108 Labour rebels have signed an amendment to the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill which, if it secured a majority, would kill the bill.

The amendment was published on the Parliament website this morning.  It declines to give a second reading to the PIP cuts bill, giving a devastating set of reasons for this, including:

  • its provisions have not been subject to a formal consultation with disabled people, or co-produced with them, or their carers;
  • because the Office for Budget Responsibility is not due to publish its analysis of the employment impact of these reforms until the autumn of 2025;
  • because the majority of the additional employment support funding will not be in place until the end of the decade;
  • because the Government’s own impact assessment estimates that 250,000 people will be pushed into poverty as a result of these provisions, including 50,000 children;
  • because the Government has not published an assessment of the impact of these reforms on health or care needs.

The amendment is signed by at least 11 Commons committee chairs, including:

  • Dame Meg Hillier. Treasury select committee
  • Debbie Abrahams. Work and Pensions select committee
  • Helen Hayes. Education select committee
  • Sarah Owen. Women and Equalities select committee
  • Florence Eshalomi. Housing, Communities and Local Government committee
  • Paulette Hamilton. Health and Social Care select committee
  • Mr Tanmanjeet Singh Dhesi. Defence select committee
  • Cat Smith Procedure committee
  • Ruth Cadbury. Transport select committee
  • Patricia Ferguson. Scottish Affairs committee
  • Ruth Jones. Welsh Affairs select committee

The amendment would need to be selected by the Speaker in order for it to be voted on.  If it was passed it would mean no vote would take place on the bill itself and it could not proceed further.

But, even if it is not selected, it gives a clear indication of the minimum number of Labour MPs considering voting against the government bill.  A minimum of 83 Labour MPs would need to vote against the bill for it to fail, but only if every opposition MP joined them.

However, according to the BBC, the Conservatives have now indicated that they are yet to decide whether to support the bill, with Kemi Badenoch saying she did not want to alert Labour to her plans before the bill was voted on.

This raises the possibility that the Labour leadership could get the bill through by relying on Conservative votes.  Whether ministers would be prepared to risk the fracturing of the party such a move would cause is another matter.  

There has not yet been any reaction to the amendment from the Labour leadership, but this is unquestionably a massive blow to their plans to cut benefits and suggests that their attempts to bully MPs to vote for the Green Paper reforms have backfired spectacularly.  With so many committee chairs signing the amendment, and the probability that non-cabinet ministers are waiting in the wings to resign if necessary, disciplining the rebels seems to be out of the question.

Full alphabetical list of Labour MPs who have signed the amendment

If your MP is on the list below, you might want to send them an email thanking them for their support.  And if they aren't on the list, perhaps drop them an email and ask them to consider signing, for all the reasons listed in the amendment.

