Get your MP to act against cuts

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  • WhatThe
    WhatThe Community Member, Scope Member Posts: 5,826 Championing
    edited June 2025

    Labour Together - (ex MP) Jonathan Ashworth is the Chief Executive and by coincidence, yet another former Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions.

    We are policy experts, political strategists and pollsters. We have worked in government, the private sector and charities, in political parties and on political campaigns.

    Core Team

    800px-Official_portrait_of_Jonathan_Ashworth_MP_crop_2.jpg

    JONATHAN ASHWORTH
    CHIEF EXECUTIVE

    Jonathan began working for the Labour Party in 2001. In 2011, he was elected to parliament in Leicester South and held this seat for 13 years until 2024. He served in a number of shadow ministerial roles, including Shadow Secretary of State for Health, Shadow Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, and most recently, Shadow Paymaster General.

    I have never liked this man-boy or his goofy style and now I know why. Just play-acting all these years ughh. Also on his top team are;

    MATTHEW UPTON
    EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR

    Before joining Labour Together, Matt worked in the private, public and voluntary sectors, most recently as Executive Director of Policy & Advocacy at Citizens Advice. Previous roles have been in local government and in a political consultancy. He is also a trustee at the Abrdn Financial Fairness Trust.

    MORGAN WILD
    CHIEF POLICY ADVISOR

    Morgan joined Labour Together from Citizens Advice where he was Head of Policy. He's interested in why policy keeps failing, why we keep noticing and why we don't fix it. He's spent his career exploiting this fact to help get a few billion back in people's pockets, but wants to know why it keeps happening. He's worked a bit on a lot of things, including energy policy, inflation measurement, regulation and social security.

    So they all know what really happened to welfare benefits in the coalition years and Citizens Advice knowingly misled the public about the cuts in 2015.

  • trouble5316
    trouble5316 Community Member Posts: 155 Contributor

    I have cerebral palsy and tourettes so struggling with my fingers to copy and paste on my phone. And I would love to help

  • Dragonwolfsprite
    Dragonwolfsprite Community Member Posts: 40 Connected

    is there a place to find out what your Local MP views are? i cant find any info at all about my local MP - and one my friends mum said she knew him and wants to know if he is a "betrayer" she said she has always voted labour her whole life and said never again as my friend will likely lose his care pip meaning cant dress or bathe and get to his volunteering job!

    ive signed every petition i can find to help fight against them - but news about how liz is still going ahead without delay doesnt bold well

  • ashmere
    ashmere Community Member Posts: 80 Empowering

    From the Benefits and Work site

    News

    What you can still do to challenge the cuts

     Published: 17 June 2025

    There are probably only two weeks to go until the first vote on Labour’s cuts takes place in the Commons.  Labour backbenchers suspected of planning to rebel will be bombarded with threats, bribes and misleading propaganda about the reform plans.

    But there are still steps you can take to counter the pressure they are experiencing and also to encourage MPs of all parties to vote against the cuts.

    Contact local councillors

    This really is worth doing.  Cuts will have a very damaging effect on local authority budgets as care services, housing, health services, advice services and education will all be hit and everyone will be worse off as a result. So, it’s an issue councillors really should be raising with their MPs.

    Tower Hamlets local authority has called on the government to reverse the cuts, which they estimate will cost them £8.5 million a year.

    Two Labour councillors in Cheshire have resigned, in part over the cuts.  This is not earth shattering, but will be big news locally and will draw attention to Labour’s plans.

    One reader who contacted 58 councillors has heard back from some who say they have contacted the local MP.  Our reader has also heard from the MP herself, who says she has been contacted by councillors, after residents raised the issue with them.

    There’s more details and a sample email to send to councillors here.

    Make your MP aware of these reports

    There are an awful lot of facts and figures washing about at the moment.  But sometimes knowing who objects to a measure can be as important as why they object.  So, please make sure you local MP knows about these reports – you can copy and paste this information if you wish:

    Citizens Advice (CA) literally works for the DWP, having had over £20 million from them to run the Help To Claim service. But it hasn’t stopped CA publishing Pathways To Poverty, a searing report on the cuts, which begins:  “By refusing to properly consult on its plan to cut billions from disability benefits, the government is choosing not to ask questions it doesn’t want the answers to. The cuts will have a devastating impact on disabled people (and their children), sending hundreds of thousands into poverty, and many more into deeper poverty.”

    Money saving expert Martin Lewis is probably the most trusted figure in the UK when it comes to financial issues.  So, when his charity produces a report on the planned reforms headed “Lead shoes instead of a life ring”,  and says “We strongly urge the government to ditch these plans, which will cause misery and hardship for some of the most vulnerable people in society” you can be sure people will listen.

    The Commons All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Poverty and Inequality is hugely dominated by Labour MPs.  Yet it has condemned the “sweeping cuts” in a report that argues that “These proposals won’t remove barriers to employment—they will add new ones by stripping people of the income they rely on to survive. “

    The Commons work and pensions committee also has a Labour majority, yet their interim report asks for any changes to be delayed and warns that the proposals: “might not incentivise work, as the Government hopes, but rather push people deeper into poverty, worsen health, especially in more deprived areas, and move people further from the labour market, as evidence suggests has happened in the past with similar reforms.” 

