
This ruthless pursuit of disabled people has damaged Labour – no matter what happens next
One year ago, as cheering supporters waved union jacks to celebrate Labour's election landslide, Keir Starmer walked into Downing Street with a promise: the country had voted 'for change. For national renewal. And a return of politics to public service.' On Tuesday, his government will ask parliament to remove benefits from more than 1 million disabled and sick people.
You will have already heard much about the Westminster drama of the vote. More than 120 Labour MPs have signed an amendment aiming to kill the bill next week, with more still said to be joining, presumably fuelled by the sense this was not the 'change' they were elected for. It has been a welcome relief to see such moral strength, with backbenchers and even a now former government whip dodging alleged threats of deselection to stand up for their constituents. Starmer says he will 'press forward' with the cuts, describing the rebels as 'noises off', but behind the scenes No 10 is said to be desperately trying to get MPs – including frontbenchers – back in line.
In the coming days, the papers will inevitably splash on what the size of the rebellion means for Starmer's premiership while pundits gas about rumoured resignations, as though all of this were a game and the only casualty a promising ministerial career. Let's remember, then, what – and who – it is MPs would be voting for. With the number of people relying on disability benefits growing, the government plans to tighten eligibility for personal independence payments (Pip). That means up to 1.2 million disabled people, many of whom are already in some of the poorest households in the country, could lose between £4,200 and £6,300 a year they need to pay for the extra costs of disability. Under the changes, due to be introduced in November 2026, disabled people would not qualify for Pip unless they score a minimum of four points on an assessment designed to measure their ability to carry out a single daily activity, such as washing or getting dressed.
If that sounds like technical jargon, just talk to Lee – a worried reader who emailed me – and the human impact of the policy becomes clear. Lee has multiple debilitating health conditions – from muscle wasting and joint pain to depression and daily seizures – and was reassessed for Pip in March. He scraped by to win the lowest benefit rate, but didn't score the magic four points in any category – which means that if MPs vote to change the rules, it is likely Lee will be rejected next time he's assessed. That's despite the fact he needs help from his partner to shower, cook and use the toilet. Lee is 'petrified' of losing his disability benefits and his seizures are increasing from the stress. 'I couldn't survive without the support I receive,' he says. 'It would be a death sentence for me.'
No Labour minister will tell you they want to take Pip from people like Lee. No politician who cuts disability benefits ever says out loud, 'We will take support from people who rely on it.' Instead, they cast doubt on reality, chipping away at trust in the social security system and, with it, our disabled neighbours. They say we should give benefits to people who 'genuinely need them', as though not everyone receiving them does. They pick a 'good reason' for cutting support – a bloated welfare bill, say, or a labour market crisis – and paint empathy as costly and cruelty as prudent.
That's why government figures – including Starmer himself in response to the rebellion – repeatedly claim the cuts will get disabled people into work, even though a Pip award has no relation to whether someone has a job or not.
It is telling that the official forecast for the policy's impact on employment isn't due to be published until October – meaning that MPs are being asked to cut disabled people's benefits on the basis it will help them find work without any evidence to back this up. Or, as Labour MPs tabling the amendment put it: 'We are being asked to vote before consultation with disabled people and before impact assessments.' Facts, it seems, don't trump fiscal rules.
Even if a few thousand long-term sick people get jobs as a result of the changes, it will pale in significance compared with the number pushed into penury: analysis by Trussell and WPI Economics shows nearly half a million people in disabled households will be forced into severe hardship if the government goes ahead with the full cuts. 'Tightening eligibility criteria' is a neat euphemism for withholding the money disabled people need to live.
The Pip change is only the beginning. In the same bill, MPs are due to vote to cut the health top-up of universal credit for new claimants from £97 a week to £50 in order to, in the government's words, fix a system 'which encourages sickness' – as well as scrap it entirely for under-22s. That's still not all: when the work capabilities assessment is abolished, Pip will become the 'gateway' for this benefit, so swathes of people who lose Pip won't be eligible for out-of-work sickness benefits payments either.
Like many, Lee receives both Pip and universal credit – which means Labour's 'reforms' could see his two main strands of support pulled away. On top of that, his partner could also have her carer's allowance taken, as that's linked to Pip eligibility too. Lee has already done the maths. If both his disability benefits are stopped, he will lose precisely £718.87 per month. That works out at roughly half his income. 'I've told the crisis team [these cuts] would be the end of me,' he admits. 'Why would anyone want to go on without any support or quality of life?'
That's the thing with Westminster drama. Politics is only a game if you are privileged enough to be cushioned from its effects. For others, it is what decides whether there is enough food in the cupboard or whether a care worker arrives to help you wash your hair.
In 2015, fresh from the coalition pact, the Liberal Democrats were punished by the electorate for helping the Conservatives push through sweeping public spending cuts. Come the next general election, the accusation will not be that Starmer's Labour cosied up to the Tories for power, but that they embodied them: their cruelty, their austerity and, ultimately, their failure.