Abbott, Ms Diane

Abrahams, Debbie

Al-Hassan, Sadik

Allin-Khan, Dr Rosena

Arthur, Dr Scott

Baker, Richard

Bance, Antonia

Barker, Paula

Barron, Lee

Beavers, Lorraine

Begum, Apsana

Betts, Mr Clive

Billington, Ms Polly

Bishop, Matt

Blake, Olivia

Brash, Mr Jonathan

Burgon, Richard

Butler, Dawn

Byrne, Ian

Cadbury, Ruth

Coleman, Ben

Collinge, Lizzi

Cooper, Andrew

Cooper, Dr Beccy

Craft, Jen

Creasy, Ms Stella

Davies, Paul

De Cordova, Marsha

Dixon, Anna

Duncan-Jordan, Neil

Eccles, Cat

Edwards, Lauren

Efford, Clive

Ellis, Maya

Entwistle, Kirith

Eshalomi, Florence 

Fenton-Glynn, Josh

Ferguson, Patricia

Foxcroft, Vicky

Francis, Daniel

Furniss, Gill

Gardner, Dr Allison

Gilbert, Tracy

Hack, Amanda

Haigh, Louise

Hall, Sarah

Hamilton,  Paulette

Hamilton, Fabian

Hayes,  Helen

Hillier, Dame Meg 

Hinchliff, Chris

Hume, Alison

Hurley, Patrick

Hussain, Imran

Jermy, Terry

Jogee, Adam

Johnson, Kim

Jones, Lillian

Jones, Ruth

Kelly Foy, Mary

Lamb, Peter

Lavery, Ian

Leishman, Brian

Lewell, Emma

Lewis, Clive

Long Bailey, Rebecca

Maskell, Rachael

McDonald, Andy

McDonnell, John

McKenna, Kevin

Midgley, Anneliese

Mishra, Navendu

Mohamed, Abtisam

Morris, Grahame

Naish, James

Naismith, Connor

Niblett, Samantha

Nichols, Charlotte

Onn, Melanie

Opher, Dr Simon

Osamor, Kate

Osborne, Kate

Owen, Sarah 

Paffey, Darren

Pitcher, Lee

Platt, Jo

Quigley, Mr Richard

Qureshi, Yasmin

Ribeiro-Addy, Bell

Riddell-Carpenter, Jenny

Rimmer, Ms Marie

Rushworth, Sam

Smith, Cat

Stainbank, Euan

Stewart, Elaine

Sullivan, Kirsteen

Tanmanjeet, Mr

Trickett, Jon

Tufnell, Henry

Turner, Laurence

Vaughan, Tony

Webb, Chris

Western, Matt

Whittome, Nadia

Williams, David

Witherden, Steve

Yang, Yuan

Yasin, Mohammad

Full text of the amendment

That this House, whilst noting the need for the reform of the social security system, and agreeing with the Government’s principles for providing support to people into work and protecting people who cannot work, declines to give a Second Reading to the Universal Credit and Personal Independent Payment Bill because its provisions have not been subject to a formal consultation with disabled people, or co-produced with them, or their carers; because the Office for Budget Responsibility is not due to publish its analysis of the employment impact of these reforms until the autumn of 2025; because the majority of the additional employment support funding will not be in place until the end of the decade; because the Government’s own impact assessment estimates that 250,000 people will be pushed into poverty as a result of these provisions, including 50,000 children; because the Government has not published an assessment of the impact of these reforms on health or care needs; because the Government is still awaiting the findings of the Minister for Social Security and Disability’s review into the assessment for Personal Independence Payment and Sir Charlie Mayfield’s independent review into the role of employers and government in boosting the employment of disabled people and people with long-term health conditions.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    I’m sorry I have to ask but does human rights legislation not protect us as disabled people?
    The Nazi T4 (Tiergartenstrasse 4) project incited hatred against disabled people and led to the murder of 250000 disabled people including 5000 children. I believed this legislation would stop that ever happening again. I do not expect my family to survive this.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 hours ago
      @MJ I didn’t know about it before and I do now so thank you!
      I certainly don’t want to be hysterical, but I am certainly afraid for my family’s survival and not optimistic.
      I do think that historical events probably looked more benign at the time than they turned out to be.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 hours ago
      @Ginny Hysterical comparison, I'm totally against these cuts, but to compare deliberate murder of 250,000 disabled people with these cuts is an absurd out of proportional analogy and offensive to those that went through that historically murderous holocaust. 

      Ever heard of Godwin's Law. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    My MP isn't on the list but that is no surprise, he hasn't even replied to my emails, he is an absolute waste of space and I've told him so too.  Just seen online in The Sun our useless Prime Minister is off on another trip away from Britain and has said "we as Labour need to reform the welfare bill and we will carry on with this bill regardless " .  He isn't taking any notice of these backbenchers. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    I am sorry to have to ask but why is there no protection for as as disabled people under Human Rights legislation?
    I thought that was there to stop the incitement of hatred against disabled people, so that atrocities like the Nazi T4 (Tiergartenstrasse 4) project, which led to the deaths of 250 thousand disabled people including 5000 children. 
    Is there no legal challenge?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    Oh good news
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    What happens to the bill if the Conservatives do side with Keir Starmer & Co?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 hours ago
      @YogiBear Labour knows if it hasn't got the consent of a large chunk of its own party it loses credibility. So I don't think this bill will proceed past 3rd reading without significant change or being dropped altogether. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    I just emailed the Speaker, Sir Lindsay Hoyle: 

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    Starmer, when questioned at a summet today 24 June 2025, said he'd plough on with the welfare reforms. time for his party and the house to tell him what they really think.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    Can anyone advise anything I can do with an MP who refuses to reply and what would be persuasive? I have Darren Jones who has sent one stock reply and refuses to do any surgeries or meetings about the cuts, and he hasn’t read any of the information I sent. I expect he’s a lost cause given his comments about pocket money but still want to do something constructive while we’re all in limbo
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 hours ago
      @tintack Thanks, that's much as I feared but will try emailing him once more just in case!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 hours ago
      @Pickle Unfortunately Jones is also a member of the government, so there is no way he will do anything except regurgitate government soundbites and gaslighting. All you can do is make your feelings clear. Either Jones or one of his staff will read whatever e-mails you send him,  even if there's little to no chance he will respond.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    Sir Keir Starmer has vowed to "press ahead" with the government's planned welfare changes, despite a growing rebellion from Labour backbench MPs.

