Mayor says too many families are 'working poor'
Mayor says too many families are 'working poor' 2 days ago Share Save Gemma Dillon , West Yorkshire political reporter and Rima Ahmed , BBC Radio Leeds Share Save BBC Tracy Brabin says the emphasis on mayors in the Budget is "revolutionary" West Yorkshire's mayor says scrapping the two-child benefit cap will help families that have jobs but still struggle to make ends meet.
Labour's Tracy Brabin has been answering questions on Message the Mayor on BBC Radio Leeds.
Read our takeaways from the interview below or listen to the full interview here.
"In some communities in West Yorkshire, 50% of children are living in poverty.
In last week's Budget, the chancellor scrapped a rule that means parents can only claim Universal Credit or tax credits for their first two children.
Investing in mayors is good for the economy "I think this Budget is actually quite revolutionary.
"I think it's fair that people pay a tiny amount of money when they come.
"And then that money will be invested in big events, or infrastructure support like better buses.
Hoping work will restart on the White Rose station next year "I am desperate to sort this out.
I know the longer it stays closed the more it is going to cost us. "It was an agreement before my time as mayor and, quite frankly, we'd never do this again in the way we are doing it. " Work stopped on the White Rose station in Leeds in 2024. It is a project jointly funded by the West Yorkshire Combined Authority and private company Munroe K. The mayor hopes contractors will be back in 2026 - but she says she cannot promise. Rio climate trip was about diplomacy
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