Green Paper Related Discussions
Comments
-
Government officials have admitted they made a mistake by making the financial case for cutting benefits as they steel themselves for as many as 50 Labour MPs rebelling against the welfare bill that is being published on Wednesday.
Sources told the Guardian that they now believed the party should have focused on the moral case for reforming the welfare system, arguing that it was letting down millions of people who could be supported into work.
Labour insiders believe they could have kept more MPs on side if they had not highlighted the £5bn savings the Treasury would make as a result of the cuts to health and disability benefits that have so angered the party.
At the time of the spring statement, ministers said there were two justifications for the move: one was to get people off benefits in the long term, but the justification for the immediate cut to incapacity benefit was to make sure the system remained financially sustainable.
Rachel Reeves told MPs: “These plans mean that welfare spending as a share of GDP will fall between 2026-27 and the end of the forecast period. We are reforming our welfare system, making it more sustainable, protecting the most vulnerable and supporting more people back into secure work lifting them out of poverty.”
Labour MPs are demanding big changes to the proposals first put forward in March in the welfare green paper, including a rethink on eligibility for personal independence payments (Pip) for disabled people and benefits for carers.
Kendall’s plans to save £5bn a year by overhauling the welfare system, including by cutting Pip, triggered alarm in the party, with experts saying that up to 1.2 million people with disabilities are expected to lose thousands of pounds a year.
Nevertheless, the government is not expected to make any further changes to the welfare bill after it is published. “The £5bn is already spent,” said one senior government source. “Any further tweaks to the bill including on start dates or on criteria or tapering would mean that we start to spend money we don’t have. And this goes far beyond welfare.
“We have to be able to make tough decisions. We have to be able to make a budget add up in the autumn. We have to be able to make tough reforms that are the right thing to do. If we cannot get this through the consequences are far bigger than just this reform.”
Senior No 10 figures said the numbers who eventually rebelled or abstained might be as high as 50 – but did not believe Labour was at risk of losing the vote, which is expected in early July. “We think that when it comes to it, MPs will want to vote with their government,” one said.
The government has been intensifying efforts to quell a growing rebellion over welfare cuts, with whips stepping up contact with MPs and strategists drawing up plans for a cabinet reshuffle in case of resignations.
Ministers are taking a carrot-and-stick approach by laying out extra support for people who face losing their benefits, while also warning mutinous MPs of the consequences of voting against the plans.
Several MPs said that whips were strengthening efforts to bring them into line after Liz Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, sought to ease concerns by promising extra protections for vulnerable people.
Labour whips have suggested that the expansion of free school meals earlier this month and big capital investment announced at the spending review – albeit alongside cuts to day-to-day departmental budgets – were also helping to reassure concerned MPs.
Government insiders admitted, however, that deep unease about the disability benefit cuts across the party meant there was no single leader of the group of rebel MPs, so it was difficult to predict the likely scale of any parliamentary mutiny.
Neil Duncan-Jordan, a Labour MP who has opposed the welfare reform plans, said: “The government will only withdraw its damaging disability benefit cuts if Labour MPs make clear they will vote against them.
“The so-called concessions that have been suggested are nowhere near enough to undo the damage that is being proposed. The facts are undeniable: these cuts won’t create jobs – they’ll only push 3 million people deeper into hardship.
“After 14 years of Tory cuts, the benefits system is already driving disabled people into destitution. Another wave of cuts won’t clean up their mess – it’ll make things worse. I urge ministers to pause, withdraw these cuts, and work with disabled people’s organisations to redesign a fairer benefits system.”3 -
The user and all related content has been deleted.2
-
So they’ve already spent our money . A piddly £5 billion compared to the £300 billion they’ve spent. I wonder have they spent it on the WFA u turn and a future scrapping of the two child limit ? If so it shows we really are the least deserving according to this lot .
0 -
All while Cameron claimed DLA for his son even though he’s a millionaire
0 -
strange thing is she increased my award so I actually got more so I didn’t check the points . Makes me wonder if this was a plan then
0 -
The user and all related content has been deleted.0
-
What newspaper reported this @bellatango?
0 -
I think it was guardian
0 -
Thanks. There's nothing about the bill being read tomorrow in the front pages of the mainstream broadsheets as far as I can see.
0 -
Ellen Clifford | For Wealth Taxes, Not Cuts1
-
I know I thought that . Being covered a bit I think
0 -
PasserbyPosts: 525 Championing2:08PMI've the exact same feeling as you, as the DWP is known to provide undisclosed guidelines and instructions, known as "secret" or "undisclosed", to PIP and WCA assessors.PasserbyPosts: 525 Championing9:25PMI believe such a behaviour is due to undisclosed guidelines and instructions that they're given rather than being based on the merits of the assessment. This was happening through undisclosed guidelines and instructions they were giving to ATOSI asked you once before to post that WhatDoTheyKnow reference because this isn't entirely true and you keep saying this. I want to point something out which you have missed.
Thank you
0 -
-
Sorry thought I had linked it
1 -
This was posted on Disability News Service X page recently.
Here's confirmation of the bill that will introduce billions of pounds of cuts a yr to #PIP and #UniversalCredit.
Seems to be called the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill.
It will be presented after #PMQs today ie soon after 12.30pm.
To 'make provision to alter the rates of the standard allowance, limited capability for work element and limited capability for work and work-related activity element of UC and the rates of income-related ESA, and to restrict eligibility for the personal independence payment'
Suspect further details will be revealed later today.
#WelfareNotWarfare #TakingThePIP1 -
The user and all related content has been deleted.1
-
The user and all related content has been deleted.1
-
The user and all related content has been deleted.0
-
The user and all related content has been deleted.0
Categories
- All Categories
- 15.9K Start here and say hello!
- 7.6K Coffee lounge
- 108 Games den
- 1.8K People power
- 162 Announcements and information
- 25.3K Talk about life
- 6.2K Everyday life
- 505 Current affairs
- 2.5K Families and carers
- 874 Education and skills
- 2K Work
- 587 Money and bills
- 3.7K Housing and independent living
- 1.2K Transport and travel
- 645 Relationships
- 1.6K Mental health and wellbeing
- 2.5K Talk about your impairment
- 883 Rare, invisible, & undiagnosed conditions
- 942 Neurological impairments and pain
- 2.2K Cerebral Palsy Network
- 1.3K Autism and neurodiversity
- 40.9K Talk about your benefits
- 6.1K Employment & Support Allowance (ESA)
- 20.3K PIP, DLA, ADP & AA
- 9.2K Universal Credit (UC)
- 5.3K Benefits and income
