Labour spins out PIP voucher anxiety as it looks at consultation responses
Labour is leaving millions of claimants in a state of anxiety as it reveals that it is looking at the responses to the Conservative’s green paper on PIP which suggested, amongst other things, the possibility of paying the benefit as vouchers rather than cash.
The Conservatives published a Green Paper on the future of PIP in April 2024. Amongst the proposals were suggestions that instead of regular cash payments, PIP could be replaced with:
- A catalogue/shop scheme
- A voucher scheme
- A receipt based system
- One-off grants
The consultation period for the Green Paper ended on 22 July and we know that many of our readers took part and are desperate to know the outcome.
Liberal Democrat peer Baroness Thomas of Winchester tabled a question for the DWP in the House of Lords:
“To ask His Majesty's Government whether they have any plans to change the personal independence payment assessment.”
Yesterday, the answer came from Baroness Sherlock, the DWP minister in the House of Lords:
“We will be engaging with the responses people have made to the previous government's consultation on Personal Independence Payment, which closed on Monday 22 July.
“We want to thank the many people who invested their time in responding.
“We will be considering our own approach to social security in due course.”
The response by Baroness Sherlock makes it seem unlikely that there will be any official statement on PIP changes before the parliamentary summer recess, which lasts from 30 July until 2 September.
However, the House of Commons goes into recess again for the party conference season from 13 September until 6 October.
So, there is a real possibility that PIP claimants will be left without any news for several months.
Written questions by MPs to the secretary of state about the PIP consultation and about WCA changes have yet to receive answers. We suspect that any responses will simply be stalling ones, but we’ll keep readers posted if we learn anything more.
https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/news/labour-spins-out-pip-voucher-anxiety-as-it-looks-at-consultation-responses
Comments
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I'd be trying not to read too many of these articles, they all seem to be basically saying "we don't know what's happening yet." in an attempt to get more clicks for their site. Which isn't great for anyone's mental health right now.
The fact is the new government have not mentioned anything about this yet and probably wont until they have a clearer picture of where the money is and where it needs to go. But I know they are talking to many disability charities, which is showing they're willing to listen. So please try not to worry too much!6 -
Even more important, When you check Labours 2019 manifesto
https://www.policyforum.labour.org.uk/news/labour-launches-its-manifesto-for-disabled-people
"04-12-2019
Labour has launched a manifesto for disabled people, Breaking Down Barriers, setting out how the next Labour government will enforce the right of disabled people to live independent lives.
The number of families where someone is disabled living in poverty has risen by over a million since 2010, and nearly half of all working age adults living in poverty live in a family that includes a disabled adult or child.
To tackle disabled poverty, Labour plans to:
- Ensure a disabled child on Universal Credit (UC) receives the same amount as a disabled child on Child Tax Credits.
- Introduce a self-care element into UC to support severely disabled people without a formal carer – the equivalent of the Severe Disability Premium.
- Increase Employment and Support Allowance by £30 per week for those in the work-related activity group.
- Increase the Carer’s Allowance to the level of Jobseeker’s Allowance.
- Immediately suspend all sanctions and scrap the Work Capability Assessment and Personal Independence Payment assessment.
All of these reforms are estimated to cost around £2.6 billion in 2023-24 and are accounted for in Labour’s Grey Book.
In addition, Breaking Down Barriers further commits to:
- Halve the disability employment gap, give people the right to disability leave, produce statutory guidance on timescales for the implementation of reasonable adjustments and introduce a government-backed Reasonable Adjustments Passport.
- Developing a strategy throughout our education system based on inclusivity, invest in Special Educational Needs Coordinators (SENCOs) and introduce measures to increase access for disabled people at every level of education.
- Ensure disabled people can get access to justice by incorporating disability hate crime into law, requiring disability hate crime and violence against disabled women to be reported annually, and putting in place comprehensive national action plans.
- Break down barriers to disabled people in transport by ending Driver Only Operation on the railways, expanding bus services and ensuring all new buses offer audio-visual announcements.
- Break down the barriers to disabled people in cultural and political live by giving British Sign Language full legal recognition and reinstating the Access to Elected Office fund to enable disabled people to run for elected office.
Marsha de Cordova, Labour’s Shadow Minister for Disabled People, said:
“I am proud that Labour is the only party with a manifesto developed by and for disabled people, according to our principle of ‘nothing about you without you’. Labour in government will embody that principle, empowering disabled people and enhancing our voices.
“Breaking Down Barriers takes us beyond what we’ve previously committed, and sets out how we’ll radically shift our approach to ensure the economic, social and structural barriers faced by disabled people are addressed. It’s time for real change.”
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