Labour is prepared to risk a backbench revolt by allowing a vote on cuts to Personal Independence Payment (PIP), in order to be sure it can breach claimants’ human rights without worrying about legal repercussions, Benefits and Work believes. 

When the Pathways to Work Green paper was published, it contained the surprising information that the changes to PIP scores and the cuts to universal credit (UC) payments would be introduced by primary legislation – an Act of Parliament.

Surprising, because these changes would normally be done using Statutory Instruments (SIs).  This is delegated legislation that does not require a vote in Parliament, just a signature from the secretary of state.

A vote carries real risks.

Given that the Tories will undoubtedly be in favour of the cuts, the risk is not that Labour might lose the vote.

But if a sizeable number of backbenchers revolt, real damage may be done to the Labour leadership and to party cohesion. A large enough uprising might even threaten the careers of Reeves or Kendall – perhaps even be the beginning of the end for Starmer himself .

In the face of overwhelming discontent, it seems likely Labour would abandon the whole plan rather than risk a showdown.

SIs, on the other hand, are extremely difficult to get a ballot on in Parliament.  There is a process whereby MPs can “pray against” an SI and potentially vote on it.  But it is a complex and seldom successful process.  The last time an SI was overturned in this way in the Commons was almost half a century ago.

So, why give MPs and Lords a vote on a highly controversial issue when it isn’t at all necessary?

The argument that it is being done in the interests of democracy is not one that can be taken seriously.  Not when Labour have refused to consult with the public, and particularly disabled claimants, over these changes which will have such a dramatic effect on their lives.

But there is a more obvious reason.

SIs can be challenged in court, usually by judicial review, and have some of their provisions removed or the entire instrument quashed.  The Human Rights Act is often the basis of such challenges.

In truth, successful challenges are very rare.

One study found that between 2014 and 2020 there were just 14 successful challenges of delegated legislation using the Human Rights Act, in spite of thousands of SIs being enacted every year.

It’s worth noting, though, that four of those cases were in connection with regulations made under the Welfare Reform Act 2012.

The situation is very different where an Act of Parliament, rather than an SI, is involved.

In the UK, parliament is sovereign. Because an act has gone through the whole extensive democratic process of scrutiny and debate by both the Commons and the Lords, courts cannot overturn the provisions of an Act of Parliament.

The most they can do is inform the government that particular provisions of an act are in breach of, for example, the Human Rights Act or the Equality Act.

But the government does not have to do anything about the court’s findings.  It can simply shrug its shoulders and carry on regardless.

Benefits and Work suspects that the DWP have very strong grounds to fear that both the changes to the PIP points system and the cuts to the LCWRA element of UC are in breach of the Human Rights Act and/or the Equality Act.

And that, we believe, is why they are to be made law via a single Act of Parliament that the courts can’t touch.

Once again, we remind readers that In the Green paper, the DWP claim that “We are committed to putting the views and voices of disabled people and people with health conditions at the heart of everything we do.”

Disabled people’s human rights, on the other hand, can be safely ignored.

Visit our What you can do page for at least eight actions you can take right now to challenge the Green Paper.  

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    So will pip still be how your conditions affect you and not based on diagnosis? Cos reading some newspapers they list some conditions that won’t be accepted, which is adding to all the stress.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Hello, does anyone know when we’ll know if these proposed changes to benefits will go ahead?  As it stands right now they’re just proposals but when will they actually tell us what’s happening?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    If emailing your MP via their parlimentary email address you must confirm your address otherwise your MP cannot respond
    For example in the email put : I confirm I reside at (your full address).

    I got this from my MP (please see below)
    Due to strict Parliamentary protocol, please could you confirm your full address so that I am able to respond to your email in full
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Hi 
    If emailing your MP via their parlimentary email address you must confirm your address otherwise your MP cannot respond 
    For example in the email put : I confirm I reside at (your full address).

    I got this from my MP  (please see below)
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Upsetting when this website cuts off bits of your post the one I just sent started with -

    They say the system is broken—but they don’t speak about the people it has broken......

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @CaroA It may likely be a technical issue, as this has happened to some of my posts too. I reposted again including the cut off bit, which is what was posted on here by moderation.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago

    My brother was one of them. He lived with serious health conditions—epilepsy, Ménière’s disease, HIV, hepatitis B—and deep trauma from our childhood. He died of a heart attack while dreading yet another DWP reassessment. I believe the constant pressure to prove his illness, over and over, contributed to that final strain.

