Keir Starmer is braced for an 'absolute horror' collision with Labor MPs on movements to reduce the spiral benefits.
As the tensions are revealed tomorrow prior to the plan, the mayor Andy Burnham of Manchester has warned the prime minister that reducing suitability can leave people in poverty '.
Despite the fact that ministers are already looking for a climb of the idea of freezing personal independence (PIP), the most important disability benefit (PIP).
That led to a protest on labor banks, because it would have meant real terms for 3.6 million claimants.
Some have claimed that the proposal was leaked in 'evil loyalty' before the agreement between work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall and Rachel Reeves.
The Chancellor is desperately looking for an estimated £ 15 billion hole in public finances to the spring statement this month, caused by persistent growth and higher debt interest costs.

Keir Starmer is braced for an 'absolute horror' collision with Labor MPs on movements to reduce the spiral benefits Bill

The bill has risen and is expected to continue to rise
Touring -Uitzendstudios This morning tried to play TREASURY Emma Reynold's tensions, but again emphasized the moral matter to get people from benefits and to get back to work.
Mrs. Kendall is expected to explain plans for reform tomorrow after Sir Keir has burned the emerging burden 'untenable'. They were originally disputed as £ 5 billion a year for the treasury, including £ 1 billion re -invested in supporting people back to jobs.
However, the announcement was pushed back for a week, because the prime minister tries to suppress a potential uprising.
NO10 has held 'engagement sessions' to explain the changes, but they have been rejected by some Labor MPs as 'a Tick Box exercise'.
One parliamentary member told The Guardian that they were anticipating 'absolute horror' in the coming days.
It is unclear whether there should be a voice about the benefits changes if PIP will not be frozen in real terms – in a possible relief for Downing Street.
Ministers point to the number of people in England and Wales who claims that illness or disabled benefits from 2.8 million to around 4 million since 2019.
The bill has risen with this increase and reaches £ 48 billion in 2023-24.
It is expected to continue to rise to £ 67 billion in 2029-30 more than the current school budget.
Health secretary Wes Streeting said yesterday that the full proposals still have to come before the cabinet – where several ministers rather expressed concern.
He said to the BBC: “What I know is that the work and pensions secretary wants to support people who need the most help, and we must ensure that there is a wide range of support and that everyone plays their role.”
In the Times newspaper, Mr Burnham said that he agreed that the welfare system needed 'a radical overhaul', but said that the government should concentrate on helping people to work instead of just reducing benefits.
The mayor – often tipped as a successor to Sir Keir – said: “I would share worries about changing support and being eligible for benefits, while the top -down system remains in general. It would catch too many people in poverty.
“And to be clear: there is no case in any scenario for reducing the support that is available for people with a disability who cannot work.”
During the weekend, the sources of government indicated that Mrs Kendall's reforms would be a 'right to try to guarantee', so that disabled people enable people to work without losing the risk of losing their benefits if it was not possible.
But conservative shadow work and pensions Secretary Helen Whately said that work was 'divided' over well -being and 'cannot deliver the decisive change we need'.
She said: 'The this and delay of the government costs millions of taxpayers every day and fails the people who rely on the welfare system.
'Under new leadership, conservatives are the only party united in the need to reduce the expenditure for benefits, we have promised to save £ 12 billion a year from the welfare account that Labor deleted. Labor must come up with a serious plan to make savings. '
Mrs. Reynolds was asked on Sky News this morning whether MPs should fall in line.
She said to the broadcaster: 'We have a large majority, we are a government that has guaranteed a mandate for change.

As the tensions become before the plan, the plan is revealed tomorrow, the mayor of Manchester Andy Burnham has warned the prime minister that reducing suitability would leave people in poverty '
'It is absolutely everyday company that we have to discuss with back benchers, meetings between our MPs and ministers happen all day, every day. So this is not something that is different, but we are determined to find the right balance here.
'We have to reform a system that everyone fails, and we have to do that according to our values.
“As Liz Kendall said, there is a job request for reform here, because too many people from the labor market for the labor market are locked up, and there is dignity in the work, and we want people to go back to work if they can.”