needs to move further in the future, if the economy allows us to do that, don’t forget we’re carrying huge debts at the moment, then I know he’ll look very seriously at doing so.”

Save the Children director Dan Paskins blasted the government’s response - including raising benefits by just 3.1%, half the inflation rate - “isn’t good enough”.

He said: “The rise in energy prices will be devastating for families on low incomes.

“We’ve already seen families having to choose between heating their homes and feeding their children.

“These price rises will undoubtedly leave millions of parents wondering how they will be able to cope in the months ahead.

"Unless families are provided with more support, this increase in energy bills will leave more children living in cold and damp homes, going to bed hungry, and missing out on the opportunities they need to grow and thrive.”

One working single mum who remained anonymous told the charity: “I actually feel physically sick. I feel pressurised to work more hours even when I'm already working as much as I can.

“I often do more work after my daughter goes to bed to make the most of the time I have without it affecting her.”
Labour leader Keir Starmer blasted: "I think most people are clear that ... the Government really needed to step up in its Spring Statement last week.

“They failed to do so and their response is frankly pathetic on a very, very difficult day for millions of people.

“Energy bills are going up far more than we've ever seen on record. People are really struggling and I just don't think the Government gets it."

Keir Starmer blasted: "Their response is frankly pathetic on a very, very difficult day for millions of people" (REUTERS)

Government minister Kit Malthouse said: "I can't pretend to you it isn't tough. It is going to be.”

Liverpool-born Mr Malthouse, 55, is a close ally of Prime Minister Boris Johnson.

Before entering politics he was a chartered accountant at Deloitte before setting up County Finance Group.

As chairman, he trousered £40,000-a-year for between 10 and 35 hours’ work a month, according to the MP’s register of interests.

He is believed to have given up the role after becoming a minister in early 2018.

He also holds shares in County Finance Group Ltd and County Business Finance Ltd.

Kit Malthouse, pictured, is a close ally of Boris Johnson (Leon Neal)

He was elected to the ultra-safe Tory seat of North West Hampshire in 2015 and enjoys a 26,308 majority. He married Juliana Fahrain 15 years ago.

She is managing director of Kun Europe, which “provides a range of services to The Kun Shoulder Rest, the world's leading shoulder rest for violin and viola”.

They have one son and one daughter together. He also has a son from a previous marriage.

Labour’s leader urged ministers to examine hiking benefits by the rate of inflation - 6.2% and set to peak at almost 9% - instead of 3.1% now which is a real-terms cut.

As the cost-of-living crisis intensified, the Labour leader said people were “tossing and turning in their beds about how they’re going to pay for this”.

He said people are “seeing nothing from the government”, who “don’t realise” how badly people are struggling.

He added he was hearing of people keeping the heating at 12C as they can't afford any more.

But asked if benefits should rise in line with inflation, Mr Starmer stopped short of giving a guarantee that they would under a Labour government.

Instead he told Sky News:: “I think we’ve got to look at it for that very reason because otherwise people fall behind.

“That’s what we wanted to see from the Government last week, that’s what we didn’t see from the Government last week.

“Frankly, if the Government put a package on the table that Parliament could agree we could get on with this.

“But the Government just doesn’t get the scale of the problem for millions and millions of people.”

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