logo
DWP shares what will happen to PIP claimants who lose their benefits to cuts

DWP shares what will happen to PIP claimants who lose their benefits to cuts

Independent4 hours ago

Labour has published its landmark welfare bill, laying bare the full extent of the plans to cut welfare for millions of disabled benefit claimants ahead of a crunch vote next month.
Titled the 'Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill,' the legislation lays out exactly what will happen to Personal Independence Payment (PIP) claimants who lose their entitlement under the new measures.
Currently claimed by 3.7 million people, PIP is designed to help with extra costs incurred by living with an illness or disability.
The changes, first announced by DWP secretary Liz Kendall in March, will see the 'daily living' element of the benefit effectively become harder to claim as the eligibility criteria is tightened.
As before, assessors will decide if an applicant has limited ability to carry out daily living activities. They do this by asking applicants to carry out a range of activities, awarding them points based on how limited their ability is.
The applicant will be awarded points based on how limited their ability is for each, needing eight overall to secure this element of the benefit at the basic rate, and twelve for the higher.
But from November 2026, they will need to score at least four points in a single daily living activity to be awarded this element of the benefit. The eight required points can no longer be spread across activities.
Around 1.5 million people who currently claim the benefit would no longer be eligible under this criteria, analysis by the Office for Budget Responsibility shows. The watchdog adds that the 'behavioural response' could reduce this to around 800,000 people, but acknowledges that this is a 'highly uncertain judgement'.
The changes have received strong backlash from charities and campaign groups, as over 100 Labour MPs are understood to be considering voting against the government on the plans.
What happens if I lose my PIP entitlement?
Crucially, anyone already claiming PIP will not see their entitlement reduced without attending a reassessment. These happen every three years on average.
Once invited for a reassessment – for which attendance is compulsory – applicants will be assessed as before. However, the new points-scoring system will now apply.
If the reassessment results in someone losing their entitlement to the daily living element of PIP as a direct result of Labour's changes, it will not stop being paid at that rate immediately.
Instead, payments will continue at that level for 13 weeks as a 'transitional cover.' This will cease to be paid if the recipient moves abroad or is reassessed and becomes entitled again.
After these 13 weeks, payments for the daily living part of the benefit will cease.
This protection will include those who lose their eligibility for Carers Allowance and the carer's element of Universal Credit.
The DWP said: 'The 13-week additional protection will give people who will be affected by the changes time to adapt, access new, tailored employment support, and plan for their future once they are reassessed and their entitlement ends.
A release from the department adds that this protection is 'one of the most generous ever.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

EXCLUSIVE Revealed: How 'pregnant people' ended up in Martine Croxall's autocue - as BBC bosses back newsreader for correcting wording to 'women' live on air
EXCLUSIVE Revealed: How 'pregnant people' ended up in Martine Croxall's autocue - as BBC bosses back newsreader for correcting wording to 'women' live on air

Daily Mail​

time28 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Revealed: How 'pregnant people' ended up in Martine Croxall's autocue - as BBC bosses back newsreader for correcting wording to 'women' live on air

