The Universal Credit Bill becomes law. Here are the changes to disability benefits you need to know

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Comments

  • AppleJacks
    AppleJacks Posts: 89 Empowering

    I think it's going to come down to who will do peoples review and how lenient they are in making awards.

  • jamrumples
    jamrumples Online Community Member Posts: 123 Contributor

    could you please copy and paste some of what the article says, i can’t view properly because im not a member. Thankyou.

  • Tumilty
    Tumilty Online Community Member Posts: 472 Empowering

    @Catherine21 couldn't you do it on phone or pc? You can keep going back to it and have 28 days. I've done nearly half and took half hour.

  • Ross1975
    Ross1975 Online Community Member Posts: 1,008 Championing
    edited July 2025

    If anyone is using a computer it can be read by pressing the 'Print Screen' button before the 'To continue' banner comes up and stops you from reading, and then reading the screenshot you've saved, then you just refresh the page, scroll down to where you were, and press the Print Screen button again, etc.

    Here's the screenshots that I've taken:

    Screenshot 2025-07-31 135634.png Screenshot 2025-07-31 135714.png Screenshot 2025-07-31 135734.png Screenshot 2025-07-31 135854.png
  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing

    I haven't a PC and my phone is useless I have a new phone to chakge over to but I hate change as habe to put all passwords ect this phone doesn't download do you have to download an app for Universal credit I've gone into head in sand and will panic last minute

  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing
  • jasminehoop
    jasminehoop Online Community Member Posts: 51 Contributor

    Catherine you don't need to use an app for UC, it's all done through your Internet browser, which you can use on your phone, tablet and PC. When you get your migration notice you can ask CAB and/or your council welfare team/office to help you with the whole thing, if you don't feel confident doing it by yourself.

  • Tumilty
    Tumilty Online Community Member Posts: 472 Empowering

    If can type on here like you have nothing to worry about. . No app it's government website on browser

  • Ross1975
    Ross1975 Online Community Member Posts: 1,008 Championing

    I really hope it's true that they'll drop the planned cuts to LCWRA.

  • jamrumples
    jamrumples Online Community Member Posts: 123 Contributor

    how credible is the article? Is it set in stone? Or hear say? Has anything else been said to back it up?

  • Socrates63
    Socrates63 Online Community Member Posts: 69 Empowering

    I thought that starmer and his cronies had dropped the cuts the health part of uc till 2026, till the report from his headhunter timms is finished. Who knows when that'll be.

  • jasminehoop
    jasminehoop Online Community Member Posts: 51 Contributor

    It feels to me like it's the Torygraph taking a swipe at Starmer and his cabinet, implying that the select committee's intervention ultimately carries more weight and authority regarding the cuts than the government does. How true that is I couldn't say, but perhaps the writer of that opinion piece knows how these things work in practice. Or maybe they're just being dramatic 🙄

  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing
  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing
  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing

    Yes me too can't find anything else on this subject

  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing

    AAh Even though cane from telegraph and I shared I don't think it's true maybe they said yes then changed mind but noting mentioned in john pring or Amy where else so take it as false news hope I'm wrong

  • Socrates63
    Socrates63 Online Community Member Posts: 69 Empowering

    What is John pring and Amy where else? I'm baffled!

  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing

    It really shouldn't be allowed I'm sorry I posted it thinking it was credible she is getting pressure but she don't care it's going to royal assent soon so think trying before then she will let it go ahead

  • Catherine21
    Catherine21 Online Community Member Posts: 9,796 Championing

    Oh any lol john pring wrotes news on latest disability news not Amy meant to say any I type and don't check

  • ashmere
    ashmere Online Community Member Posts: 69 Empowering

    From the Benefits and Work site

    No genuine co-production for Timms review

     Published: 04 August 2025

    The promised genuine co-production of the Timms personal independence payment (PIP) review already seems to have been ruled out by disability minister Stephen Timms. Timms gave more details of the process in an interview with the BBC last week covering both the PIP review and the forthcoming white paper.

    PIP review

    It already seems clear that any possibility of genuine co-production of the Timms review with disabled people has been dropped.

    Timms told the BBC that his idea of “co-production” is that:  “we are going to be taking a lead from disabled people and representatives of disabled people in this work over the next year or so. And what we’re actually doing over the summer we’re going to be planning in detail how that process will be taken forward. What I envisage is there will be a fairly small group of ten people, something like that, who will work very closely with me as the minister for the period of this review, and they will have a lot of say and a lot of sway over the form that the recommendations emerge in.”

    This, however, is a very long way from the amendment to the Universal Credit Bill proposed but subsequently withdrawn by MP Dr Marie Tidball MP, following assurances from Timms in the committee of the full house debate.  

