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Matt Hancock pledges to end home-sell scandal for care home pensioners

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Matt Hancock pledges to end home-sell scandal for care home pensioners

Matt Hancock today vows to end the scandal of pensioners being forced to sell their home to pay for old-age care.

Launching one of the first major policy initiatives of the Tory leadership campaign, the Health Secretary calls for a state-backed insurance scheme.

This would cover potentially ruinous care costs and remove the risk of being unable to pass on the family home.

Mr Hancock says workers would have to fund a scheme able to cover average lifetime care costs of around £40,000 –more if they wanted to also cover potential residential costs [File photo]

In an interview with the Daily Mail, Mr Hancock said the social care system was unsustainable and unfair.

The idea for an insurance scheme is the centre-piece of the Government’s long-delayed ‘green paper’ on social care, which has been held up for a year by wrangling between Downing Street and the Treasury over costs.

Mr Hancock, who formally launches his bid to succeed Theresa May as prime minister this morning, has adopted it as a ‘priority’ for his own campaign.

Last year he said he was ‘attracted to’ a scheme that would require all workers over 40 to contribute 2.5 per cent of their wages. The idea is based on the German model. There, an adult on a £27,000 salary pays about £675 a year, while those earning £50,000 pay up to £1,250 [File photo]

A relative outsider in the leadership race, he is expected to retain a top Cabinet job, possibly as chancellor.

Today he also pledges a £3.5billion cash injection to help stave off collapse in the social care system.

‘The sign of a civilised society is how we treat the most vulnerable and our social care system is not up to scratch,’ he says. ‘The system is unsustainable.

Mr Hancock, who formally launches his bid to succeed Theresa May as prime minister this morning, has now adopted it as a ‘priority’ for his own campaign. A relative outsider in the leadership race, he is expected to retain a top Cabinet job, possibly as chancellor [File photo]

Mr Hancock will launch his campaign today by stressing his pro-business credentials and making an appeal for the Tories to do much more to attract younger voters. He tells the Mail that his first act as prime minister will be to ‘deliver Brexit’

‘People are getting older – that is a good thing – but there isn’t enough funding in the system. And there’s a whole number of injustices. 

One of the biggest injustices is that for people who worked hard all their lives and have put money aside – the system penalises them and won’t fund their care without them having to sell the house, whereas people who haven’t put money aside get their care supported. I think this is very unfair.’

Previous attempts to persuade the insurance market to offer cover for social care costs have failed because of the potential size and unpredictability of the bills involved. 

While a quarter of people will die before incurring any care costs, another 10 per cent will rack up costs of more than £100,000 and, in some cases, many times that.

Mr Hancock describes the situation as ‘the greatest financial lottery we face’ and said there was a clear ‘role for government’ in providing insurance that the market will not offer. Costs are to be determined by a detailed consultation, but premiums would not be cheap.

Mr Hancock says workers would have to fund a scheme able to cover average lifetime care costs of about £40,000 –more if they wanted to also cover potential residential costs.

Launching one of the first major policy initiatives of the Tory leadership campaign, the Health Secretary calls for a state-backed insurance scheme. This would cover potentially ruinous care costs and remove the risk of being unable to pass on the family home [File photo]

He stresses that the payments could be made over many years of a working life.

Last year he said he was ‘attracted’ to a scheme that would require all workers over 40 to contribute 2.5 per cent of their wages. The idea is based on the German model. There, an adult on a £27,000 salary pays about £675 a year, while those earning £50,000 pay up to £1,250.

But Mr Hancock has concluded that making the scheme compulsory would be too politically contentious without cross-party consensus – something he believes is impossible with a Labour Party led by Jeremy Corbyn.

As a result, the scheme will begin life as a voluntary one. ‘I’d like to see people encouraged to take it out when they get their first mortgage – that being the point where many people buy life insurance,’ he says. 

Individuals needing care have to fund their own costs if they have assets of more than £23,250. In practice, this means that many with long-term needs have to sell the family home, wrecking their plans to pass something on to their children. 

The insurance scheme would do away with previous Conservative proposals to put a lifetime cap on care costs.

Hunt sets out stall as ‘Brexit fixer’ after chat with Merkel 

Jeremy Hunt yesterday revealed that Angela Merkel had told him she was ‘willing to negotiate’ on the Brexit deal with a new prime minister.

The Foreign Secretary said the German chancellor had promised Brussels ‘would look at any solutions’ the UK puts forward to clear up the Northern Ireland border issue. 

The leadership hopeful’s comments will be seen as an attempt to emphasise his credentials as a deal-maker.

The Foreign Secretary said the German chancellor had promised Brussels ‘would look at any solutions’ the UK puts forward to clear up the Northern Ireland border issue.  Merkel is pictured at last week’s D-Day commemorations when she allegedly made the remarks

Mr Hunt, who last night won the backing of Amber Rudd, said: ‘I had a conversation with Angela Merkel earlier this week at the D-Day celebrations, and I’m absolutely clear that if we take the right approach to this the Europeans would be willing to negotiate on the package.

‘She said that, of course, with a new British prime minister we would want to look at any solutions you have. She said: “It’s up to you. Germany doesn’t have that border with the Republic of Ireland, you do. So you need to come up with a solution.” It’s absolutely clear.’ 

In a thinly-veiled criticism of his rival Boris Johnson, Mr Hunt said an ‘ultra hard-line approach’ would be met by ‘an ultra hard-line response’.

Asked if Mr Johnson, his predecessor at the Foreign Office, had done a good job there, Mr Hunt said he had made ‘a very big impact on the British position in the world because he led the Brexit campaign’.

But he said he was ‘a Marmite character’ and suggested some EU foreign ministers ‘found him difficult to work with’.

In the same Sky News interview, Mr Hunt said he still believed the legal time limit for abortion should be reduced.

Asked whether he had changed his mind after saying he was in favour of reducing the threshold from 24 to 12 weeks, he said: ‘These are matters of conscience, yes, my view hasn’t changed on that.’

Mr Hancock says the cap was too hard to calculate and left families exposed to ‘huge financial risk’.

He describes the issue of keeping the family home out of the care trap as ‘very personal to me’, citing the example of his father, who was born in a council house and worked hard to buy his own home.

‘The way he sees himself is entirely defined by the fact he’s a homeowner. The idea that he should have to sell his home because he did the right thing and saved and put money aside for the next generation undermines all the values we should stand for as a country,’ he said.

The creaking care system has received a number of ‘sticking plaster’ cash injections, including £650million this year, to prevent it collapsing. 

But Mr Hancock acknowledges that ‘we can’t go on with one-year-at-a-time top-ups’ and said he would seek an extra £3.5billion in the next spending review. 

He said Britain had to do much more to allow older people to receive care in their own homes.

Mr Hancock will today stress his pro-business credentials and make an appeal for the Tories to do much more to attract younger voters. 

He tells the Mail that his first act as prime minister will be to ‘deliver Brexit’, and says conversations with senior EU figures have convinced him it is possible to reform Mrs May’s Brexit deal by building a time limit or escape clause into the controversial Irish backstop.

He also says his experience at the Department for Health has convinced him of the need to allow ‘free movement for medics’. 

But he argues that migrants wanting to acquire British citizenship should have to clear a higher hurdle, and demonstrate they are fully signed up to this country’s values.  

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