The BBC today backed a star presenter forced to correct the phrase 'pregnant people' to 'women' on her autocue while broadcasting live - and ruled out the need for any investigation, MailOnline can reveal. There were concerns amongst colleagues that Martine Croxall could be disciplined after Justin Webb was told he partially breached BBC guidelines for describing trans women as 'males' during a Radio 4 debate. But Martine's bosses are said to have been 'intensely relaxed' after her intervention and have also decided there is no need for a probe into how the phrase 'pregnant people' ended up in her script. They have already concluded it was an innocent mistake - rather than act of defiance on behalf of the trans community following the Supreme Court's ruling in April. MailOnline can reveal that Ms Croxall couldn't hide her 'shock and frustration' when she was forced to change an autocue line from 'pregnant people' to 'women' live on air. 'Most people didn't need a Supreme Court ruling to tell them what a woman is – but based on what happened to Martine Croxall, it seems someone at the BBC might', a senior figure at the corporation has claimed. Martine Croxall's message for supporters after after she was praised for rejecting woke gender-neutral language live on air The BBC is blaming a press release on heat waves from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine for the blunder. It quoted an academic who used the phrase 'pregnant people' instead of women and this was pasted into Martine's autocue script by another BBC journalist - but Ms Croxall spotted it mid-broadcast. The presenter has the full support of her bosses for her on-air heroics. 'Martine is not in any trouble. She has the full backing of the BBC because she got it right', MailOnline's insider said. 'She was stating a fact and correcting a mistake'. The source said that Ms Croxall, 56, and other presenters will often change words on the autocue without viewers noticing. 'But this time I think she couldn't hide she was shocked and frustrated by the mistake'. Martine has won a legion of new fans, including JK Rowling. The broadcaster's Twitter followers have jumped from 56,000 to 127,000 – and doubled in the first 24 hours after she changed her BBC script. JK Rowling had been in direct contact with Martine to ask is she was 'in trouble' over the incident. 'She has not had a single negative comment from her colleagues and the overwhelming response from the public has been positive', the BBC source said. In February last year Today programme presenter Justin Webb was found to have broken BBC impartiality rules after he said 'trans women, in other words males' on air. Mr Webb's comment was found to have fallen foul of guidelines because he 'gave the impression of endorsing one viewpoint in a highly controversial area', the corporation said. He made the remark during a discussion about new International Chess Federation (FIDE) guidelines, which had looked at whether being biologically male held an advantage in the game. But a listener complained that during the interview in August 2023, with Dominic Lawson, the Today presenter had given 'his personal view' on a 'controversial matter'. But following the Supreme Court's ruling this year - it appears that the BBC has shifted its position. Martine has supported women on TV before - and behind the scenes also stood up with female colleagues in their fight for equal pay at the corporation. Famously she also got tough with a transgender wannabe politician who said she felt attacked when Ms Croxall questioned her claim that the Supreme Court's April ruling that trans women are legally male and trans men are legally female might need further 'clarification'. There have also been lighter moments, including when she winked and joked that she was a 'beautiful creature' and also the times she was wasn't in her seat as cameras began rolling. She also appeared tearful when she announced the death of Prince Philip in 2021. Heather Herbert, a trans campaigner and former Labour MSP candidate, provoked a furious response from Croxall after declaring: 'I feel like I'm under attack' when they discussed the Supreme Court's ruling on gender In April the broadcaster was praised when she challenged a transgender activist who claimed the Supreme Court 's ruling that the definition of a woman is based on biological sex may still need 'clarification'. The BBC veteran firmly told ex-Labour MSP candidate Heather Herbert that the landmark ruling made it clear 'sex is binary and immutable'. Leicestershire-born Ms Croxall repeatedly challenged Herbert after she called for further 'clarification' on single sex spaces, at one point reminding her: 'The ruling is that woman means biological sex.' She spearheaded a legal case against the BBC over pay, with the corporation settling the case in March. Martine, Karin Giannone, Kasia Madera and Annita McVeigh launched an employment tribunal against the BBC in a bombshell case, which included the claim they had not been paid equally compared with their male counterparts. All four claimed they lost their roles on the BBC News Channel following a 'rigged' recruitment exercise when it was merged with BBC World. The case was settled by the BBC in the spring of this year. The row meant the women were all off for 12 months, which Martine chronicled on social media. Instead of being in the studio she enjoyed trips to Mexico, Bulgaria and Thailand. During her time off, she went swimming with whale sharks and sea lions in the Gulf of California, zipwired over a canyon in Mexico and fed elephants at a sanctuary in Phuket. That's on top of taking a hot balloon over the pyramids in Mexico and venturing on two ski trips, including one where she was seen relaxing in a massive hot tub after spending a day on the slopes. Croxall joined the corporation in 1991 following work experience with her local station, BBC Radio Leicester. She grew up in the countryside, attending an independent school before graduating from the University of Leeds. In 2022, she was briefly taken off air after breaking the corporation's impartiality rules. She also winked on an occasion and joked she was a 'beautiful creature' on a feature about sealife The blunder happened on October 23 after Boris Johnson ran out of the leadership contest that Rishi Sunak went on to win. During the Sunday night edition of The Papers, where press members discuss the main stories of the day, she said in the wake of Johnson's departure: 'Well this is all very exciting, isn't it? Am I allowed to be this gleeful? Well I am.' Later in the show she also admitted that she was 'probably breaking' some of the BBC's impartiality rules when she laughed at Tony Grew's mocking of Johnson. The corporation later ruled that Croxall had made 'several remarks and reactions' that caused 'significant risk' that the audience could believe 'opinions were being expressed' on the Conservative leadership race. She returned to air after 11 days off. Following the death of Prince Philip, Ms Croxall was close to tears as she interrupted the broadcast to break the news to the country. Now she is in the headlines again after standing up for women. The clip from a recent BBC News episode saw Ms Croxall introduce new research on the number of heat-related deaths expected amid Britain's current heatwave. But as the autocue prompted her to warn 'pregnant people' to take care in the heat, she first read the term out before overriding it, with a smirk and eyebrow raise. She said: 'Malcolm Mistry, who was involved in the research, said the aged, pregnant people - women! - and those with pre-existing health conditions need to take precautions.' Ms Rowling reposted the clip on X, captioning it: 'I have a new favourite BBC presenter.' It is understood the phrase 'pregnant people' was the term used in the research the presenter was reporting on, rather than the BBC having written it. Ms Croxall herself soon responded to a commenter who had praised her move as 'brilliant' by saying: 'I hope you don't get hauled before the BBC News beak.' The broadcaster simply replied: 'Braced x.' The original clip was first reposted to X by campaign group SEEN In Journalism, which says it 'seeks to restore accuracy and impartiality to media coverage of sex and gender'.

