logo
EXCLUSIVE 'Why would I get a job? I get your monthly wage in a week!' As Starmer's bid to cut disability benefits is sunk by Labour MPs, social media tutorials show claimants how to milk the system - and you'll be the one left feeling sick

EXCLUSIVE 'Why would I get a job? I get your monthly wage in a week!' As Starmer's bid to cut disability benefits is sunk by Labour MPs, social media tutorials show claimants how to milk the system - and you'll be the one left feeling sick

Daily Mail​12 hours ago
As anyone who has had the misfortune of dealing with civil service bureaucracy will know, it can be a complicated endeavour. There is the jargon, the minutes that bleed into hours spent on hold on the phone and, of course, the endless form-filling.
But mastering this red tape – particularly in relation to Britain's bloated benefits system – can apparently also present extraordinarily lucrative business opportunities.
Just ask Charlie Anderson, a YouTube blogger who says her chronic arthritis and fatigue has rendered her unable to work.
Thanks to her lengthy experience with the welfare system, she is extremely proficient at filling out forms used to claim the Personal Independence Payment [PIP] allowance disability benefit.
So adept has she become in applying for this taxpayer-funded help that she has taken to explaining the 'tricks of the trade' to any prospective benefits claimant – for a hefty fee, of course.
For £750, Ms Anderson will provide a three-hour online consultation in which she will discuss the best way to fill out a PIP claim form. If she can work her magic, the pricey up-front outlay will quickly be repaid by the taxpayer.
She also offers a premium service to people whose initial PIP claim was turned down. Her £950 fee includes a four-hour, one-to-one video call during which Ms Anderson will talk them through their 'mandatory reconsideration' – civil service-speak for a free appeal.
All from the comfort of her shed-turned-office at the bottom of her garden in Bucknall, Staffordshire.
Charlie Anderson, a YouTube blogger who says her chronic arthritis and fatigue has rendered her unable to work, charges disability benefit applicants large fees for help explaining the 'tricks of the trade'
Remarkably, Ms Anderson – whose YouTube tutorials and emotional diatribes against the state of Britain's benefits system have attracted almost four million views – claims that she has a '100 per cent success rate at winning PIP' and has 'helped over 150 people receive their PIP claims'.
A video with more than 200,000 views starts with a bouncy, 'Hi, my name is Charlie and I'm really good at PIP'. She then describes the 'trickery' used by the Government's assessors. If asked whether you can go to the shops or hospital unaided, don't say yes, she warns, or you won't be awarded benefits.
Despite the fact that her tutorials have attracted criticism from various quarters, business is apparently booming – with Ms Anderson even seemingly 'employing' two people to assist her in administering her customer base.
The 46-year-old is far from the only online influencer – or 'sickfluencer' – exploiting a lucrative market in helping claimants navigate the welfare system's complexities.
Take Whitney Ainscough, who boasts 750,000 followers across TikTok and Instagram. The Range Rover-driving 31-year-old mother from Rotherham, South Yorkshire, says her lifestyle is funded by benefits, claiming in one video posted in May that she receives £1,151.90 a week.
'Why would I get a job?' she said. 'I get your monthly wage in a week. Why would I go out and get a job? I'm living my f***ing best life.'
In another video from earlier this year she advised her followers to withdraw their PIP money in cash so nobody would be able to track what it was being spent on.
It is this sort of abuse of the system that the Government sought to address with its £5billion cuts to the ballooning welfare budget announced earlier this year.
But ministers were this week forced into a humiliating climbdown following a rebellion by Labour MPs. Now there will be no reform of PIP rules until the Government has had time to consider a review of current procedures.
One anonymous Labour MP said the series of U-turns on the bill had turned it into 'a total clusterf**k of Godzilla proportions'.
Mel Stride, the shadow chancellor, said: 'This farcical climbdown is the most humiliating moment of Labour's first year in office.'
But it's not hard to see why the Government targeted disability benefits for cuts. Around one in ten working-age adults – some four million people – are claiming either disability or incapacity benefit, up from less than three million six years ago. This means taxpayers are footing a bill of £70billion a year for such claimants – up £20billion since the pandemic.
One of the key factors behind this surge is the number of people reporting mental health conditions such as anxiety or depression as what makes them eligible for PIP.
Earlier this year, Health Secretary Wes Streeting said there was an 'overdiagnosis' of mental health conditions, contributing to 1,000 new PIP claimants every day. Even those suffering from conditions such as acne, alcoholism and Tourette syndrome (a neurological condition that causes involuntary, repetitive movements and sounds) are receiving welfare payments.
The Mail can reveal that last year alone, more than £2billion was paid out in benefits to claimants suffering from mixed anxiety and depressive disorders – an average of around £6,600 per claimant.
The figures compiled by the Taxpayers' Alliance also reveal £291million was spent on almost 47,000 claimants who cited anxiety disorders as their main condition and more than £26million was paid out to help people with obesity.
Another £60million went to 9,000 people claiming to have Obsessive Compulsive Disorder (OCD). This absurd liberalisation of the system has not gone unnoticed by bloggers such as Chantelle Knight.
The Southampton-based 43-year-old has told her TikTok followers that sufferers of conditions such as ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) don't need an official medical diagnosis to get benefits but just to show how the condition affects their everyday life – advice echoed by Charlie Anderson. In another TikTok video, Ms Knight said: 'I have a client with ADHD who is undiagnosed. And I've just secured him an award of high rate daily living allowance and low rate mobility [payments made on the basis of how serious the client's perceived disability is].
'He doesn't have a diagnosis. And it just goes to show you can have an abundance of diagnoses and no evidence and not get an award. Equally you can have an abundance of evidence and no diagnosis and get the award.'
Last month, the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) ruled that Ms Knight had breached advertising rules for 'potentially harmful' promotions of a saffron-based food supplement via her website neurodiverselife.co.uk and 'irresponsibly discouraged' people from taking medically-prescribed treatments for ADHD. Last night, her website appeared to have been closed.
