The real scroungers

The BBC political shows are so much more interesting than ours, aren’t they?

Salma Yaqoob called Tory bigwig Iain Duncan Smith a “scrounger” on Thursday’sQuestion Time, attacking the secretary for works and pensions over austerity measures that have left “13 million Britons living below the poverty line”.

“I’m sitting next to Iain Duncan Smith who labels poor people as scroungers when you {IDS} claim £39 for a breakfast, like you can’t afford your own breakfast, and you live on your wife’s estate and have taken a million pounds of taxpayers’ money, that’s what I call scrounging,” the Birmingham chair of Stop the War and the former leader of the Respect party said.

“What a load of old nonsense,” replied the angered Tory, before dismissing his attacker with a wave of the hand. “I have never, ever labelled them as scroungers at all,” he said, shaking his head. He also denied that he had claimed the money for breakfast.

Earlier, Yaqoob had called Duncan-Smith “patronising” when he spoke about poverty.

“There are people in this country, 13 million people, who are now below the poverty line. People in one of the richest countries in the world face the indignity of relying on food banks,” she said.

“My full-time job is in mental health and I have seen myself how people have become suicidal. I have counselled people who have lost members of their family who did not want to go on, because they didn’t want to be a burden after having their support taken away. These are very, very real issues.

“We have this drive on people called ‘scroungers’ but half the people on welfare benefits are pensioners. Our pensioners are not scroungers. And 60% of people claiming benefits are in work, because their wages are not paying enough.

Oh, and here’s the receipt for the breakfast he insists he didn’t claim:

2 thoughts on “The real scroungers

  1. Clinton yesterday, “Bill and I are not that well off.” Which is probably true when you’re only worth $20 or $30 million dollars and you’re hanging around with billionaires. Us workers out here in the real world think you’re doing pretty well madam. The fact that you can’t recognize your place outside of the 99% speaks very clearly about how comfortable you’ve become being a part of the 1%. This women is a joke. A very dangerous joke.

  2. I only wish we could hear the same discussions this side of the pond. I’m really tired of the never ending circle jerks that are panel discussions on Corporate Media.

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