The Green Paper Discussion (the document link is here too!)

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  • [Deleted User]
    [Deleted User] Posts: 1,170 Championing
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  • secretsquirrel1
    secretsquirrel1 Online Community Member Posts: 2,052 Championing

    just read the headline of The Telegraph ( don’t have subscription). It basically said The equality commission is looking into the cuts to see if they’re breaking equality laws.

  • Mysteriouskitten
    Mysteriouskitten Online Community Member Posts: 40 Empowering

    independence payments Credit: House of CommonsEthan CroftSunday Political Correspondent22 March 2025 6:00pm GMT

    Labour’s proposed benefit cuts will be investigated by a human rights watchdog for potentially breaking equality law.

    The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) has said it is considering whether the plans set out by Liz Kendall to cut disability benefits comply with the Equality Act.

    A spokesman for the EHRC said: “The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) must consider the equality impact of the proposed benefit reforms on disabled people.

    “The public sector equality duty (PSED) requires government departments to have due regard for how their policies and decisions affect people with protected characteristics.”

    The Work and Pensions Secretary’s proposals include cuts to disability benefits and a higher age cap for claimants.

    Ms Kendall announced on Tuesday that the eligibility age for the health and disability component of universal credit would rise from 18 to 22.

    The age of eligibility for personal independence payments (PIP) may also rise from 16 to 18.

    She also announced the Government could cut universal credit disability benefits almost in half from April 2026, which she aims to balance with a rise in the standard allowance element of universal credit.

    https://cf-particle-html.eip.telegraph.co.uk/0f97aa03-6ea6-49e0-bc17-36396c22aef6.html?direct=true&id=0f97aa03-6ea6-49e0-bc17-36396c22aef6&template=cls There was an error displaying this embed.

    Ms Kendall has delayed publishing equality impact assessments of the policies, which are required by law, until after the Chancellor’s fiscal statement on Wednesday.

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    The assessments are expected to show that over 2 million people will be affected by the cuts. They will also give an estimate of how many will be pushed into poverty by Ms Kendall’s reforms.

    An EHRC spokesman said the watchdog is considering the green paper, including “its wider implications for people with protected characteristics”.

    The watchdog has previously criticised the Government for delaying equality impact assessments for political convenience.

    Last year Chancellor Rachel Reeves was accused of “breaking rules” by refusing to release an impact assessment of the cuts to winter fuel allowance.

    The assessment, later disclosed under Freedom of Information laws, showed seven in 10 disabled pensioners would lose the allowance.

    Ms Reeves was later reprimanded by the watchdog for providing an “insufficient” impact assessment of National Insurance changes which disproportionately hit women workers.

    The release of the welfare reform impact assessments could spell trouble for Ms Kendall’s reforms.

    https://cf-particle-html.eip.telegraph.co.uk/165b9ab0-d28b-4a30-aa65-00820a773b65.html?direct=true&id=165b9ab0-d28b-4a30-aa65-00820a773b65&template=cls There was an error displaying this embed.

    She has already faced a wave of discontent about the cuts from Labour party colleagues, including senior Cabinet ministers.

    Any potential watering down of the cuts as a result of the impact assessments will now come after the Chancellor’s fiscal statement on Wednesday.

    This means that the promised £5 billion of cuts to welfare should be factored into the Office for Budget Responsibility’s (OBR) forecast of the country’s economic performance.

    On Wednesday the Chancellor will respond to the OBR’s latest forecast.

    Ms Reeves is preparing to make swinging public spending cuts in order to save her economic project amid expectations of the country’s economic growth falling by half.

    The projected cuts to benefits are expected to form one part of this wider effort to balance the books.

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    The EHRC is currently undertaking a wider investigation of the DWP’s practices after concerns were raised about its compliance with equality law under the last government.

    An EHRC spokesperson said: “As Britain’s equality regulator, we are currently undertaking an assessment of the DWP’s compliance with the PSED under Section 31 of the Equality Act 2006.

    “This robust enforcement action involves assessing the department’s compliance with the duty when developing, implementing and monitoring policy guidance related to health assessment determinations for people with learning disabilities or long-term mental health conditions.

    “We are also undertaking an investigation over concerns about the treatment of these disabled benefits claimants – focused on whether the DWP failed to make reasonable adjustments during those health assessment determinations.”

    Join the conversation

  • Vulcress
    Vulcress Online Community Member Posts: 111 Empowering

    Sorry if its been posted the new PIP test has apparently been leaked

    https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/news/try-the-proposed-new-pip-test

  • mangomungo
    mangomungo Online Community Member Posts: 180 Empowering

    I’m glad this is happening. What I think is disgraceful is Starmers background as a lawyer, he knows or should know this is an infringement on peoples rights and protected characteristics yet has gone ahead with it anyway which puts his whole integrity and imo leadership into question. If he’d have run on a manifesto of taking benefits from the disabled and sick and sweeping cuts to departments he wouldn’t have been voted in so it shouldn’t be allowed to go ahead at all

  • Andi66
    Andi66 Online Community Member Posts: 1,314 Championing

    All this because reeves terrible budget in Oct. She has no idea how to manage it. I was watching a economist on talk, he said if she reversed the national insurance on business that would help a lot. I doubt if she will. So if echr said it was unlawful can it be stopped

  • Anniebeau
    Anniebeau Online Community Member Posts: 24 Contributor

    I wish we could contact Michael Sheen and ask him to stick up for the disabled. I wouldn’t know how to contact him though and if he would even read a letter etc.