EXCLUSIVE Revealed: How 'pregnant people' ended up in Martine Croxhall's autocue - as BBC bosses back newsreader for correcting wording to 'women' live on air
EXCLUSIVE Revealed: How 'pregnant people' ended up in Martine Croxhall's autocue - as BBC bosses back newsreader for correcting wording to 'women' live on air

Daily Mail​

time36 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

EXCLUSIVE Revealed: How 'pregnant people' ended up in Martine Croxhall's autocue - as BBC bosses back newsreader for correcting wording to 'women' live on air

The BBC today backed a star presenter forced to correct the phrase 'pregnant people' to 'women' on her autocue while broadcasting live - and ruled out the need for any investigation, MailOnline can reveal. There were concerns amongst colleagues that Martine Croxall could be disciplined after Justin Webb was told he partially breached BBC guidelines for describing trans women as 'males' during a Radio 4 debate. But Martine's bosses are said to have been 'intensely relaxed' after her intervention and have also decided there is no need for a probe into how the phrase 'pregnant people' ended up in her script. They have already concluded it was an innocent mistake - rather than act of defiance on behalf of the trans community following the Supreme Court's ruling in April. MailOnline can reveal that Ms Croxall couldn't hide her 'shock and frustration' when she was forced to change an autocue line from 'pregnant people' to 'women' live on air. 'Most people didn't need a Supreme Court ruling to tell them what a woman is – but based on what happened to Martine Croxall, it seems someone at the BBC might', a senior figure at the corporation has claimed. Martine Croxall's message for supporters after after she was praised for rejecting woke gender-neutral language live on air The BBC is blaming a press release on heat waves from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine for the blunder. It quoted an academic who used the phrase 'pregnant people' instead of women and this was pasted into Martine's autocue script by another BBC journalist - but Ms Croxall spotted it mid-broadcast. The presenter has the full support of her bosses for her on-air heroics. 'Martine is not in any trouble. She has the full backing of the BBC because she got it right', MailOnline's insider said. 'She was stating a fact and correcting a mistake'. The source said that Ms Croxall, 56, and other presenters will often change words on the autocue without viewers noticing. 'But this time I think she couldn't hide she was shocked and frustrated by the mistake'. Martine has won a legion of new fans, including JK Rowling. The broadcaster's Twitter followers have jumped from 56,000 to 127,000 – and doubled in the first 24 hours after she changed her BBC script. JK Rowling had been in direct contact with Martine to ask is she was 'in trouble' over the incident. 'She has not had a single negative comment from her colleagues and the overwhelming response from the public has been positive', the BBC source said. In February last year Today programme presenter Justin Webb was found to have broken BBC impartiality rules after he said 'trans women, in other words males' on air. Mr Webb's comment was found to have fallen foul of guidelines because he 'gave the impression of endorsing one viewpoint in a highly controversial area', the corporation said. He made the remark during a discussion about new International Chess Federation (FIDE) guidelines, which had looked at whether being biologically male held an advantage in the game. But a listener complained that during the interview in August 2023, with Dominic Lawson, the Today presenter had given 'his personal view' on a 'controversial matter'. But following the Supreme Court's ruling this year - it appears that the BBC has shifted its position. Martine has supported women on TV before - and behind the scenes also stood up with female colleagues in their fight for equal pay at the corporation. Famously she also got tough with a transgender wannabe politician who said she felt attacked when Ms Croxall questioned her claim that the Supreme Court's April ruling that trans women are legally male and trans men are legally female might need further 'clarification'. There have also been lighter moments, including when she winked and joked that she was a 'beautiful creature' and also the times she was wasn't in her seat as cameras began rolling. She