Payments to carers being examined after referendum defeat, says Varadkar

Minister for Social Protection looking at a review of means tests and various payments

A voter marks their ballot in the recent referendums on proposed changes to the wording of the Constitution on International Women's Day. Photograph: Mostafa Darwish/EPA
A voter marks their ballot in the recent referendums on proposed changes to the wording of the Constitution on International Women's Day. Photograph: Mostafa Darwish/EPA

The Government has to demonstrate to carers that it is “on their side”, the Taoiseach has said.

Leo Varadkar said the Government could continue to increase payments to carers and people with disabilities, relax the means tests and improve the home-care tax credit.

During his St Patrick’s Day visit to the US, Mr Varadkar also said it could improve parental leave to give parents more choice about when or if they return to work.

Referendum wording chosen to ‘avoid a concrete and mandatory obligation’, files suggestOpens in new window ]

Speaking after 73 per cent of the voters in a recent referendum rejected the wording of a constitutional amendment about family care, the Taoiseach told reporters: “I think we need to, obviously, demonstrate to carers and people with disabilities that we are on their side and that we are working in their interests.”

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He said Minister for Social Protection Heather Humphreys is looking at a review of the means tests and various payments, as well as examining a State-contributory pension for carers.

“We’re doing all that we can to provide more respite which is very deficient at the moment and provide more therapies and more services and unfortunately, that’s not up to where it should be,” he said.

“But the real difficulty there isn’t financial, or lack of concern or care from the Government, it’s finding skilled people who are qualified to do the job and willing to do the job and that’s that’s been a real struggle for us.”