    More than 120 Labour MPs have signed up to an effort to block plans to cut disability and sickness-related benefits payments to save £5bn a year by 2030.

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 8 hours ago
    I presume that they will not pull the bill as it would be another u-turn for starmer and Co. (the mupets) and he said no more concessions.

    So will blame the rebels for the defeat when it comes......

    Let's hope and pray 🙏 that the bill get blow into the wind and the mupets follow suit. 

    Nice slap in the face for kendell 🤦‍♂️
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 hours ago
      @GLB Yea, and their damehoods up the spout !
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    119 have now signed the amendment.  Going up ^^ 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    So jo platt has changed her mind,I emailed her months ago and the response was welfare needed changing and the usual dribble about NEETS needing to work,so,she's switched sides probably wasn't brave enough back then to speak out but there's strength in numbers,it's easier to rebel when there's 140 of you, let's hope more find the courage to say no aswell, so thankyou for deciding to support us and doing what's right,I mean how can condemning millions of people to poverty ever be right? of course there's still plenty of tough nuts to crack snd the Conservatives may be a problem  after all,they started all of this let's hope they're not determined to finish it 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    Welfare rebellion to test Starmer like never before

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c3w48zlw04po
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 hours ago
      @Gingin There is now a Have Your Say comments section. Rather typical reaction of the 'ordinary' elector who really doesn't paying taxes to those on any benefits (unless they are net recipients then that is different). And everyone has a different definition of what constitutes disability.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    Another 15 then?

    Still, the numbers involved in the amendment published overnight, external - 123 and rising - are breathtaking.

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    If Labour claim to be on the center-left wing of the political spectrum. Look how inhumane and vile this "Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill"  is! 

    Then I'd hate to see the Conservative's center-right to right wing along with Reform UK's Right-wing policies regarding welfare and disability benefits.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    Can someone give a brief explanation what does this mean, please?
    I’m so stressed and worried, need I say emotionally drained as well, that every time something new pops up I try to read it but a whooshing sound in my ears and fear stops me from understanding and digesting the text.
    What does this new article mean, is it positive, hopeful or is it another setback? 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 hours ago
      @Lost and helpless Its a really good day for us! The government's plans are in dire straits. Even if the bill goes through second reading (and there's a very good chance it won't), I can't see it going to 3rd reading  (and making it to law) in its current form. So basically, the government's plans look very likely to be scuppered today. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    Why The Labour Welfare Rebellion Is 'A Massive F*** You To Keir And Rachel'

    The PM and chancellor have angered Labour MPs throughout the last year – and now it is payback time.

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 hours ago
      @Yorkie Bard Or as it's said in the film 'Evolution'......"It's Payback Tiiimmme!"
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 hours ago
      @gingin @Gingin he's totally incompetent, he's still not listening to what's happened today, so arrogant. He's not what this country needs in a 'leader'. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    I was thinking what about people with assistant pets? Do people think it's really ok to take away an autistic person's assistant dog away because they soon won't be afford to eat let alone feed their pet along with the expensive vet bills? Has anyone thought about this?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @Chickadee Quite a lot actually. There's charities raising dogs for autistic. Some autistic adults and children have problems going outside and the dog helps. Some actually go to schools with a child and if they're stressed the dog comforts. This is actually risking losing an assistant dog for a the child if the parent(s) also receiving pip. Even if dwp doesn't recognise them for autistics they are really helping. I have seen someone go to work with one clearly the workplace gives permission but the whole thing puzzles me why PIP is also for people who works but reading the news you'd think nobody is working at all. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 hours ago
      @D Yes but the point is still Valid they'll lose the means to support the animals that Support Them, and Like everything Else in these killer Cuts iit Still Matters to Us even if it matters Not to Them.  A very valid point from Apple. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 hours ago
      @Apple I’m autistic and am not sure what a dog could do to assist autistic people in any case. I agree it could be a problem for things like early warning pets for things like seizures and guide dogs.  In these instances I’d include it under things like losing aids which would definitely be affected by the proposed changes.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 8 hours ago
      @Apple The only assistance dogs that the dwp recognise are for those disabled with sensory impairment (which the dwp define as a loss of sense such as sight or hearing………sensory overload doesn’t count)

      The only type of assistance dog that helps gain pip descriptor points are guide dogs and hearing dogs.

