I seem to remember that back in 1997 (?) Gordon Brown introduced the Winter Fuel Allowance as a one-off payment in order to avoid raising the state pension itself. Over the quarter of a century since then it has certainly become an expected element of pensioner income and it is really interesting that one of the first changes Labour has chosen to make is what is in effect a non-Manifesto reduction of the pension — and has chosen to go for this rather than look at excess profits in the banking or fuel or water industries. And the British state pension is already amongst the poorer ones in the civilised world.
Is Labour about to head down the traditional path of handouts both for those genuinely in need and others whilst again not daring to touch the really rich (no wealth tax, no changes to inheritance tax, no massive chase-up of tax evasion, etc), and at the same time taking money off those in the middle (including the train-drivers, senior teachers, "junior" medics, police, etc) by not raising tax thresholds and other ploys — and now even resorts to attacking the pension arrangements?
At least it's no longer the Tories in power (and infinite thanks to whomsoever we believe in for that!), but is Labour really so different? Will this just continue to be the land of the ever-widening gap between the very rich and slowly worsening conditions for the middle and lower elements amongst us?
The winter fuel allowance is an odd anomaly which most richer people will never have figured into their pension calculations at all. If it was worth keeping it should have just been part of the pension, rather than a weird hypothecated additional payment.
In terms of the assorted whataboutery, the winter fuel payment is an easy change to make which will impact the finances this year. Any changes to personal tax couldn't take effect before next April at the earliest, and in all probability not fully for another year after that.
Windfall taxes on banks might theoretically be possible, although it's not particularly clear that banks have some wild pot of gold that they don't deserve. Energy companies are potentially a bit more credible, but the energy companies that have the excess revenues are largely international, and very few of them are meaningfully controlled by the UK.
The water industry is a more complex problem because in the case of Thames and probably others the money has effectively already been stolen by parent companies. If they go bankrupt it's quite likely that it would cost the government billions to get the company cleanly back into public ownership.
Sadly we're a relatively small player in a global economic system where governments struggle to assert control, and even when they do the real influence lies in Europe and the US. The UK government is less powerful than it has ever been.