It seems simple to me. We can't afford it. There's no legal requirement to do it. Even if the government had put it in their manifesto, now that they know the state of the country's finances, I would cut them some slack.
I'd like them to be honest about it though.
Spot on. And I think they are being honest about it - they chose not to put the commitment in their manifesto, which is a pretty clear indication that they weren't going to do it. And in recent days they have been very clearly that we simply cannot afford to make discretionary spending of £10billion on compensation when the courts threw out their claim for compensation.
And this isn't pin money - it is £10billion. Money that would have to be found either through £10billion cuts to public spending on services, through £10billion rise in tax or adding £10billion to borrowing. And just to put it into context £10billion is about the same as the entire budget for the following departments:
Local government
Housing
Foreign office
Science, innovation and technology
Work and pensions (who'd presumably need to foot the bill)
It is twice the entire budget for Dept Environment and about five times the total budget for Culture, Media & Sports.
We can argue about how wise it was to cosy up to the WASPI women in opposition - I think it was a mistake (I've already said this). But the most important thing is that by the time the opposition was putting together its plans for government in its manifesto it had clearly dropped any commitment (not sure there really was any commitment to compensation - a photo op isn't the same as committing to agree to the demands of a campaigning group).
And most importantly as a government it has made the right decision.