I perhaps needed a comma. They stood on a manifesto that made no mention, and then it was said many times during the campaign that it wouldn't be done immediately. They knew what they were standing for, precisely, but rather than make a stand they took the central funds and then decided to cause a fuss once they'd had their seats won.
They were pretty clear even before the vote, that it will be scrapped, in time. It's on the agenda, on the radar, and we all know that the child poverty project will recommend it's abolition and the money will found. Not because he's been backed into a corner, because it was always going to be. Phillpson said a few days ago that lifting the cap was 'one of the levers we can use to eradicate child poverty', and Starmer agreed with her.
I disagree with the cap, and think it should have been in the manifesto, but understand why it wasn't, from a political strategy perspective. Voting for an opposition amendment to your own King's speech is nothing more than gesture politics, especially when it's on a matter that we all know is going to resolved completely by the new year.