The SNP politician has accused Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Scottish Labour leader Anas Sarwar of exploiting the issue to gain votes.
Perth’s MP has hit out at the UK Government after ministers once again rejected calls for compensation from women affected by changes to the state pension age.
The previous policy of the Labour Government not to pay the so-called ‘WASPI women’ was reconsidered by Work and Pensions Secretary Pat McFadden after the rediscovery of a 2007 Department for Work and Pensions evaluation, which at the time led to officials stopping sending automatic pension forecast letters out.
But in an announcement last week, Mr McFadden told the Commons a targeted compensation programme would “not be practical”, with a wider flat-rate scheme costing up to £10.3 billion.
That call has been slammed by women who have long campaigned for financial redress faced by those they represent, with the Government accused of treating 1950s-born women with “utter contempt”.
Women Against State Pension Inequality chairwoman Angela Madden branded the decision a “disgraceful political choice by a small group of very powerful people who have decided the harm and injustice suffered by millions of ordinary women simply does not matter”.
That stinging criticism was backed up by Perth and North Perthshire MP Pete Wishart, who turned up the pressure on the Labour Party for the move.
Mr Wishart said: “After all the promises and warm words in opposition, Labour has once again turned its back on the WASPI women.
“Today’s decision confirms what many feared, that Keir Starmer and Anas Sarwar misled these women to win votes.
“WASPI women did everything that was asked of them: they worked hard, paid in, and played by the rules.
“Labour politicians were happy to pose behind placards before the election, then do nothing when they had the power to act. It’s no wonder so many have lost faith in this UK Government.
“The WASPI women, and the millions who support them, will not forget this broken promise. The SNP remains committed to standing with WASPI women and hold Westminster to account until they get the justice they deserve.”
In his statement, Mr McFadden said: “The evidence shows that the vast majority of 1950s-born women already knew the state pension age was increasing thanks to a wide range of public information, including through leaflets, education campaigns, information in GP surgeries, on TV, radio, cinema and online.
“To specifically compensate only those women who suffered injustice would require a scheme that could reliably verify the individual circumstances of millions of women.”
He added to an apology made to the WASPI women by previous Work and Pensions chief Liz Kendall, saying: “We accept that individual letters about changes to the state pension age could have been sent earlier.
“For this, I want to repeat the apology that (former work and pensions secretary Ms Kendall) gave on behalf of the Government.
“And I am sorry that those letters were not sent sooner.
“We also agree with the (Parliamentary and Health Service) Ombudsman that women did not suffer any direct financial loss from the delay.”

