Its the same policy with a revision, no u-turn, one up for democracy.
Of course it is a U-turn.
They key toxic element to the proposals was that there was no ceiling on payments, just a floor on assets. And that included people having care in their own homes. Deciding to place a ceiling on payments (due to a hugely adverse response to the original proposals) is a complete U-turn. I hope the Tories will also tell us how they plan to pay for this U-turn, which will clearly be expensive, just how expensive will depend on what level the cap is set at.
I think people will like to leave at least £100k to their families as opposed to £27k.
Disingenuous in the extreme - the point about these proposals is that they incorporate the home as an asset for people who stay in their home and need care. And that is huge numbers of people. So they now have an asset floor of £100k
including their home where previously they had an asset floor of £23k
excluding their home. And given that for many people their home is far and away their largest asset that difference is huge.
But the debt issue is also critical. Under the current system no-one dies in debt due to the cost of their care. Under the proposals many people will do exactly that - die in debt, caused specifically by these proposals. And in some cases that debt will be passed on from one spouse to another. So if one half of a couple needs significant social care while one (or both) of the couple still live in their family home they will build up significant debt which will be passed on to the surviving member of the couple.
For many people it is a huge effort, and massively significant, to finally end up debt free after decades of mortgage payments. To reverse that position in the final few years of life will be simply horrifying to loads of people, many of whom would consider themselves to be, at least, small-c conservatives.