      All other types of assistance dog (uk law on the definition of an assistance dog is very very open to abuse - it’s any dog that aids a disabled person in their day to day life if I remember correctly - the ADUK umbrella charities have wanted that definition tightened for years) would most likely harm your chances of getting descriptor points (assessors would put those dogs in the same category as a pet and argue if you have a dog you can do x, y and z - much safer in dwp assessments to not offer information/
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @Apple No body least of Liz Kendall or Stephen Timms or the DWP senior civil servants have thought about anything except to come up with a formula to cut payments from a vast majority of people and then lie and tell stories how they are there to help us all. This has been the most duplicitous, disingenuous bunch of people I have ever seen and I hold the civil servants and the ministers who depend on them for good advice to be held responsible not only for the cuts but the deaths that will occur. There is something really rotten with the public servants and the ministers as they are rotten to the core and need to be all fired for the harm they are causing to people
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 hours ago
    Version 7 – Updated 24th June
    A list representing the majority of the country opposing the introduction of the Disability Welfare Bill

    So Kemi Badenoch and Sir Lindsay Hoyle — will you use your power to crush the powerless?
    With Labour’s majority threatened and the government needing external votes, the Conservative leader and the Speaker of the House may decide the fate of one of the most dishonourable welfare bills in recent history.

    So Sir Keir Starmer — and Ministers Liz Kendall, Rachel Reeves and Stephen Timms — you know better than:

    Disability rights organisations across the UK

    Major mental health and epilepsy charities

    Poverty, food bank and homelessness networks

    Leading journalists, lawyers and legal charities

    Trade unions representing millions of workers

    Cultural and arts institutions

    Faith organisations including the Church of England and Quakers in Britain

    The British Medical Journal (BMJ) and frontline doctors

    All carer support organisations

    Over 100 Labour MPs and peers across Parliament

    International watchdogs including the UN CRPD

    All the voices of disabled people and unpaid carers



    ---

    This is not just a list — it’s a movement.
    As the clock ticks down to a crucial vote on July 1st that could strip support from over a million disabled people, a powerful coalition has formed: from disability campaigners and unions to charities, faith leaders, public figures, and MPs — voices from every corner of society are uniting to say: enough is enough.

    Together, we refuse to let the rights and dignity of sick and disabled people be dismantled.
    Every name here stands as a testament to courage and solidarity.
    Share this list. Amplify these voices.
    History will remember who stood up — and who stayed silent — when disabled people needed us most.


    ---

    The List of Those Opposing the Disability Welfare Bill

    Disability and Advocacy Organisations:
    Scope, Disability Rights UK, Inclusion London, Inclusion Barnet, Disability Sheffield, Community Integrated Care, NSUN, WinVisible, Crips Against Cuts, Disability Benefits Consortium, Mencap, Sense, RNIB, RNID, National Autistic Society, Leonard Cheshire, Business Disability Forum, Disability Positive, VoiceAbility, VODG, Stay Safe East, Three Guineas Trust, Fightback4Justice, Benefits and Work, Disability News Service, Action on Disability (AoD), POhWER, Disability Can Do, ME Association, Action for M.E., #MEAction UK, 25% ME Group, MS Society UK, MS Trust, Rethink Mental Illness, Well Adapt, DPO Forum England, Black Triangle Campaign.

    Charities Supporting Marginalised Groups:
    Age UK and Independent Age for older people; Contact and Council for Disabled Children for families with disabled children; METRO Charity for intersectional/LGBTQ+ and disability; Mind for mental health.

    Homelessness and Poverty Charities:
    St Mungo’s, Crisis, Shelter, YMCA, Homeless Link, Centrepoint, The Passage, Thames Reach, Depaul UK, Single Homeless Project, Justlife, Hope Housing, The Connection at St Martin’s, Groundswell, Turn2us, Joseph Rowntree Foundation.