also appeared tearful when she announced the death of Prince Philip in 2021. Heather Herbert, a trans campaigner and former Labour MSP candidate, provoked a furious response from Croxall after declaring: 'I feel like I'm under attack' when they discussed the Supreme Court's ruling on gender In April the broadcaster was praised when she challenged a transgender activist who claimed the Supreme Court 's ruling that the definition of a woman is based on biological sex may still need 'clarification'. The BBC veteran firmly told ex-Labour MSP candidate Heather Herbert that the landmark ruling made it clear 'sex is binary and immutable'. Leicestershire-born Ms Croxall repeatedly challenged Herbert after she called for further 'clarification' on single sex spaces, at one point reminding her: 'The ruling is that woman means biological sex.' She spearheaded a legal case against the BBC over pay, with the corporation settling the case in March. Martine, Karin Giannone, Kasia Madera and Annita McVeigh launched an employment tribunal against the BBC in a bombshell case, which included the claim they had not been paid equally compared with their male counterparts. All four claimed they lost their roles on the BBC News Channel following a 'rigged' recruitment exercise when it was merged with BBC World. The case was settled by the BBC in the spring of this year. The row meant the women were all off for 12 months, which Martine chronicled on social media. Instead of being in the studio she enjoyed trips to Mexico, Bulgaria and Thailand. During her time off, she went swimming with whale sharks and sea lions in the Gulf of California, zipwired over a canyon in Mexico and fed elephants at a sanctuary in Phuket. That's on top of taking a hot balloon over the pyramids in Mexico and venturing on two ski trips, including one where she was seen relaxing in a massive hot tub after spending a day on the slopes. Croxall joined the corporation in 1991 following work experience with her local station, BBC Radio Leicester. She grew up in the countryside, attending an independent school before graduating from the University of Leeds. In 2022, she was briefly taken off air after breaking the corporation's impartiality rules. She also winked on an occasion and joked she was a 'beautiful creature' on a feature about sealife The blunder happened on October 23 after Boris Johnson ran out of the leadership contest that Rishi Sunak went on to win. During the Sunday night edition of The Papers, where press members discuss the main stories of the day, she said in the wake of Johnson's departure: 'Well this is all very exciting, isn't it? Am I allowed to be this gleeful? Well I am.' Later in the show she also admitted that she was 'probably breaking' some of the BBC's impartiality rules when she laughed at Tony Grew's mocking of Johnson. The corporation later ruled that Croxall had made 'several remarks and reactions' that caused 'significant risk' that the audience could believe 'opinions were being expressed' on the Conservative leadership race. She returned to air after 11 days off. Following the death of Prince Philip, Ms Croxall was close to tears as she interrupted the broadcast to break the news to the country. Now she is in the headlines again after standing up for women. The clip from a recent BBC News episode saw Ms Croxall introduce new research on the number of heat-related deaths expected amid Britain's current heatwave. But as the autocue prompted her to warn 'pregnant people' to take care in the heat, she first read the term out before overriding it, with a smirk and eyebrow raise. She said: 'Malcolm Mistry, who was involved in the research, said the aged, pregnant people - women! - and those with pre-existing health conditions need to take precautions.' Ms Rowling reposted the clip on X, captioning it: 'I have a new favourite BBC presenter.' It is understood the phrase 'pregnant people' was the term used in the research the presenter was reporting on, rather than the BBC having written it. Ms Croxall herself soon responded to a commenter who had praised her move as 'brilliant' by saying: 'I hope you don't get hauled before the BBC News beak.' The broadcaster simply replied: 'Braced x.' The original clip was first reposted to X by campaign group SEEN In Journalism, which says it 'seeks to restore accuracy and impartiality to media coverage of sex and gender'.

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