    Now politicians talk about a “perverse need to justify illness”—as if it's our fault but it wasn’t the sick who made it this way. The system forces us to reduce ourselves to our worst days, just to be believed.

    My brother made a beautiful home, found love, and lived with dignity despite the system. Sadly though he was tormented still from many lifelong demons....including the DWP. 

    He deserved rest, not scrutiny.He deserved to live!

    And he is not the only one.




    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @CaroA Well said.   The psychological stress of being an increasingly demonized group in  society and living with the fear of being hit financially with cuts especially from a Labour government is very isolating and frightening
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    These proposals will end up in the courts and this labour government will be defeated big style just wait and see.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 22 hours ago
      @freddy Agree! When the Tories tried to do their vouchers it got ruled on in the courts " unlawful "
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @freddy Oh yes please if I lose LCWRA I will then lose UC and therefore most likely my flat, possessions and also the mobility scooter that I use

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @freddy Oh god yes please id love to see him lose on a human rights violation given his prior experience 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Fingers crossed for a backbench revolt, and get Starmer and Reeves out.  That would be like having all of my birthdays and Christmasses at once! 
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    · 1 days ago
    I have emailed my MP twice, Maria Eagle, no response and am not surprised by that either.
     I have also signed petitions by other organizations / charity groups and have passed on those petition links to my family and friends and they have signed them too.
    They are now going to save millions by the fact that people who genuinely would be entitled to pip will now not bother to make a claim as they will put off by all this, people will think what's the point not going to get it, same with people coming up for reviews, scaring people into not making claims is exactly what they want.
    There's no morality in politics, they are thieves in suits, all in it for themselves. 

    Thanks to all the advice, help and information we get from the marvelous people at B&W we won't be among those scared off.

    Take care and I wish you all well.
    Keep up the fight.




  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Liz Kendall has been parroting that they want to support sick and disabled people into work. But with their upcoming evil 4 point based criteria and scrapping the WCA, there'll only be very seriously ill or bed-bound sick and disabled ones left in the system who won't be able to do any type of work.

    Therefore, supporting sick and disabled people into work is for the birds.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Welfare spending as a percentage of GDP.

    - France: 31% of GDP.
    - Finland: 29%.
    - Belgium: 28.9%.
    - Italy: 28%.
    - Germany: 26%.
    - Spain: 25%.
    - Denmark: 25%.
    - Sweden: 25%.
    - Norway: 25%.
    - Japan: 22%.
    - United Kingdom: 21%.

    Just to provide some context this also includes pensions and housing benefit. Actual UK unemployment and sickness/disability benefit rates are also significantly lower than comparable countries.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 58 minutes ago
      @Gawayn You have to sell your furniture in America if your unemployed.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 17 hours ago
      @Bert
      Latest figures from 2022 have USA public welfare spending on 22.7% of GDP, very slightly higher than the UK's 22.1%.

      With total net social spending which takes into account "public and private social expenditure, and also includes the effect of direct taxes (income tax and social security contributions), indirect taxation of consumption on cash benefits, as well as tax breaks for social purposes" has the USA on 29.4% with the UK again lower at 24%.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 17 hours ago
      @Bert What's that got to do with the UK? You're trying to make excuses again for Labour and Starmer. Look everyone they aren't too bad compared to blah blah blah.  Nobody gives two hoots about that, everyone is concerned about what is going on here at the moment not the US.  
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 17 hours ago
      @Bob
      These figures are based off the OECD Social Expenditure Database which "includes reliable and internationally comparable statistics on public and mandatory and voluntary private social expenditure at programme level."


      How individual spending is further broken down of course varies per country. In the UK pensions of course takes the highest amount of the spend with housing benefit being the second biggest. This isn't too surprising given so much council housing has been sold off and also given what many would call an overheated property market.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Matt Trump is cutting benefits and giving tax breaks too millionaires.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    I’ve read online that the equality and human rights commission are investigating the cuts for potentially breaching the equality act. Wonder whether it’s actually true?  
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Rachel Reeves responding to a viewer's concern raised on Kuenssberg's programme: he's worried he'll lose his PIP. Reeves responds that nothing will change until he's reassessed, without mentioning that under the new criteria he might well lose it. She then says that if he' still unable to work he'll keep his PIP.

