WOMEN have turned to sex work as a result of the UK Government’s flagship welfare project, a senior MP has warned.

Frank Field, the independent MP who chairs the Work and Pensions Committee, said that is the effect the introduction of Universal Credit (UC) has had on some women in his Birkenhead constituency on Merseyside.

During a parliamentary debate on the controversial reform yesterday, Labour also repeated demands to pause the roll-out of UC, while Tory MPs called for extra funding.

Work and Pensions Secretary Esther McVey said she has been discussing UC with Chancellor Philip Hammond and that details of these talks will be revealed in the Budget later this month.

Field said: “Might I raise a question that I wrote to the Secretary of State about, about how Universal Credit is being rolled out in Birkenhead, how it is not going as well as we’re told in the House of Commons, and some women have taken to the red light district for the first time?

“Might she come to Birkenhead and meet those women’s organisations and the police who are worried about women’s security being pushed into this position?”

McVey replied: “We need to work with those ladies and see what help we can give them from the work coaches right the way through to the various charities and organisations.”

She also asked Field to tell the women that there are “record job vacancies”.

When asked by the SNP’s work and pensions spokesman Neil Gray if she has asked the Chancellor for more money for UC, McVey refused to give any details.

She said: “I don’t let people know what we do in private meetings – old fashioned as that might be, I don’t – but what he can know is I am championing UC to make sure that it works the best it can possibly work. Take from that what he will.”