    Food Poverty and Anti-Poverty Networks:
    The Trussell Trust, Independent Food Aid Network (IFAN).

    Faith-Based Organisations:
    Church of England, Quakers in Britain.

    Advocacy and Rights Groups:
    Citizens Advice, Minority Rights Group, Campaign for Disability Justice, Carers UK, Carers Trust, Coalition Against Benefit Cuts, Money and Mental Health Policy Institute, Trust for London, Liberty, Justice, Amnesty International.

    Medical and Healthcare Organisations:
    British Medical Association (BMA), British Medical Journal (BMJ), Epilepsy Action.

    Trade Unions:
    PCS, Unite Community, BFAWU, TUC, Scottish TUC, Equity, Musicians’ Union, NUJ, Cardiff Trades Union Council, TUCG, UCU.

    Disabled People’s Campaigns and Activists:
    DPAC (Disabled People Against Cuts), GMCDP (Greater Manchester Coalition of Disabled People), #TakingThePIP campaign, Elaine Clifford, John Pring, Michelle Cardno, Steve Donnison, Holiday Whitehead, Joy Dove, John McArdle, Samuel Miller, Mark Anthony Bastiani, Caroline Collier, Geoff Fimister.

    Public Figures:
    Liz Carr, Rosie Jones, Ruth Madeley, James Taylor (Scope), Martin Lewis (MoneySavingExpert), Cherylee Houston, Kim Tserkezie, Daniel Monks, Jack Hunter.

    Arts and Cultural Institutions:
    National Theatre, Graeae Theatre Company, Equity, Disability Arts Online, Disability Arts Cymru, University of Atypical for Arts and Disability, Disability Arts International, Arts & Disability Ireland.

    House of Lords Advocates:
    Baroness Grey-Thompson (Crossbench), Lord Addington (Liberal Democrat), Lord Holmes of Richmond (Conservative), Baroness Sherlock (Labour), Lord Shinkwin (Conservative), Lord Touhig (Labour), Baroness Ruth Lister (Labour).

    Journalists and Media:
    Frances Ryan (The Guardian), May Bulman (The Independent), Disability News Service (led by John Pring), The Canary, Novara Media, Prospect Magazine, LabourList, The Guardian, The Independent, ITV News.

    International and Human Rights Organisations:
    UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD), UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR), Amnesty International.

    Parliamentary and Political Opposition:
    Over 100 Labour MPs have signed the official amendment to stop the bill (full confirmed list to follow). Vicky Foxcroft MP resigned from her government role in protest. Other named opponents include Diane Abbott MP, Andy Burnham (Mayor of Greater Manchester), Sadiq Khan (Mayor of London), Rachael Maskell MP, Steve Witherden MP, Debbie Abrahams MP, and the Leeds West and Pudsey CLP.

    Local Authorities Taking a Stand:
    Lutfur Rahman, Mayor of Tower Hamlets, pledged £8.5 million in local support and condemned the cuts as “cruel”.

    Parliamentary Groups:
    All-Party Parliamentary Group on Disability (Chair: Marsha de Cordova MP), All-Party Parliamentary Group on Poverty.

    Legal Support and Advice Services:
    Disability Law Service (DLS), Public Law Project (PLP), Leigh Day, Bhatt Murphy, Aoife O’Reilly (solicitor), Tom Royston (barrister), Liberty, Justice.

    Labour MPs Who Signed the Original Opposition Letter:
    Diane Abbott, Paula Barker, Apsana Begum, Olivia Blake, Richard Burgon, Dawn Butler, Ian Byrne, Stella Creasy, Barry Gardiner, Mary Glindon, Imran Hussain, Kim Johnson, Mary Kelly Foy, Ian Lavery, Emma Lewell-Buck, Clive Lewis, Rebecca Long-Bailey, Rachael Maskell, Andy McDonald, John McDonnell, Abtisam Mohamed, Grahame Morris, Charlotte Nichols, Kate Osborne, Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Zarah Sultana, Jon Trickett, Chris Webb, Nadia Whittome, Steve Witherden.

    Public Opinion Speaks:
    The vast majority of people in the UK do not support cutting disability benefits. Polls show most believe these reforms are about saving money, not helping people into work — and that they risk pushing more disabled people into poverty. When it comes to supporting those who need it most, the public is clear: enough is enough.
    (Sources: More in Common, Community Care, Ipsos)

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