The Westminster lensArchive · Written questions · 369 tabled · 343 answered

Written questions by McVey.

Every parliamentary written question tabled by Esther McVey this session, with the full answer and department. See how every department answers, or back to the MP page.

Department:All (369)Department of Health and Social Care (115)Department for Science, Innovation and Technology (36)Department for Energy Security and Net Zero (36)Home Office (35)Treasury (28)Ministry of Justice (19)Cabinet Office (14)Department for Education (13)Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (11)Department for Work and Pensions (11)Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (10)Department for Culture, Media and Sport (7)

Showing 111 of 11 · Department for Work and Pensions

17 Jun 2026·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

How many times his Department has responded to a written parliamentary question saying that the information is not held in 2026.

Reply

The information requested can be found at https://questions-statements.parliament.uk.

11 Jun 2026·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

What estimate he has made of the average cost to the public purse of households in receipt of benefits made up of (a) 1 husband and 2 wives in a polygamous marriage and 6 children, (b) 1 husband and 2 w

Reply

I refer the Rt. Hon. Member to the answer I gave on 9 June 2026 to Question UIN 4348.

26 Feb 2026·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

How many people are claiming a UK State Pension whilst living abroad by the country they are living in.

Reply

There were around 1.1 million recipients of the UK State Pension living overseas outside the United Kingdom as of the quarter ending August 2025. DWP Stat-Xplore. A full breakdown by country of residence is also available via Stat-Xplore. These figures relate to State Pension cases paid outside the UK, administered by the Department for Work and Pensions and cover State Pensions accrued in Great Britain only. State Pension cases administered separately in Northern Ireland by the Department for Communities are not included.

11 Sept 2025·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

What plans his Department has to review how the Child Maintenance Service processes cases involving domestic abuse allegations.

Reply

We are committed to ensuring that victims and survivors of domestic abuse get the help and support they need to use the CMS safely. CMS domestic abuse training has been reviewed to ensure it reflects the Home Office’s updated statutory guidance on coercive and controlling behaviour, published in April 2023, to ensure CMS staff are equipped to recognise this form of domestic abuse and signpost parents appropriately. The CMS has access to a list of resources which helps caseworkers provide signposting to supporting organisations, and a Domestic Abuse plan which includes clear steps to follow in order to support customers who are experiencing abuse. The list of resources and Domestic Abuse Plan is regularly reviewed. As well as the domestic abuse plan, the CMS responds to cases involving domestic abuse in several ways, including by acting as an intermediary in Direct Pay cases, and providing advice on how to set up bank accounts with a centralised sort code to limit the risk of a parent’s location being traced. The Department has introduced a domestic abuse specialist caseworker team which provides a discrete and tactful service. The CMS determines which cases are referred to the team and offer, if required, a ‘named caseworker’ to prevent customers having to retell their story at each interaction. The CMS reviews its domestic abuse training regularly to ensure caseworkers are equipped to support parents in vulnerable situations and the Department will continue to meet stakeholders regularly to maintain an open dialogue on how to improve the service. We believe planned reforms to the direct pay service, where all payments are collected and transferred on behalf of parents will allow the CMS to tackle non-compliance faster, and better support victims and survivors of domestic abuse who use the CMS, reducing contact with the other parent and reducing the paying parent’s ability to financially control the receiving parent by paying too little or too late, as is currently the case on Direct Pay.

12 Jun 2025·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

How many staff network events took place in her Department in May 2025; and what the names of those events were.

Reply

The information you have requested is not held centrally, as staff networks are collaborative volunteer networks, organised by staff themselves rather than the department. This would include site-specific networks. Gathering this data would incur disproportionate costs. While some networks are organised centrally, there is no requirement for network groups across the organisation to be formally recorded or registered. Networks can be based on location, team structure and development as well as areas of diversity, health and inclusion. Some centrally organised networks may hold information but this does not provide a full picture of all network events during May 2025.

