Despite months of warnings about the cost of living crisis and now the stark reality of how bad it already is, and it will get worse, some on the government benches still insist that this is not as bad an issue as we think.

In fact, some even deny it exists. They believe if working people would simply bother themselves to learn how to cook in batch for 30p a meal then all of this would go away.

People in this country are facing a 30 year high decade of inflation while wages have stagnated, a failed NHS and social care system and crumbling public services. This cost of living crisis is not their fault but the fault of this government not doing enough to protect the most financially vulnerable who as usual will be the ones who suffer the most.

Foodbanks in my constituency of Wansbeck report record levels of demand but faltering supply as people no longer have the means to donate.

The government must take responsibility for the rapid increase in food poverty in my constituency and hundreds of others across the country that has happened under their watch.

Even if it were possible to eat for 30p a day on freshly cook food every night, which it is clear it is not, why would we be happy with that for the people of this country? This is certainly not the attitude I would expect from the so called patriotic party towards their own people.

If those on the government benches truly think this then it seems that they have completely given up on actually improving the lives of ordinary people and are engaged in a managed decline and brutal race to the bottom.

Things did not end well for Marie Antoinette when she shrugged off the problems facing the French peasantry by suggesting they eat cake, and nor will they end well for the Conservative Party, or indeed any political party, if they do the same.

This cost of living crisis is a political crisis. There are a number of straightforward steps this government could take to alleviate the pressure on millions of families, including introducing an immediate windfall tax backed up with a wealth tax, reinstating the £20 UC uplift and raising other benefits in line with inflation for a start.

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