
Shameless: Stephanie, 29, centre, pictured with partner Ian, 56, and their ten children - Bobbie, Cameron, Jack, Stephen, Sian, Charlie, Alex, Summer, Callum and Nicole - says she knows she is taking advantage of the benefits system - but blames the government for making it 'so easy'
'We've paid our way in the past': Benefits family of 12 whose ?50k handouts are 'too good' for them to go back to work appear on Daybreak to defend controversial lifestyle
A couple with ten children who said the ?50k they receive in benefits makes it pointless going back to work have appeared on Daybreak to defend their controversial lifestyle.
Stephanie Fennessy-Sharp, 28, partner Ian Sharp, 56 live with six of their children in a ?1,700-a-month five-bed house in Kent paid for by the State - and receive a further ?28,000 in separate benefits every year.
Astonishingly, Stephanie insists she cannot go back to work because she would not be able to earn enough to cover the cost of their current lifestyle. For his part, Ian says his debilitating migraines have prevented him from returning to work for the past two decades.
Since the story broke, the two have come under fire for saying claiming benefits is 'too easy' and that they are better off on handouts than they would be working for a living.
But this morning, the couple hit back at critics who have called them 'scroungers'.
In the interview, screened this morning on ITV, Kate Garraway asked Stephanie what she would say to those who have lashed out at her for claiming benefits she has admitted she does not need.
Her reply? That both she and Ian have 'had their time working'.
'I have worked full time,' Stephanie says. 'I've had my time working. When my eldest son was two weeks old. I went back to work, because I had a mortgage, I had a house. I couldn't afford not to. Ian has worked full time, Ian has paid lots of tax.
'But you're not working now,' Kate Garraway points out.
'We are not currently,' Stephanie agrees. 'I gave up work before I met Ian because I had three children under 5 and I couldn't work and afford childcare.'
"what people don't understand is that our housing benefit [the two receive ?1,700 a month, or ?20,400 a year] goes straight to the landlord. People think we are getting the money but we're not." Well that shows their level of intelligence, doesn't it?
Link:
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/femail/ar...lifestyle.html

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