It would seem that one of the main contributory factors to this trend is the fact that many PIP claimants are no longer obliged to attend a face-to-face assessment.
The switch to assessments carried out over the phone started in the pandemic when lockdowns made in-person ones impossible. Outsourcing firm Maximus, which conducts PIP assessments on behalf of the Government in the north of England and Scotland, says on its website that some assessments can even be completed solely based on the information provided in the initial form.
It then says that 'if there is not enough information to complete the assessment, you will be invited to attend a consultation'.
'Most consultations are carried out by telephone,' it adds, 'but we may invite you to a video or face-to-face consultation if needed.'
Critics say the use of telephone assessments makes it easier for claimants to exaggerate their symptoms because the assessor is not in a position to scrutinise their condition properly.
In December, former assessor Michael Houston told a Channel 4 Dispatches documentary that 'people were encouraged to do six cases a day' and that they received cash incentives to process more.
'If you did any more than that, you would get £80 per case,' he added. 'If the claimant met the highest category [of sickness benefit] then the assessment could be curtailed early. This would allow them to fit in more cases per day.'
As the phone interviews are not recorded, leaving no way of checking if guidelines are being applied properly, the system is vulnerable to abuse. Former Spectator editor Fraser Nelson, who made the Dispatches documentary, recently argued that returning to face-to-face interviews is vital if the welfare budget is to be brought under control. He said: 'Record and spot-check all claims, not just rejected ones. Publish all sickness benefit data, daily. How many applied and were approved? How many bonuses were paid? Such transparency could be transformative. A Covid-style live data dashboard would focus minds more than any ministerial edict.'
But to understand why the welfare reforms provoked such outrage, it's worth looking at what the Government initially wanted to do.
PIP is not means-tested and does not affect other benefits or the benefits cap. It can even be claimed if you are working. It includes a daily living component and a mobility component. To be entitled to the daily living part, claimants need to explain how much difficulty they have performing everyday activities, including tasks such as cooking, washing and getting dressed or undressed.
A points system is used where, for example, requiring supervision or assistance to prepare or cook a simple meal would be awarded four points. Being completely unable to prepare and cook food would warrant eight points. Under the Government's initial proposals, claimants would have needed to score a minimum of four points on at least one activity to be eligible for that component – rather than a range of different ones. But scrapping the change was one of the Government's concessions to the rebels on Tuesday.
People claiming daily living payments can receive the standard weekly rate of £73.90 or an enhanced one of £110.40, depending on their level of difficulty performing the relevant tasks.
The mobility part comprises a standard rate of £29.20 per week or an enhanced rate of £77.05 per week. Those who qualify for the higher rate can also choose to exchange this for a car under the Motability scheme.
This arrangement came under fire after it emerged it accounts for one in five new cars sold in Britain and, in March, the Mail revealed that the company behind the scheme is sitting on a £4billion stockpile of reserves – including £1.3billion in cash in the bank.
So many people are now entitled to disability benefits that, in some parts of the country, an astonishing one in five people are in receipt of handouts.
In the Welsh county of Blaenau Gwent, 211 out of every 1,000 people are claiming PIP – the highest proportion in the country.
In Sunderland, the figure stands at 173 per 1,000 people and, in this PIP hotspot on Thursday afternoon, sisters Maureen and Mary Robey and their friend Olga Koch were enjoying the sunshine in the city centre. All three have been claiming PIP for a number of years.
Maureen, 71, said she was finally granted the £600-a-month benefit following a phone consultation.
'It wasn't as easy as it could have been to claim PIP,' she said. 'I wasn't expecting to have to answer questions over the phone. I had been told that filling out a form would be all I needed to do. But I filled out a long form and my doctor's notes were sent over to back up my claim. I expected the money to be sent to my account quickly after.
'They rang me and asked questions about my COPD [Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease], which I didn't think was necessary.
'All three of us have been on it for years and it's helped to make our lives easier, so this uncertainty about it being reformed has caused some concern.'
Mary, 72, said she has anxiety and depression but her PIP claim was initially rejected. 'I turned to Age Concern for help and they filled out my forms for me,' she said. 'It was only after their involvement that I got the help I needed.'
Under PIP terms, new claims cannot be made after reaching state pension age. But if you already get PIP and hit pension age, your payments continue.
Former soldier John Heskett, 73, said he believed there were a number of people in the city fooling the system: 'There are a lot of kidders out there who are claiming PIP when there's not a thing wrong with them.
'I know of people in this town who are claiming and they're fitter than me. I have problems with my legs and I know I would qualify but I don't ask for help when I don't feel I need it.
'Everyone should be tested properly because people are working the system.'
Back online, Charlie Anderson, as part of her £750 online tutorial, says she will analyse answers to ensure 'what we write matches your life AND is communicated in a way that suits the DWP [Department for Work and Pensions] so they can assess you.'
Ms Anderson, with more than 52,000 YouTube subscribers, then says she can send answers back so the claimant can 'copy what we wrote straight on to your form'.
She adds: 'By the end of the meeting, you will feel much better and you will probably have the best nap you have had in years!'
Last night, a spokesman for the Department for Work and Pensions hit out at those trying to cash in on the benefits boom.
'We condemn attempts to charge people for support with their PIP applications, and strongly encourage customers to seek additional support through free channels, such as, the gov.uk website, our dedicated helpline, and relevant charities,' he said.
'And we are bringing forward the biggest fraud crackdown in a generation as part of wider plans that will save £9.6billion by 2030 – protecting taxpayers' money and investing in our public services through our Plan for Change.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

