THERESA May was confronted on the campaign trail by a woman who told her benefit cuts had left her with just a £100 a month to live on.

Cathy Mohan, of Abingdon, Oxfordshire, told the Prime Minister she could not live on her reduced personal independence payment, saying: “I want my disability living allowance back.”

Mrs May said the Government was focusing on “those most in need”.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said Ms Mohan had confronted the PM with “the reality of the suffering her Government has caused”.

Mrs May had to be satisfied with faint praise during a visit to Abingdon market to talk to shoppers, with one telling her she was “the best of a bad bunch”. “I’ll take that as flattering,” she replied.

Her encounter came as she launched a “new deal for workers” which Conservatives said was the greatest package for employees the party has every offered.

Meanwhile, Mr Corbyn and Liberal Democrat leader Tim Farron highlighted their health plans in speeches to the Royal College of Nursing conference in Liverpool.

The Labour leader promised to “save the NHS” with a £37bn boost over the next five years, funded in part by increases in income tax for earnings over £80,000.

He said he understood the anger of nurses who made clear in a poll at the weekend they are ready to stage a summer of protests over pay.

“We will lift the public-sector pay cap and hand back decisions on pay to an independent review body,” he added.

Mr Farron said nurses were treated “like dirt” by the Government, adding the Lib Dems would give the health service and social care a £48 billion funding boost over five years, £30bn coming from a penny rise on income tax.

Ms Mohan, who has mental health problems, confronted the PM during her walkabout with candidate Nicola Blackwood.

She told her: “I want you to do something for us, I’m talking about everybody who has got mental health and who has got learning disabilities. I want them not to have their money taken away from them and being crippled. I can’t live on £100 a month,”

Disability allowances were replaced by personal independence payments (PIP), in a move which many with disabilities say has left them struggling to survive.

The PM said she was ensuring the Government gave “more help to people with mental health problems and learning disabilities”.