
The Chancellor will always be looking at what else he can do to support people, a Cabinet minister said as he faced questions over the Governmentâs handling of the cost-of-living crisis.
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps insisted Rishi Sunak has âalready provided billions and billions of pounds to try to relieve the pressureâ.
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has lambasted the Government for what he claims are âpatheticâ attempts to ease the burden on people struggling with rising bills.
That sentiment was echoed by shadow business secretary Jonathan Reynolds, who said on Sunday he is âangryâ at the scale of the crisis, arguing that ministers have not done enough to tackle the problem.
I want to absolutely be clear, given the Chancellorâs record, Iâm sure heâll always be looking what else he can do
Grant Shapps, Transport Secretary
He told Skyâs Sophy Ridge on Sunday programme that the Governmentâs proposals for investing in nuclear energy should not be used as a âsmokescreenâ to obscure the âreal issueâ at hand.
âWhatever the long-term energy strategy the Government will unveil, it canât get away from the fact theyâve got to take some action now to help people,â he said.
Asked about the cost-of-living crisis, Mr Shapps told the same programme: âWeâre trying to do what we can â youâre asking if weâll do more â I want to absolutely be clear, given the Chancellorâs record, Iâm sure heâll always be looking what else he can do.
âHeâs already provided billions and billions of pounds to try to relieve the pressure.â

He went on to tell the BBCâs Sunday Morning programme: âI donât rule out the fact that we may need to do more still.â
But he also suggested in interviews on Sunday that the way poverty data is presented can be âsomewhat misleadingâ.
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Put to him that hundreds of thousands more children are being pushed into poverty, he told Sophy Ridge: âI donât want to sort of get us lost in numbers here, but poverty is divided into both absolute and relative (poverty), and sometimes the way itâs presented can be somewhat misleading to say the least.â
The Resolution Foundation think tank has said a further 1.3 million people are set to fall into absolute poverty next year, including 500,000 children.

Mr Shapps added: âI do not mean to in any way, shape or form underplay it because you donât have to be an expert â you just look at the cost of living, as you mentioned, the increase in inflation⦠itâs very substantial. And thatâs why the Chancellorâs already come forward with £22 billion.â
Speaking to Sunday Morning, Mr Reynolds criticised what he deemed to be a lack of action from ministers to tackle rising living costs.
âI sit here this morning and I feel angry at the scale of the crisis people in this country are facing and the lack of response from Government in the spring statement â and promises on announcements in future just wonât cut it,â he said.
Referring to the Governmentâs upcoming energy security strategy, he said: âThe energy statement⦠will deal with long-term issues of supply, I understand it, it will not be about help now, and the Government has to understand the scale of this crisis.â