    And then there’s the DWP’s own opinion about its chances of moving disabled people into work. At 4pm on Friday 2 May 2025, on the eve of a bank holiday and on a day when the news was dominated by the results of the local elections, the DWP quietly buried two reports.

    In “The Experience of Additional Work Coach Support” the DWP found that more time with a work coach improved mental well being for claimants with mental health issues, but had no effect where physical health conditions were concerned and that “Feeling meaningfully closer to work was an outcome for only a minority of those interviewed.”

     “Evaluation of the Employment and Health Discussion” found that employment and health discussions make claimant’s briefly feel more positive, but the solutions they produce don’t work and fail to address may of the barriers to work that disabled claimants actually face.  Yet the Green Paper argues that claimants will benefit from “a new support conversation” which will “enable people to get help early, providing access to more rapid and timely support.”

    When so many respected organisations cast doubt on the Green Paper proposals, surely it’s time to pause the plans and carry out more research and consultation.

    Don’t be fooled

    Most importantly of all, don’t listen to Labour claims that the rebellion has collapsed, that’s just them trying to make their own backbenchers feel isolated and scared.  Instead, keep encouraging claimants to contact their MPs and also offer your own words of support to those MPs brave enough to openly declare they will not vote for Labour’s cuts.

    https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/news/what-you-can-still-do-to-challenge-the-cuts

  • Ross1975
    Ross1975 Community Member Posts: 1,158 Championing
    edited June 2025

    the DWP found that more time with a work coach improved mental well being for claimants with mental health issues

    They must've been really friendly easy going work coaches, because when I had to see a work coach even though she wasn't that bad and nothing was mandatory, my depression, anxiety, and stress got a lot worse (and not just in the moment, it was actually long lasting, I'd be waking up everyday feeling a lot worse) because of her always trying to push me into things that I wouldn't be able to cope with or just wasn't able to face, it made my mental health worse.

  • Roughyed1485
    Roughyed1485 Community Member Posts: 73 Empowering
  • durhamjaide2001
    durhamjaide2001 Scope Member Posts: 15,450 Championing

    wells done everyone for getting to page 15 of this thread and a massive well done to @Dragonwolfsprite for being the first person to post on page 15

  • Overwhelmed1
    Overwhelmed1 Community Member Posts: 42 Contributor

    I’ve been so inspired by what I have seen from Scope and this community I wrote to my MP this morning. I thought it was essential and hope it has some positive impact because he’s supporting the changes 😩

  • mrsBB
    mrsBB Community Member Posts: 297 Empowering

    I cannot find any info about how my MP is going to vote. I wrote to her about WASPI (sp) debacle some time ago as part of the Age UK campaign, her response was as expected, rhetoric only. Is there somewhere I can find out her intentions re the vote ?

  • Kaliwax
    Kaliwax Community Member Posts: 101 Empowering

    My MP is Yvette Cooper, I have emailed her, i doubt I will get anything back.

    If your MP is Richard Tice, hard luck, he hates disabled people

  • worried33
    worried33 Community Member Posts: 1,054 Championing
    edited June 2025

    Or having Kendall as MP. I sympathise with anyone who has one of these MP's.

  • lil12
    lil12 Community Member Posts: 17 Connected

    My local MP is Peter Lamb.

    He is opposed to the proposed changes,also the 'new' concessions.

    Thankyou Peter Lamb!

  • Andi66
    Andi66 Community Member Posts: 1,433 Championing

    Tom collins is my mp and favours cuts, like he did with pensioners and farmers.

    He dosent care about his constitutes only his career

  • michael57
    michael57 Community Member Posts: 2,888 Championing

    yet in my lifetime to see a poor farmer just a few bad business men who tried to do it without the government subsidies of which there are a plenty

  • mrsBB
    mrsBB Community Member Posts: 297 Empowering

    All three of my city's MP's voted Aye 😡to the green paper yesterday. No surprise really, it has always been a Labour stronghold, all three are young and will want to make an impression and more importantly keep their positions. They might be in for a shock though when it comes to the GE, at the recent local elections, Reform made real waves, that's as scary as hell.

  • Andi66
    Andi66 Community Member Posts: 1,433 Championing

    Our mp, was in the paper, He is not people favorite, He dosent reply to any emails, from the public , organisations, etc. Or if they do ,it's a standard reply. Just comes out for photos.

  • michael57
    michael57 Community Member Posts: 2,888 Championing

    all the big farmers dont buy tractors they lease them for 3 years then the dealers sell them to 3rd world countries

  • michael57
    michael57 Community Member Posts: 2,888 Championing

    Ah back when I could drive I had a tme evo 6 with a 2.3 stroker engine at 550 bhp that was fun

  • Overwhelmed1
    Overwhelmed1 Community Member Posts: 42 Contributor

    I’ve emailed my MP again, he voted in favour of the planned welfare reform and intends to again.

    I got an automated reply “Luke Charters MP is expecting the birth of his second son in early July and will be on paternity leave for at least four weeks.”

    It’s easy to vote for something you’re not personally impacted by!