  • pinkrose
    pinkrose Online Community Member Posts: 170 Empowering

    I've been doing my bit emailing MP's etc but I'm afraid to say, there has been hardly any 'pushback' in parliament.

    Yes we've had a couple of MP's resign and merely a handful 'speak out' but this week has shown that most MP'S seem to be in agreement with the cuts, or even scared to 'go against them' ....this terrifies me because it points to these proposals being passed through parliament. And the disability charities haven't really 'fought back', their very 'lax' reactions have been all but buried in the media.

    BTW, not one MP has had the decency to even reply to my emails.

    The contempt most of them have for the sick and vulnerable is really starting to show.

    I've lost all hope of these proposals being 'watered down' or cancelled.

    Sadly I've resigned myself to the major possibility of it being a 'done deal'.

    Destitution here I come.

  • pinkrose
    pinkrose Online Community Member Posts: 170 Empowering

    And go through they will. It's disgraceful. But we don't have enough MP'S to fight our corner.

    And I must say Catherine, given how awful and dangerous these proposals are, the disability charities have really let us down this week.

    There has been NO PUSHBACK OF ANY NOTE FROM THE ORGANISATIONS THAT CLAIM TO BE FOR THE DISABLED. JUST A FEW VERY LACKLUSTRE STATEMENTS.

  • Vulcress
    Vulcress Online Community Member Posts: 111 Empowering

    Spot on,

    What's triggered this her fiscal rules will fail totally, Now they are sending her team out

    saying "of course its not austerity". Its Austerity, they made a serious of promises that were not needed. Funny though the promise to make the mega wealthy pay has been broken no problem,

    Starmer can change his stance on issues in a matter of days.

    A book suggests its people like Mc Fadden are running the show

    and given how Starmer is performing I could well believe it.

    they seem to be under this impression 2 years time everything will be amazing

    and a 2nd term assured. If this years Elections go bad watch the collective meltdown

    they appear to have prepared nothing for Government whilst in opposition

    C&C should be the foundation of Labour, Common sense and Compassion

    its never weak to show compassion its never weak to speak from the heart

    and defend the people who need defending. But what we are seeing from Starmer

    is a feckless man who buckled when the right wing media piled pressure on him.

    I would go as far to say we might be seeing the end of the Labour party as we know it

    they have totally lost focus on what separates them from the Tories/Reform

  • Vulcress
    Vulcress Online Community Member Posts: 111 Empowering

    Its a limbo period.

    What appears to have happened is Kendall and Timms called a meeting with MP's to basically stop a rebellion later on, then they opened the floor to comments and basically every MP

    said they had been flooded with messages from mild to very abusive stating long term voters will never support them again, new MP's who barely won got angry saying they were not elected on a platform like this and the meeting then went even worse when one asked was the story true Reeves is planning on more welfare cuts this coming week, Both Ministers apparently refused to answer and that's when MP's shouted they would not vote in favour.

    Starmer seems confused, If the role of an MP is just to vote for whatever the leader wants

    it makes this form of governance a total waste of time, MP's are there to convey back to the Govt exactly what the people who voted for them are saying. I really am getting the vibe from Starmer he's acting like a President = vote against me I kick you out.

  • Stellar
    Stellar Online Community Member Posts: 370 Pioneering

    Emails on their own aren't enough. Attending in person protests where possible is the next step forward (or helping them behind the scenes if you can't physically go). There's a day of action planned for Wednesday 26t by Crips Against Cuts.

  • Stellar
    Stellar Online Community Member Posts: 370 Pioneering

    Trade unions refusing to stop supporting Labour are part of the problem. Just one of many reasons the British left are strategically and politically inept.

  • pinkrose
    pinkrose Online Community Member Posts: 170 Empowering

    I agree stellar..but due to my multiple disabilities I will not be able to attend in person,and this just makes me feel more worthless and helpless.

  • pinkrose
    pinkrose Online Community Member Posts: 170 Empowering

    Yup....starmer is a dictator.

  • zoomie
    zoomie Online Community Member Posts: 11 Connected

    I am a pensioner on a light touch review every 10 years. I get high rates PIP for both Mobility and Daily Care. I was given 4 points on three of the daily living descriptors and 3 points on one descriptor . The letter I received at the time of the award stated that they would get in touch with me in Nov 2026 to see if my needs were the same. Do I have to worry regarding Labour’s proposals? Thanks

  • [Deleted User]
    [Deleted User] Posts: 1,170 Championing
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  • Girl_No1
    Girl_No1 Online Community Member Posts: 413 Trailblazing

    @Vulcress my fear is that even if some Labour MPs rebel, it will be carried by Tory MPs voting for it. The Tories' rationale is they know Labour will not be re-elected when this is implemented, Tory voters will support their support of any dismantling of the welfare state, and the Tories' job of dismantling the welfare state will be half way done when they next come into power.

    It's a win/win for the Tories - keep their own voters onside, and have the job half-done by Labour.

  • HollisMcBobbery
    HollisMcBobbery Online Community Member Posts: 31 Contributor

    I can't see the Tories getting in anytime soon unless reform implodes. I can see reform/ lib dems swallowing most of their votes they hope to get back in the next election. Just about the only political good news is seeing them where they belong, as an irrelevance.

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