    At column 1045 Timms called the amendment “a helpful checklist of the desirable features of our co-produced review”.

    However, there is no indication that Timms intends to follow most of the items on that checklist, including:

    The Secretary of State must establish a Disability Co-Production Taskforce (“the Taskforce”) to provide independent oversight of the conduct of the review and the preparation of the final report . . .

    The Taskforce must—

    (a)be provided with support by the Government Equalities Office,

    (b)be chaired by an independent person appointed by the Secretary of State,

    (c)have a majority of members who are disabled people or representatives of disabled people’s organisations; and

    (d)include such other persons or representatives of such organisations as the chair considers relevant to the effects of the review and proposals developed for the purposes of subsection (3)(a) on disabled people.

    Timms cannot in any way be considered to be an “independent person”.  He is a government minister who fought hard to remove the PIP daily living allowance from hundreds of thousands of current and future claimants.  He should not be chairing the taskforce, even if he is in charge of the review.

    Yet Timms already seems to have decided that “the taskforce” will consist of just 10 people and it seems clear that he will make the final decision on who is on that taskforce, rather than those decisions being made by an independent chair.

    When asked who was going to be on the taskforce, Timms replied “Well, we haven’t yet worked out who it’s going to be… I’m going to be talking to disability organisations, I mean, I do talk regularly to them of course, but I’ll be talking specifically about this point so that we can set out in the detail both the process and how it’s going to work.”

    There is also a lack of clarity about one of the primary aims of the review:  is it a cost-cutting exercise?

    Timms told the BBC:  “The review exercise that we’re undertaking is not designed to deliver spending cuts. I mean, we will certainly have to operate within the current projections for what spending is going to be. . . This review is not intended to deliver cuts. I think it’s quite important that that is well understood because I don’t think some of the people who we need to be involved in the review would be if they thought that that’s what it was for.”

    Yet, in her welfare reform speech on 21 May 2025, secretary of state Liz Kendall told MPs that:

    “And the number of people on Personal Independence Payments is set to more than double to 4.3 million.

    There are now 1,000 new PIP awards every single day. That’s the equivalent of adding a city the size of Leicester every single year.

    This is not sustainable or fair – for the people who need support and for taxpayers.

    So unless we reform the system to help those who can work to do so…

    Unless we get social security spending on a more sustainable footing…

    And unless we ensure public money is focused on those with the greatest need and is spent in ways that have the best chance of improving people’s lives…

    …the risk is the welfare state won’t be there for people who really need it in future.”

    So, are the current projections that the PIP review will have to operate within,  the ones that Liz Kendall says are “not sustainable” and, if so, what is the likelihood of Liz Kendall implementing the recommendations of the review? 

    Or are they the projections which take account of Labour’s original intention to cut £5 billion from the overall welfare benefits budget by 2030?

    Whatever the reality, it is clear that the Timms review will be a carefully managed consultation and in no way a co-production in which disabled people have a clear say in what changes the government actually implements.

    Five other committees

    Timms revealed that five other committees have already begun work.  These cover:

    • Pathways to Work
    • Right to Try
    • Access to Work
    • Raising the age at which people can claim PIP to 18
    • Delaying access to the UC health element until age 22

    There are approximately 10 people on each committee, all of whom are currently operating under a cloak of anonymity.  They have all met once and will meet every month for two or three hours until October, when their recommendations will be presented to ministers and “will be very influential in the final decisions that get made.”

    This means that each committee will have met a maximum of four times for a combined total of between 8 and 12 hours, before making recommendations that will affect the future of potentially millions of claimants.

    No committees

    There did not appear to be any mention of a committee to discuss the proposed new Unemployment Insurance contributory benefit, which was consulted on in the Pathways to Work Green Paper.

    Nor was there any mention of a committee to consider the scrapping of the WCA, which was set out in the Green Paper, but on which there were no consultation questions.  Timms has said, however, in his PIP review terms of reference that “We will be setting out plans for how access to the health element of UC will work when the WCA is removed as part of the forthcoming White Paper.”

    No confidence

    It is hard to take an optimistic view of the consultation processes taking place. 

    The fact that existing committees are operating anonymously, without any public information about their terms of reference or procedures, does not encourage confidence.  Clearly individuals may not wish to be identified, but there seems no reason why organisations should not be.

    And the lack of any real element of co-production in relation to the Timms review suggests that it will be little more than a cover for whatever it is that the DWP plan to do anyway.

    You can listen to the BBC programme Access All here.

    https://www.benefitsandwork.co.uk/news/no-genuine-co-production-for-timms-review