Jeremy Corbyn lashed out at an “uncaring” Tory today in a furious attack after the MP heckled him during the Budget debate.

The heckler made what Labour MPs described as an "ageist" and "inappropriate" joke while Mr Corbyn complained older people "aren't receiving the care they need".

One senior Labour source told the Mirror the heckler said: "You should be in care." A second senior source claimed the phrasing was along the lines of "put you in a care home".

After the Mirror published this story, Tory whip Andrew Griffiths admitted he heckled the Labour leader over his age.

But he said quotes attributed to him by Labour were "wrong, misleading and inaccurate".

Instead, Mr Griffiths said Mr Corbyn said "there are elderly people in need of help", to which he replied: "That's you!"

Video shows Mr Corbyn's comments as being: "Over a million of our elderly aren't receiving the care they need."

The wording of the joke or who told it could not be identified from the Parliamentary TV feed during the rowdy debate, but it turned 68-year-old Mr Corbyn's face to thunder.

Visibly angry, Mr Corbyn told the heckler: “Over £6billion will have been cut from social care budgets by next March.

“I hope the honourable member begins to understand what it’s like to wait for social care stuck in a hospital bed while other people are having to give up their work to care for them!

“The uncaring, uncouth attitude of certain members of parliament needs to be called out.”

Labour MPs shouted at the Tory: “Shame on you!” Other Opposition backbenchers shouted "get out" and pointed towards the exit of the wood-panelled chamber.

Jeremy Corbyn speaking earlier in the day during Prime Minister's Questions (
Image:
PA)

Mr Corbyn's team were today trying to find out who was responsible for the heckle.

MPs named Andrew Griffiths, MP for Burton since 2010 who has been on the government whips' team since last year.

Contacted by the Mirror, Mr Griffiths said he did heckle Mr Corbyn about his age, but did not make the alleged remark about putting him in care.

He added: "The quotes attributed to me by Labour are entirely wrong, misleading and inaccurate."

But Laura Smith, a Labour MP, tweeted: "So disappointing to listen to Government whip heckling Jeremy Corbyn about his age. Ageist, rude and disgusting behaviour. Shameful."

She added: "This was absolutely disgraceful, none of us could believe what we were hearing.

"The fact he's a Government whip shows that hurling abuse is now a deliberate and calculated Tory ploy."

Councils have warned they face a cash crisis to pay for older people's care - yet Chancellor Philip Hammond didn't mention the issue once in his 7,704-word speech.

Mr Corbyn spoke immediately after the Budget was revealed and claimed key announcements were not good enough.

Scrapping Stamp Duty for first-time buyers - the Budget's "rabbit out of the hat" - was a Labour policy, he said.

Chancellor Philip Hammond announced new measures in the Budget (
Image:
PA)

“We’ve been here before,” he added on housing, such as the Tories announcing 200,000 Starter Homes not one of which has been built.

And he attacked the cut in waiting time for Universal Credit, saying: "Wouldn’t it have been better to pause the whole thing and look at the problems it has caused?”

He added: “As the days go ahead and this Budget unravels, the reality will be a lot of people will be no better off and the misery will be continuing.”

He slammed the revising down of GDP growth, productivity growth and business investment, calling it a "record of failure".

He added: "They call this a Budget fit for the future. The reality is this is a government no longer fit for office!"

The Chancellor promised a Budget "fit for the future" (
Image:
Shuzo Shikano)

Age UK criticised Chancellor Philip Hammond for being “desperately short-sighted” by not addressing problems in the care sector during his speech.

Charity director Caroline Abrahams said there are already more than a million elderly people in England who do not get the support they need.

Ms Abrahams said: “At Age UK we worry most of all about the millions of older people in our country in declining health, with a need for extra support, and on a low retirement income after a working life spent on low pay, many of whom live alone in poor quality housing that is hard to heat.

“Unfortunately there was little in this Budget to cheer older people like these.”