Green Paper Discussion (from 24th March, 2025)
Comments
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whatever will you spend it on lol
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I’m staying off this thread at moment for the exact same reason. It needs brought back into focus.
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He didn’t. Around 38.7 percent of eligible Americans voted for Trump. His approval rating has gone down further since the election and is now lower than his contemporaries at this time for sixty years. Kamala was unelectable having being ‘shuffled’ in but it was by no means a landslide. He is particularly unpopular with voters on the economy at the present time. This is not a forum/ topic about Trump and I’ve asked moderators to remind folk of that but you should revisit facts about his popularity.
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I've been unusually busy today. Could anyone explain what the various charities/ organisations hope to gain by boycotting the discussions around this green paper?
Have they concluded it is a waste of time/energy as it's already a done deal? 😕
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worried, I have seen someone else mention it is seeded in an earlier change as well, but I would love a link to these two acts so I can read myself, because if it was in those acts then surely it would have led to changes been enacted earlier, so I would prefer to read these acts. But maybe I can skip that, If I am right you mean the planned removal of LCW/LCWRA in their entirety?
Search legislation.gov.uk
No, don't skip them! They need to be read and understood - the 2011 amended ESA regulations in conjunction with the Welfare Reform Act 2012.
We need Greens and Lib dems to merge, for some reason they wont do it, the latest polling graph has Tories, Labour and Reform at the low 20s support, if Lib Dems and Greens merged, they would have combined 23%.
Sadly, Ed Davey helped pass the 2015 cuts into law after the LibDem/Tory coalition government got the "reassessment regulations" through in 2010. Many other sitting MP's were serving then.
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I remember my first 10- bob note Sarah - in my 10th year birthday cards! Felt a rich boy at this time (oh, Probably way before you were born though )😀
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Totally understand that my neighbours we all moved in the same time same age lived beside each other 25 years she's a manager she works for dwp and was saying about changes and she said to me your such a kind caring person I could see you as a carer I felt so sad and embarrassed I never compare myself to anyone but I did then her and her husband bought thier house I can see it's her time in her life and my life is in my room with the curtains drawn I know people say it's never to late and I understand that but I just don't have the capability to do what people find normal I really understand I have autism not diagnosed but makes such sense I'm a complete loner I live in my head anyways can go on and on but yes I think it starts from birth for some people if your natured you grow if your pushed down you get broken regrets I have a few but as the song goes all we have is here and now
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It's easy to drift to other topics I do it all the time not intently
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That 50 pence is your pocket money 💰
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Dear Scope Community,
It saddens me deeply to see tension and disagreement emerging among us, especially around who deserves disability benefits. I completely understand how passionate and personal these topics are-we are all navigating difficult circumstances, especially with the uncertainty surrounding the upcoming Green Paper and Spring Statement proposals .
But now, more than ever, is the time for unity. We need to stand together against the proposed welfare changes that affect us, our families, and our futures,not against each other. Every person’s disability experience is unique, whether visible or hidden, and deserves to be met with empathy and understanding.
I also feel that some discussions,particularly those drifting toward political systems abroad,may not help us constructively at this moment, and can be emotionally draining to many. Speaking personally, I’ve found some recent comments affecting my wellbeing.
Please know that I say this with kindness and respect to everyone here. This community has always been a place of safety and support for me and everyone on this forum , and I share this out of care, not criticism.
Let’s try to refocus our energy on supporting each other with compassion and shared strength, and steer the conversation back to the core purpose of this thread.
With warmth and solidarity11 -
Well said, @noonebelieves 🙂
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beginning of the end for Starmer ?
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Welfare reform in the United Kingdom (2010-Present)
Reforms
Legislation
- Welfare Reform Act 2012
Welfare Reform and Work Act 2016
- Housing and Planning Act 2016
- Welfare in the United Kingdom
- United Kingdom Acts of Parliament 2016
- This page was last edited on 27 March 2025, at 10:27 (UTC).
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Sorry to hear you have been affected and I agree we have to unite. However I just want to say my opinion.
If we don't do something about it then it definitely will be who deserves it and who doesn't because the 4 point descriptor will hit hard and it is designed to hit hard. It will be who is more disabled and who isn't. It will be who is more effective at the point scoring and who isn't. It will be the haves and the have nots. Millions will suffer. This is almost very close to happening. They are trying to make it happen. Those that say nothing is happening right now, nothing is for certain, well, they are going ahead with it aren't they?
It will be who is more disabled and whose disability deserves financial help and whose doesn't. That is what the reforms are all about this is why they designed it.
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Thanks @Girl_No1 🙏🏽
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I think the last thing any of us want is to be assessed by work coaches, unless you're thinking of ones that are fully qualified doctors and psychiatrists.
A lot of work coaches have no understanding of mental issues, and there's a lot of work coaches who are unsympathetic and unempathetic.
I have had experiences with most work coaches that I've seen where after I have tried to explain my issues to them it is as though it has just gone in one ear and out the other, they will still continue to treat me as though there is nothing wrong with me and expect me to do things I cannot do.
For example, after explaining to one how I suffer from depression, social anxiety, and how I find it very hard to cope with a lot of regular situations that most other people can cope with, he suggested that I become a security guard! A mentally fragile person being expected to stand around somewhere in public and to tackle criminals?
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Obviously they would need to be trained and the culture would have to change. You can't have the culture we have currently with work coaches otherwise no one will qualify for disability. My thinking was it is better if the local work coaches in peoples own areas deal with claimants because circumstances in cities and rural areas are very different. Transport, finances, investment, jobs etc. That was my thinking. Personally I would not want to go to a work coach either, I get that. They would have to train people up to deal with disability if they are talking about reforming, that is what a reform should be shouldn't it?
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Is it possible to divert the Trump posts here to the correct thread please.
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Forgot to mention the £97 to £47 for LCWRA. That is another thing no one dares talk about it.
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I don't disagree that the MSM can be biased, which is why it's good to read across the papers and compare sources. The only way you get to truth is by doing that. Believing in one person/politician uncritically is very dangerous. If you really support someone's way of doing things you should also be willing to hold them to account - otherwise you are only taking one side of the story as well.
And you shouldn't ever just rely on social media, because social media is far MORE biased and more of an echo chamber than the MSM. This is because of algorithms, which give you more posts similar to what you were already reading and reacts to what you like reading. It does not give you a balanced view, which is why you should use as many sources as possible to verify what is true.I didn't vote Labour and I am angry about what they are doing. At the same time, I realise that the Tories and Reform would do more harm to disabled people if they were in power, so it worries me when people think that getting rid of Labour would solve all our problems. It won't. We have very few positive options, politically, as disabled people.
I'm not going to comment on Trump because it's another country's politics. I also know people over there going through a very bad time/lost their job etc however.Apologies if that is still off topic but I feel like it's relevant in all the political frustration - remembering to check data and corroborate information across different sources no matter what the issue.
If anything, what we should be concerned about is how little MSM coverage there is now of the benefit cuts, as if it's someone else's problem and not as important as the financial implications of Trump's tariffs. These are all economic issues.
I do think that we should be challenging the idea of economically inactive as well. There is a difference between being not employed and not contributing to the economy. There will be further implications to cutting these payments if people are no longer to contribute to the economy by buying necessities and such. But there's nothing from the govt on that impact.2
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