Waspi women denied compensation for second time

PoliticsOpinion
29 Jan 2026 • 8:07 PM MYT
The Independent
The Independent

The world’s most free-thinking newspaper

image is not available

Women affected by the way changes to the state pension age were communicated have been told for the second time they will not receive compensation.

Labour’s previous policy not to offer redress was reviewed following the rediscovery of a 2007 Department for Work and Pensions evaluation, which at the time led to officials stopping sending automatic pension forecast letters out.

Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden told the Commons on Thursday: “The evidence shows that the vast majority of 1950s-born women already knew the state pension age was increasing thanks to a wide range of public information, including through leaflets, education campaigns, information in GP surgeries, on TV, radio, cinema and online.

“To specifically compensate only those women who suffered injustice would require a scheme that could reliably verify the individual circumstances of millions of women.”

Women Against State Pension Inequality (Waspi) has long-campaigned for compensation, with chairwoman Angela Madden accusing the Government of “utter contempt”.

She said: “Waspi is taking legal advice and all options remain on the table. We stand ready to pursue every avenue in Parliament and in the courts to secure the justice that has been so shamefully denied.”

A report by the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman has previously suggested compensation ranging between £1,000 and £2,950 could be appropriate for each of those affected by how state pension changes had been communicated.