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DWP’s Waspi compensation could be ‘direct payments’ or ‘state pension settings’

DWP’s Waspi compensation could be ‘direct payments’ or ‘state pension settings’

Fiona Peake, an expert in personal finance in Ocean Finance, said women deserve compensation.

DWP's Waspi compensation could be 'direct payments' or 'state pension settings'
DWP’s Waspi compensation could be ‘direct payments’ or ‘state pension settings’

Waspi women have been announced as “direct payments” or “adjustments” to their state pension, it has been announced. Fiona Peake, expert in personal finance in Oceanic financeHe said women deserve compensation.

She said: “Many planned their retirements based on what they told them, just to be blinded by the changes.” She said that compensation in several ways could be organized, with two “direct payments” or “adjustments to state pension law.”

The finance expert added: “The key is justice. These women were lost due to poor communication, and that must be correct.” It occurs since Waspi’s women will undertake legal actions against the government unless Labor Party The ministers change their minds and offer compensation on the changes in the state pension age.

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The campaign has written to the government to tell the ministers that they will be taken to the Superior Court if they do not think again about compensation payments. The Secretary of Labor and Pensions, Liz Kendall, and the Department of Labor and Pensions (DWP) They have been given a deadline of 14 days to go back, or the lawyers of the Waspi campaign will launch judicial review procedures.

The group also launched a crowdfunding campaign urging its supporters to help raise the £ 75,000 for a case of the Superior Court. The president of the Waspi campaign, Angela Madden, accused the labor of women born in the 1950s and said she was “safe” that her case could be won in court.

“We are saying that the reasons why (the Government) are not following the recommendations of the Ombudsman are little solid and illegal,” Madden told I Paper. “It is definitely morally incorrect, but we believe that it is also legally incorrect,” said the veteran activist.

“There is a lot of anger. We have listened to our followers, who said: ‘Please, do not give up, please continue’. Then the appetite is there, ”he said. “I think they will finance us, but it depends completely on them. I would be very surprised if we did not get £ 75,000 in the first week. ”

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