Controversial plans to decentralise the welfare state by giving councils the right to set their own regional levels of benefit are being considered by the Tories.
The ideas, floated under the John Major government in 1995 but rejected as too radical, are being examined as part of David Cameron's push to devolve as much power as possible to the local level and away from Whitehall. They would mean councils being handed a lump sum from Whitehall to spend as they want on welfare and employment programmes, rather than the entire system being driven centrally, with uniform benefit levels being set nationally.
Last night the employment minister, Jim Knight, accused the Tories of planning a postcode lottery for benefits. "The Conservatives' policies would mean that people on one side of the street would be worse off than people on the other side.
"Labour believes in the principle of fairness, where people are supported according to their needs."
But the ideas are gaining support on the right of the Tory party. In their book, The Plan, the Tory MEP Daniel Hannan and the MP Douglas Carswell cite reforms in the US in the 1990s, under which responsibility for social security was shifted from the federal government to the states, as a model.


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