When the Tories introduced the cap did that mean anyone with more than two children at the time immediately lost their benefits for the xtra children or was it for new applications from a certain date?When the Tories introduced the two child cap it was "vicious", "cruel", heartless" and would only serve to increase child poverty. As soon as the new Labour government has the opportunity to bin it off, not only does it not do so, it suspends those MPs who support its removal.
I don't know the constituencies of all the suspended MPs but I know Rebecca Long-Bailey represents Salford. Is it not possible that the Tory (now Labour) two child cap might be adversely impacting northern urban communities more? Is it not possible that her constituents are raising this issue with her more than the constituents in more affluent areas?
MPs are elected to represent their constituents and if she is getting representations from those who re-elected her regarding the very real consequences of the cap, should she not, in a democratic Party, be allowed to vote as guided / directed / influenced by those she represents? Instead she gets her legs slapped and put on Starmer's naughty step for six months.
The people who voted for her as the Labour Party candidate in the GE no longer have a Labour MP. That's not particularly democratic either is it?
Is it time to abandoned the outdated custom of "whipping" Party MPs to support a particular line (open to bullying, blackmail and bribery) and allow them to vote in accordance with their personal conscience or the stated wishes of their constituents?