10 Jun 2025·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

Whether her Department has updated guidance on the use of single-sex facilities in response to the Supreme Court judgement in the case of For Women Scotland v The Scottish Ministers of 16 April 2025.

Reply

We will review and update policy wherever necessary to ensure it complies with the latest legal requirements and aim to ensure appropriate facilities are available for all staff.

28 Feb 2025·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

Whether she plans to increase the powers of the Child Maintenance Service to obtain accurate data on self-employed parents.

Reply

For self-employed paying parents, the gross income used in a maintenance calculation is provided by HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC). People who are self-employed are required to keep accurate records of their business income and expenses for tax purposes. HMRC can charge penalties for inaccurate reporting where it results in tax being unpaid.Cases involving complex income can be investigated by the Financial Investigation Unit (FIU). This is a specialist team which can request information from financial institutions to check the accuracy of information the CMS is given. The FIU uses its extensive investigative powers to ensure that families receive child maintenance appropriately and in accordance with the paying parent’s whole income.If necessary, criminal charges relating to information offences linked to the calculation, will be brought against those who persistently and deliberately evade their responsibility to provide financially for their children.The department is conducting a programme of work to review the child maintenance calculation to make sure it is fit for purpose and reflects today’s social trends. The review is wide-ranging and includes consideration of a range of issues including bringing the treatment of unearned income and assets within the calculation automatically. Proposed changes which emerge from the review will be subject to consultation.

7 Oct 2024·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

What steps her Department is taking in response to concerns of former employees of Atomic Energy Agency Technology regarding a redress of their pension.

Reply

The Public Accounts Committee (PAC) published a report on the AEAT Pension case in June 2023, which made several recommendations for the government. This work was halted due to the general election and the new government will now consider it.

4 Oct 2024·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

What steps she is taking to ensure that the Child Maintenance Service enforces parent (a) compliance and (b) payment.

Reply

Where a paying parent fails to pay on time or in full, the Child Maintenance Service (CMS) aims to take immediate action to recover the debt and re-establish compliance. If this is unsuccessful and the paying parent is employed, the CMS will use a Deducti...

9 Sept 2024·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

How many pensioners in Tatton constituency will lose entitlement to winter fuel payments as a result of the proposed changes.

Reply

To be comparable with the Winter Fuel Payment statistics, the Pension Credit data that has been used is based on the 2010 Westminster Parliamentary constituencies, not 2024. It is estimated that around 18,200 pensioners in Tatton constituency (2010 bounda...

30 Aug 2024·Department for Work and Pensions·Answered
Asked

If she will make an assessment of the potential impact of changing the eligibility criteria for the winter fuel payment on the health of pensioners.

Reply

This Government is committed to pensioners – everyone in our society, no matter their working history or savings deserves a comfortable and dignified retirement. Given the substantial pressures faced by the public finances this year and next, the government has had to make hard choices to bring the public finances back under control. Winter Fuel Payments will continue to be paid to pensioner households with someone receiving Pension Credit or certain other income-related benefits. They will continue to be worth £200 for eligible households, or £300 for eligible households with someone aged over 80. The Government is committed to a preventative approach to public health. Keeping people warm and well at home and improving the quality of new and existing homes will play an essential part in enabling people to live longer, healthier lives and reducing pressures on the NHS. Our continued commitment to the triple lock means the full new state pension is forecast to increase by a further £1,700 over the course of this parliament. We are also providing support through our Warm Homes Plan which pensioners will benefit from. This will support investment in insulation and low carbon heating – upgrading millions of homes over this Parliament. Our long-term plan will protect billpayers permanently, reduce fuel poverty, and get the UK back on track to meet our climate goals. In making a decision on Winter Fuel Payment eligibility, the government had regard to the equality analysis in line with the Public Sector Equality Duty requirements.

Sources
SourceUK Parliament Members API
MethodQuestion and answer text as published. Question preamble (“To ask the…”) trimmed for readability; answers shown in full.