but the result was tight. the ayes to the right, 272. the noes to the left, 2a6. so the ayes have it, the ayes have it. under the plan, if someone has a house worth £120,000, they'll still have to pay £86,000 themselves, even though they qualify for some council help. and they will be left with just over a quarter of the value of their home. if an individual has a house worth £500,000, they will have to pay £86,000, but will keep over 80% of the value of their house to pass on. let me remove all doubt on this issue. no—one will lose from these reforms compared to the system we have now. and the overwhelming majority will win. labour argued the plan didn't live up to the government's promises. why has the government moved away from the position ofjust a few months ago, that it published ahead of a vote on increasing national insurance, and move to a policy now