In the event the rebel amendment wins or Downing Street is forced to pull the vote to save face, it cannot undo the fact that the government wished to enact these cuts in the first place. If the bill does go ahead, the division lobby will shine a light not simply on the chasms in the Labour party, but on those between compassion and careerism, bravery and betrayal.
Forget the MPs who rebel over cutting disabled people's benefits – remember those who don't. This is Labour's poll tax. Its tuition fees. Its Partygate. Just as the Iraq war was for Tony Blair, disability cuts is the moral stain that will mark Starmer's government and the party for years to come. Severely disabled and ill people are going to be starved, isolated and degraded as a result of this policy. No Labour MP who backs it should be forgiven.
Frances Ryan is a Guardian columnist
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The Independent
33 minutes ago
- The Independent
Starmer seeks to quell revolt to speed through welfare reforms
Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer looks set to offer concessions to Labour rebels in order to speed his welfare reforms through the Commons. Downing Street insiders said talks were taking place with Labour MPs about the legislation after 126 of them publicly backed a move to block it. The first vote on the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill will take place on Tuesday and a concerted effort has been launched by ministers to win round potential rebels. If the legislation clears its first hurdle it will then face a few hours' examination by all MPs – rather than days or weeks in front of a committee tasked with looking at the Bill – with a plan for it to clear the Commons a little over a week later on July 9. Ministers have said they will listen to suggestions to improve the legislation but opposition appears entrenched and the swift timetable for the Bill could add to critics' concerns. Commons Leader Lucy Powell told MPs: 'As the House would expect, the Government actively engages with parliamentary opinion throughout a bill's passage, as we are doing intensively with the Universal Credit and Personal Independent Payment Bill.' A No 10 source said: 'Delivering fundamental change is not easy, and we all want to get it right, so of course we're talking to colleagues about the Bill and the changes it will bring, we want to start delivering this together on Tuesday.' Overnight six more Labour MPs added their names to the rebel amendment that would halt the legislation in its tracks. The reasoned amendment argues that disabled people have not been properly consulted and further scrutiny of the changes is needed. The new signatories include the Commons Environmental Audit Select Committee chairman Toby Perkins, Stoke-on-Trent Central MP Gareth Snell, Newcastle upon Tyne MP Mary Glindon and Tamworth MP Sarah Edwards. North Ayrshire and Arran MP Irene Campbell and Colchester MP Pam Cox, both of whom won their seats in the party's 2024 landslide election victory, have also added their names. The new names take the total number of Labour backbenchers supporting the amendment, tabled by Treasury Select Committee chairwoman Dame Meg Hillier, to 126 out of a total of 162 backers from all parties. The plans restrict eligibility for the personal independence payment (Pip), the main disability payment in England, and limit the sickness-related element of universal credit. The Government hopes the changes will get more people back into work and save up to £5 billion a year. Existing claimants will be given a 13-week phase-out period of financial support, a move seen as a bid to head off opposition by aiming to soften the impact of the changes. But the fact so many Labour MPs are prepared to put their names to the 'reasoned amendment' calling for a change of course shows how entrenched the opposition remains. One backbencher preparing to vote against the Bill told the PA news agency: 'A lot of people have been saying they're upset about this for months. 'To leave it until a few days before the vote, it's not a very good way of running the country. 'It's not very grown-up.' They said that minor concessions would not be enough, warning: 'I don't think you can tinker with this. They need to go back to the drawing board.' The Daily Telegraph reported that potential concessions being considered include a commitment to speed up payment of support to help people back into work and offering assurances that reviews of policies in this area will be published. Meanwhile, The Times reported some MPs opposed to the plans had blamed Sir Keir's chief of staff Morgan McSweeney and suggested the time had come for 'regime change' in Downing Street. Asked about attacks on Mr McSweeney, trade minister Douglas Alexander said: 'I'm much less interested in the gossip about SW1 than whether this legislation works on the streets, in the towns, in the communities right across the country.' He told Sky News it was 'for the Prime Minister to make his judgments' about who works in Downing Street but 'the fact is that team delivered us an historic victory only last July, against expectations'. He told ITV's Good Morning Britain: 'If there are practical ways that we can improve this legislation, we should. 'We should do it not to buy off rebels, but because it's a Labour thing to do and that's the conversation that I expect ministers will be engaged in in the coming days.' Analysis by the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) think tank indicated overall, 800,000 fewer working-age people are expected to receive a Pip daily living award in 2029–30 as a result of the reforms. The tighter criteria are set to lead to 430,000 new applicants – who would have received an award without reforms – receiving no award, and 370,000 existing claimants losing out following reassessment. Most of the 800,000 losers will receive £3,850 per year less in Pip. The 2.2 million existing claimants of the health element of universal credit who are expected to still be claiming in 2029–30 are estimated to see a £450 real decline in their support in that year because of the freezing of the payment. There are also set to be 700,000 new claimants who will typically receive £2,700 a year less than they would have done under the current system, the IFS said. It will be well into the 2030s before the reforms are fully rolled out and, in the long-term, the savings could amount to around £11 billion a year, the IFS said. A little over a quarter of the public are supportive of the proposed reforms, according to polling published on Thursday. Of 2,004 people surveyed by More in Common over the weekend, just 27% said they supported the planned changes to the benefits system and half (51%) said they believe the cuts would worsen the health of disabled people. A similar proportion (52%) said the cuts would increase pressure on the NHS while six in 10 said the Government should look at alternative cost-saving measures instead. Liberal Democrat leader Sir Ed Davey said the Government should pull the Bill and 'go back to the drawing board' instead of 'cutting vital support from thousands of vulnerable people'.