The leadership rumours inside Labour that speak volumes about Starmer's future
The leadership rumours inside Labour that speak volumes about Starmer's future

The Independent

time21 minutes ago

  • The Independent

The leadership rumours inside Labour that speak volumes about Starmer's future

The images of Rachel Reeves crying on the frontbenches during PMQs on Wednesday – just hours after the government was forced into a humiliating £5bn climbdown on welfare – were stark. It looked like Sir Keir Starmer's top team was on the brink of falling apart. But the following day, the prime minister came out fighting, insisting his chancellor – who also looked notably more cheery – was here to stay. A minister in tears would make news any day of the year. But on a day when questions over the prime minister's leadership were already splashed across the papers, just days before he was due to mark one year in office, the image was even more jarring for Labour – and only served to add fuel to growing questions about whether or not he is the right person for the job. For weeks now, there have been whisperings of a possible leadership bid by Angela Rayner. The housing secretary's repeated attempts to shut down the rumours – saying she has no desire to hold the top job – have done little to dampen speculation. The rumours speak volumes about the level of disaffection within the party over Sir Keir's leadership and the direction of government. Labour won a thumping majority at last year's general election. They had a clear mandate to deliver their so-called 'plan for change' and there was a real sense of optimism. But just one year on, that optimism is well and truly gone. After repeated attempts to reset the narrative, the prime minister's authority has been damaged, while brutal polling shows that voters have turned away. And this week's humiliating welfare debacle, which saw the PM gut his reforms entirely only to still be faced with the largest rebellion of his premiership so far – has only added to his mounting woes. Behind the scenes, there is now more wrangling than ever over where Labour goes next. If Tuesday's welfare vote proved anything, it's that Labour MPs are far more left-wing than their party's leader. Starmer has been attempting to pull the party to the right both to try to combat the threat posed by Reform, but also to deliver a government that meets the expectations of the British public. But as a result of failings in Downing Street, and obfuscations from his own MPs, it hasn't worked. There are now growing calls for a reset in No 10. The problem, however, is that this isn't the first time the prime minister has attempted to do so. We've seen repeated attempts to draw a line under previous mistakes and fumbles from the government, but no real change in direction. Despite Starmer's insistence that his chancellor is here to stay, there is a growing feeling that without a reshuffle, the PM will be unable to truly draw a line under the past year. If he can accompany that with both a clear plan to plug gaps in the public finances after several U-turns – including Tuesday's welfare chaos and previous rowbacks on winter fuel payments – alongside a genuine strategy to bring down immigration, he may be able to turn his fortunes around. But if that fails, and Starmer is unable to use a reshuffle to save some of his own authority, there is a small but growing chance the prime minister will be booted out before the next election. Championed by the so-called 'soft left', there is now a developing feeling within Labour that if the party, led by Rayner, provided a true left-wing offering (and did it well), that could be a far more effective counter to the divisive politics of Reform UK than Starmer's pragmatism. Especially given Nigel Farage's proposals to lift the two child benefit cap and restore winter fuel payments to all seem to have gone down remarkably well with the British public. But sitting to the right of Rayner is Wes Streeting – also seen as a strong contender to succeed the PM. He's well-liked by the party, as of last month being the third most popular Labour politician among party members – behind Rayner and Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham, who is not currently a Labour MP. He's so far proven himself a safe pair of hands when it comes to the health service, and has led one of the few departments that seems to be somewhat successfully implementing the change they promised. While allies of both Streeting and Rayner are attempting to shut down fevered speculation over possible leadership bids, a number of party insiders see the local elections in May next year as the deadline for when a decision would need to be made on the party's future. But there is an important health warning that needs to accompany any talk of replacing Starmer. He won a massive majority. The Tory years, which saw Britain run by three different prime ministers in two months, shouldn't fool anyone into thinking replacing him will be an easy task. The only official way to remove an incumbent leader of the party is for 20 per cent of Labour MPs to nominate a willing candidate to stand against the leader, triggering a leadership contest. With Labour's current majority, that would require at least 80 MPs to get behind a single candidate – no easy task. Therefore, the chance of Starmer being replaced is, at present, small. But the clock is ticking. Voters are currently unconvinced that Labour is anything different from the '14 years of Tory failure' that Starmer so often talks about. Every day that this sentiment is allowed to fester, the likelihood of a coup increases.

