Liz Kendall's letter to Labour MP's announcing the "concessions" the government has offered to win over rebels has been published.

It leaves a great many questions unanswered.  And as amendments to the bill will not be published before Tuesday's vote, it means MPs will have to vote without actually knowing what they are ultimately agreeing to. 

On first reading, one of the most obvious question is whether the guarantee relating to PIP means that current claimants will also be protected from the "ministerial review of the Pip assessment, led by the minister for social security and disability [Stephen Timms], to ensure the benefit is fair and fit for the future." If not, and Timms introduces much harsher conditions for PIP from 2028, then the PIP guarantee is good for only around three years.

We are sure readers will have many more queries.  Please post them in the comments section below - we won't be able to answer them, but we can begin to collate them.

Dear colleague,

We have always said we are determined to reform the social security system so it is fair, provides dignity and respect for those unable to work, supports those who can, and is sustainable so it is there for generations to come.

The broken system we inherited from the Tories fails all of those tests.

These important reforms are rooted in Labour values, and we want to get them right.

We have listened to colleagues who support the principle of reform but are worried about the impact of the pace of change on those already supported by the system.

As a result we will make two changes to strengthen the bill.

Firstly, we recognise the proposed changes have been a source of uncertainty and anxiety.

Therefore, we will ensure that all of those currently receiving Pip will stay within the current system. The new eligibility requirements will be implemented from November 2026 for new claims only.

Secondly, we will adjust the pathway of universal credit payment rates to make sure all existing recipients of the UC health element – and any new claimant meeting the severe conditions criteria – have their incomes fully protected in real terms.

Colleagues rightly want to ensure that disabled people and those with ill health are at the heart of our reforms.

We will take forward a ministerial review of the Pip assessment, led by the minister for social security and disability [Stephen Timms], to ensure the benefit is fair and fit for the future.

At the heart of this review will be coproduction with disabled people, the organisations that represent them, and MPs so their views and voices are heard. The review will then report to me as work and pensions secretary.

These commitments sit alongside our raising of the standard rate of the universal credit – the biggest real-terms permanent increase of any benefit since the 1980s – the protection of the incomes of the most vulnerable who will no longer be reassessed and the introduction of “right to try”.

Our reform principles remain; to target funding for those most in need and make sure the system is sustainable for the future to support generations to come.

We believe those who can work, should, and those who cannot, should be protected.

We will front load more of the additional funding generated by these reforms for back to work support for sick and disabled people.

Taken together it is a fair package that will preserve the social security system for those who need it by putting it on a sustainable footing, support people back into work, protect those who cannot work and reduce anxiety for those currently in the system.

Thank you to colleagues for engaging with us on these important reforms to social security.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 21 days ago
    Another question is what does "we will adjust the pathway of universal credit payment rates to make sure all existing recipients of the UC health element – and any new claimant meeting the severe conditions criteria – have their incomes fully protected in real terms." actually mean.

    The BBC is reporting this as UC health element will not be frozen and will instead be uprated with inflation. So claimants get UC standard allowance uprated by inflation plus the above inflation uprating boost + UC health element uprated by inflation.

    But I read it as meaning they get a backstop in case UC standard allowance with above inflation uplift + UC health element frozen is less than UC standard allowance +UC health element both increased by inflation. And could in theory also get a benefit cap on UC health element if UC standard allowance with above inflation uplift + UC health element frozen is more than UC standard allowance + UC health element both increased by inflation.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 days ago
      @john
      Meg Hillier's statement:

      "This means that disabled people currently in receipt of Pip and the health element of universal credit will continue to receive the same level of support."

      "The same level of support" could apply whether one or both of the standard and health elements of UC were frozen or increased with inflation. This sort of thing sounds like too much of a comparatively minor change - at least in comparison to the original proposed cuts - to be something that could be proclaimed a "major concession". 

      It sounds like Hillier and other rebels believe this is a pledge that existing UC Health claimants will not lose UC Health under the future change in qualifying criteria in 2028, just as existing PIP claimants will not be subject to the future tighter PIP eligibility criteria. I know WCA abolition is not part of the current bill, but then nor is the new PIP-based assessment (the first word of it hasn't been written yet), and yet one of the concessions extracted by the rebels concerns how that assessment will be formulated, so the things that will be in the WCA bill have clearly been brought up by the rebels in their negotiations with the government.  

      If the government says that existing UC Health claimants still stand to lose their UC Health under the new criteria in 2028 when it brings forward the WCA legislation then it is asking for trouble. Giving one impression to the rebels now to quell one rebellion is only likely to spark another major rebellion if they try to say, in Sir Humphrey-esque fashion, "we didn't actually give that pledge, if you read the wording very carefully you can see that we actually meant something totally different...."
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 days ago
      @john this could be the way of making sure those still on legacy benefits who are still to be transfered to UC when these rules come in do not lose out. I will be asking my mp about it, though until now he's been good for just spouting the usual govt line.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 21 days ago
    That is absolutely great news for those already in the system but how will it affect those waiting to be transferred from DLA?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 days ago
      @Sara k This is my worry, Sara k. I am one of those people still on DLA. I know that claimants transferring to PIP are treated exactly like new claimants. So, I find myself feeling in a bit of a quandary. Should we apply as soon as we know what's actually happening, rather than wait to be invited? I'm worried that if I wait too long I'll slip into the new 4 point ruling post November 2026. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 days ago
      @Sara k Good point...I am still on it with an indefinate award, and I have no idea what is going to happen when the transfer to PIP will occur. I will be a pensioner in 2029. 

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