    So we have a chancellor who has decided to cut at least £5billion, most of it from PIP - and doesn't even seem to know that PIP isn't an out of work benefit.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @tintack "She then says that if he' still unable to work he'll keep his PIP."

      Yet they say in their damn green paper that capacity to work is no longer assessed.

      In addition, last year, when the Tories proposed a merge of PIP and the WCA, Labour were fiercely opposed, claiming that the two were designed for two different purposes.

      All R. Reeves cares about is how to please the Treasury, and she'll do everything in this respect to keep her post, which she has never dreamed of.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Under the Salisbury Convention the House of Lords is unable to challenge bills that were included in an election party's bill. 

    So if the Government was elected on a promise to deliver welfare reform the Lords cannot legislate against this. As NO party holds a majority seat in the House of Lords.

    Under the 1911 Parliament Act if a Bill is denoted as a money bill which involves 'the public purse' It can receive Royal Assent after it being in the House of Lords for just one month. Regardless of whether the Lords approve it or not. 

    Lords can delay legislation by up to one year. Under Parliament Act of 1911 and 1949. If the Bill remains in the Lords for up to one year it will still pass without approval by the speaker of the House.

    That would NOT look good if the Lords did delay and it certainly would delay their proposals.

    That is WHY the site was stating to contact the Lords. However who elects the Lords the elected Prime Minister (Keir Starmer).

    I DO think that our efforts should be concentrating on the Fact that at the Green paper stage the announcement of the proposals that we were the disabled and ill were NOT consulted as we should have been and indeed they lied and said that we had. They consulted with disability organisations. As I said in an earlier post I have NOT seen an MP asking its constituents what they thought. Therefore, I think that the best way forward is to give support to the Disability Activist Groups and HOPE that the public outcry to this has a major impact on what they are about to do. If Equality Commission can find a way to get action through it being in contravention of Equality Act 2010. That would be such a positive move.

    Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) outside Parliament protesting on Wednesday 26 March 


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Me too.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    OK, I think I need to move away from here for a bit, as I'm worried I'm going to spend the next two years not enjoying what I have while I have it!  

    I need to clear my head for a while and concentrate on trying to do something that I DO have control of and  might help me in the long run - writing books.  I make a very modest income from it at the moment, but there's always hope it might take off, and it's really the only work I can do, and I can do it as and when I'm up to it, and I don't have to leave the house.  So I have two years to boost that income and hopefully write something that gels beyond the few Christmas books that do well during the last quarter of every year.   Fingers crossed.  Even a couple of hundred pounds every month (which I manage in the Christmas season) would help plug the gap from the £700+ I'm going to lose.   Plus the Euromillions is £182 million on Tuesday, and I am planning to win it....

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @SLB Let me break this to you gently. The winning ticket is here.  Better luck on Friday... 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @SLB Good luck with that Shane. Enjoyed your last blog very much. You'll be missed on here. Your contributions are well thought it, although I disagree with some of your recent statements.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    It's almost like they had a Human rights Lawyer on board, who knew how to by bypass demands to uphold them...
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Jane Hi Jane Keir Starmer was a Human Rights Lawyer, and head of prosecutions. I posted this yesterday.

      He was so active in one of the most notorious  Hate Crime cases of modern day and he fought for justice to achieve that for years. He fought against discrimination and NOW HE IS ACTING UNLAWFULLY UNDER THE EQUALITY ACT AND DISCRIMINATING AGAINST EVERY DISABLED PERSON IN THE COUNTRY. 

      This makes it feel all the worse. To me. 




    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Jane Excelent Jane.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    “Good people do not need laws to tell them to act responsibly, while bad people will find a way around the laws” ― Plato
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Mind you even before the news of the benefit cuts labour were at least upfront by saying they were the party of Work.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Their will be a grim choice at the next election Labour might be the best bet, as Conservatives and Reform will be looking for bigger cuts in Benefits and the greens and lib dems dont have the numbers.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @bert I hate to admit this, but for the first time since I turned 18 I very much doubt I will be voting at the next GE. I suspect two things will happen: one, the turnout will be historically very low (none of the above will the be the winner) and two, it is likely we will have a very messy coalition Government at the end of it.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @bert To the 20 down-markers - bert does say it's a grim choice. I fear that's true, I'd call Labour the "least worst." Shenanigans in Bolsover, the famous Dennis Skinner's old seat, show that every barrel has it's rotten apples anyway. And at all levels.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @bert Bert are you serious really you would vote for this lot again well what can I say.

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