Angela Hartnett: ‘A full English? It's a lot. I don't know how some people manage it every day'
Angela Hartnett: ‘A full English? It's a lot. I don't know how some people manage it every day'

Telegraph

time33 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Angela Hartnett: ‘A full English? It's a lot. I don't know how some people manage it every day'

'The Italians don't really do breakfast,' laughs Angela Hartnett. 'You maybe have a tiny little biscotti or a cappuccino and that's it. It's certainly not cooked. But we're in London, we're in Marylebone, so we're going to do a little twist on an Italian cooked breakfast.' Marylebone is home to the fourth of Hartnett's Cafe Muranos, the more relaxed cousins of her Michelin-starred restaurant Murano in Mayfair. In Marylebone, as at the branch in Bermondsey, south-east London, residents crave brunch, especially at the weekend. A restaurateur as accomplished as Hartnett, who draws upon her Italian heritage for her menus, is not going to miss the chance to give it to them. 'It's the kind of place where people might come in at 10am, and I didn't want to just do a croissant and a Danish,' she says. 'We've become Americanised: people want to eat brunch on a Saturday morning.' Among the breakfast dishes she has chosen to serve there are a frittata with courgette and feta, and a ciabatta bulging with mozzarella and mortadella. There is even, borrowing somewhat contentiously from the Austrian borderlands, a strudel. What there is not, is anything like a full English. 'I can't remember the last time I had one. It's a lot. I don't know how some people manage it every day. I probably do one every six months, if I've been out the night before!' Hartnett is hardly the first chef to dream of a busy breakfast service, but it is easier said than done. For every restaurant – such as The Wolseley or Hide in the capital – that manages to establish itself as a morning destination, there are countless others that fail. 'The mistake everyone makes is they start it, it's quiet, and they give up,' she says. 'They let things slide. They don't staff it properly, they reduce the menu, so people don't come back. You've got to stick at it for at least a year and build up the trade.' It is encouraging that Hartnett continues to expand at a time when most of the music from British restaurants is rather gloomy. 'It's not easy, but our business has never been easy,' she says. 'You've always had to work at it. You have to keep thinking about how to improve it and never stand still. But it is hard. After what the Labour government just did to us [with national insurance increases], we had to find another half a million a year just to make it work, which is nuts. There are places that will close. We're not out of the woods. 'The governments see it as survival of the fittest; I don't think they're fussed. Which is a shame. Because hospitality [businesses] – pubs more than anything – give people a lifeline in the community.' Still, Hartnett, 56, has never shied from a bit of graft. She fought her way to the top, working with Marcus Wareing and Gordon Ramsay, rather than being whooshed there at 25. As well as running the restaurants, she has hosted seven series of a podcast for Waitrose, Dish, with radio presenter Nick Grimshaw, on which they have interviewed everyone from Florence Pugh to Richard E Grant. She concedes her profile 'does make a difference' to business – the podcast has drawn a younger crowd to Murano – but says it does not 'make or break' a restaurant. After all the telly (she's frequently on Great British Menu and Saturday Kitchen), three cookbooks, the OBE (for services to the hospitality industry, and to the NHS during the pandemic) and countless awards for her cooking, she has an agreeably robust perspective. 'I can't be bothered to sit and moan about how tough [the industry] is. And you can't blame the Government for everything,' she says. 'There are places that are packed. We just need to make sure we are those places.' And it starts with an Italian-ish kind of brunch.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store