The Guardian
35 minutes ago
- The Guardian
No 10 in talks with Labour MPs in attempt to quash growing welfare revolt
Downing Street is in talks with a growing band of Labour rebels in an attempt to quash a major revolt over the government's planned welfare changes. The trade minister Douglas Alexander said on Thursday that the government was 'listening and talking and reflecting' on the rebels' criticisms of the welfare proposals, with more than 120 MPs poised to rebel against the government in next Tuesday's vote. The Guardian reported overnight that No 10 was preparing to offer concessions to Labour MPs that could include changes to the points needed to be eligible for personal independence payments (Pip), a benefit paid to those both in and out of work. Alexander said Labour MPs were in agreement 'with the principles of the bill' but were speaking with ministers about how changes would be put in place and how best to protect the most vulnerable. Disgruntled Labour MPs have told ministers they believe people were properly consulted and further scrutiny of the change is needed. 'When 120 Labour colleagues in the House of Commons are making clear through a reasoned amendment that they agree with the principles of the bill, but they've got real concerns in terms of how those principles are given expression in practical application, the government should be listening and talking and reflecting, and that's exactly what I anticipate Labour ministers will be doing,' he told ITV's Good Morning Britain. The minister said there was still enough time for discussions with potential rebels before Tuesday, telling Sky News: 'We've got time. There'll be discussions that will be happening. There's discussions that have started happening, and I expect that those conversations will continue.' He added: 'If there are practical ways that we can improve this legislation, we should. We should do it not to buy off rebels, but because it's a Labour thing to do and that's the conversation that I expect ministers will be engaged in in the coming days.' Pip was introduced by the coalition government in 2013 and is designed to help working-age people 16 and over with the extra costs of living with a health condition or a disability. It is available in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. The prime minister's chief of staff, Morgan McSweeney, has been having one-on-one talks with senior rebels in recent days, but Labour whips admitted privately they were having no success convincing MPs to withdraw their names from an amendment that would in effect kill the welfare bill. Attempts to persuade dissenting MPs to remove their names from the amendment – tabled by the Treasury select committee chair, Dame Meg Hillier – have so far proved futile. New signatories overnight included the Commons environmental audit select committee chair, Toby Perkins, the Stoke-on-Trent Central MP, Gareth Snell, the Newcastle upon Tyne MP Mary Glindon and the Tamworth MP Sarah Edwards. Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion The North Ayrshire and Arran MP, Irene Campbell, and the Colchester MP, Pam Cox, have also added their names, bringing the total number of Labour backbenchers supporting the amendment to 126. The prime minister appeared to bat away the threat of a major rebellion on Wednesday, when responding to a question about whether he had the political skill to lead Britain, while taking questions at the Nato summit in The Hague. 'Is it tough going? Are there plenty of noises off? There always are, there always have been, there always will be,' Starmer said. 'I'm comfortable with reading the room and delivering the change the country needs.' He insisted his party remained 'pretty united' behind the need for change. The government had argued its changes were necessary 'to confront the broken welfare system … which is no longer a safety net for those that need support', noting that one in 10 working-age people in Britain now claimed at least one type of health or disability benefit, while the number of people claiming health related benefits with no requirement to work had increased by 45% since 2019-20. Analysis by the Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) thinktank predicted that 800,000 fewer working-age people would receive a Pip daily living award in 2029-30 if the changes went ahead. Even if fully implemented, official forecasts have still suggested the number of working-age claimants of Pip or its predecessor in England and Wales would rise from 3.1 million in 2024-25 to 3.9 million in 2029-30.


Evening Standard
36 minutes ago
- Evening Standard
Starmer seeks to quell revolt to speed through welfare reforms
A No 10 source said: 'Delivering fundamental change is not easy, and we all want to get it right, so of course we're talking to colleagues about the Bill and the changes it will bring, we want to start delivering this together on Tuesday.'