Among her other responsibilities, Jean is the Green Party's spokesperson on social affairs, and sits on the European Parliament's "Intergroup on Ageing". For that reason, she has been raising concerns for many years about the pitiful level of pension provision in the UK, and the scandal of the many elderly people who still live in poverty in one of the richest countries in the world.
For that reason, it is particularly fitting that she should be making the announcement below - exciting not only for its potential to lift every single pensioner in Britain out of poverty, but also because of its role as part of a people's fiscal stimulus that bails out ordinary citizens, not big banks and multinational corporations.....
Today, on National Pensions Action Day (Monday 6 April), the Green Party announces its key election pledge for pensioners - a £165 a week non-means-tested citizens' pension for every pensioner in the UK.
The pledge will form part of the Green New Deal for Older People, which the Green Party will launch in the build-up to this year's elections.
Jean Lambert MEP, the Green Party's spokesperson on social affairs, said today:
"The Green Party today celebrates Pensions Action Day with possibly the best action a political party could take for British pensioners: a policy that would lift all our pensioners out of poverty."
The National Pensioners Convention (NPC) have been calling for a pension at or above the official poverty level, which is defined as 60% of median population earnings less housing costs.
For 2007/8 this would have meant a single person’s pension of £151 per week - compared to the actual full state pension of £90.70 and a pensions credits guarantee level of about £120 a week.
The NPC has recently pointed out that:
- Between 1997 and 2006, the number of British people living in severe poverty – defined as living on less than 40% of median population income – increased by 600,000
- Last year the poorest quarter of UK pensioner households saw their incomes rise by less than 1%, well below inflation. The poorest single pensioners saw their real incomes drop by 4%.
- At least 15% of UK pensioners – over 1.5m older people – are living in persistent poverty (below 60% median population income for three out of the last four years).
- Pensioner poverty in the UK has risen in the last year by 300,000 - equivalent to 822 people a day - and now reaches 2.5m (1 in 4 older people). Two thirds of these pensioners are women.
Jean Lambert MEP further commented:
"If the other parties are unwilling to lift pensioners out of poverty, then it's clear pensioners will need to elect Greens to fight their corner. Voting Green is about building a better future - and that includes a secure economic future for older people."
Jean Lambert MEP will lead the Green Party delegation in support of the NPC demonstration in London. She will be joined by Darren Johnson AM, the Green Party's trade & industry spokesperson and its parliamentary candidate for Lewisham Deptford, and Cllr Romayne Phoenix of Lewisham Borough Council.
As an added treat, here's Jean talking about her Green economic vision for the future
Monday, 6 April 2009
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