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.
    · 5 hours 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.
    · 5 hours 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.
    · 5 hours 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.
    · 6 hours 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.
    · 6 hours 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.
    · 9 hours ago
    They should be very.careful, if they are going.down the legislative approch, the parties membership will be solidly against these changes, even if their parliamentary representatives are supine, there is a real chance of a civil war in the party, something we should encourage and engage with.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    I was keeping up to date on the progress of PIP payments that is about too change in November 2026 for a 4 point system living component and the mobility is not affected for people in a wheelchair just the other day I help a wheelchair user too get on the bus and put up the seats for the Wheelchair in Exeter on bus.
    Myself I don’t get housing cost as my cost came out of the living component for bills such as the monthly electricity bill, council tax bills they where high when in work £150 but drop in this new tax year when looking for work.
    I don’t have a lot of savings to use so the living component is handy for pet food and food and other cleaning products around the house everyone is different in financial situations like myself.
    I also looking for work and go to job fairs and an employment group and is not qualified for Access To Work which I was told of 5 years ago I don’t know if it had change.
    I applied for a number of jobs for example which suit my needs cleaning, retail and also administrative works or warehouse. I am also work for a company each year as it was seasonal and last for 6 months during that time I work in other areas of society or on universal credit looking for work.
    I have autism and health anxiety which can affect how I appear to people during an interview and sometimes find questions or random one difficult to get across and when I left the interview my thoughts said I should say this and maybe best to take notes with me into an interview to gain better success.
    My Health Anxiety was checking other mental disorders such as Avoidance Personality and others but as I had a test for others I am less likely to check my symptoms against them but do learn about others and how other people struggle more with mental health maybe more than I do and the impact on them could be high when they on a road to recovery and then for them to her my messages on social media and then how it will affect there own health as well.
    PIP is very good with its computer to monitor the information store on people and I know people abuse it and for this I total agree too many people from other countries use the system and people of youth generation is not generally mental I’ll or suffer from such symptoms that myself and other experienced. One lady on YouTube had been cured from Narc and boarderline and she was telling her story and all it would do make those people go back into themselves and not getting the treatment that they deserve.
    So for looking for other people with those disorders up and down the country on YouTube experience even what I experienced Health Anxiety or autism or others with different mental illnesses I do not support the government bill to change the living component for 4 points and just leave the system the way it was set up in the first place. The people who can’t walk or in the wheelchair get the disability allowance which I don’t on the living component.
    Sarah Reeves just balance the black hold in the public finances.

    Richard Bealey
    Exeter Devon UK
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 9 hours ago
    rachel Reeves on the media round this morning, and Starmer yesterday, seem to have turned into robots, repeating the same line that these changes will get young people into work.  Even if that were true (and I can't see how it is), those no longer in their early twenties who have disabilities SHOULD NOT be collatoral damage.  The shocking thing is just how many perfectly sensible people are believing the "young people" line.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 hours ago
    I’ve emailed my MP twice and received no answer. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 hours ago
      @Leprechaun Neither have I. As I understand if, they are legally obliged to reply too! It tells me much about the person we have as an MP... and who not to vote for again (not that I ever plan to vote for these morons ever again anyway, after being a lifelong Labour voter). 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    How can the green paper itself be legal? The whole point of a green paper it to set out ideas and a guide for consultation. If there are sections of the green paper that are out of bounds for consultation (PIP Cuts) then how can this be a credible and legal green paper if no consultations are allowed in certain areas? The whole elegibility and legality of the green papaer also need challenging and not only its contents.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 11 hours ago
    Since this new terror has landed in, no one is worried or questioning about ESA migration anymore. I don't even think people care about it anymore.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 12 hours ago
    It wouldn’t surprise me if this government take away the standard rate of care on pip when they redesign pip for the reform. Let’s see how this devil of a government talk on Wednesday on the budget day. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 12 hours ago
    Sadly I wrote to my local MP and he is absolutely all for it. Missed all the points I was trying to make and basically sung from Reeves playbook of why it's important people work and young people too. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @Darcy My MP didn't even bother replying to my email. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 11 hours ago
      @Darcy Similar with my MP Alison McGovern 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 12 hours ago
      @Darcy
      This statement is so twisted, it makes me sick!
      It all follows the IDS mantra of "Work will make you free"... and we all know whto invented it!
      Thev'e decided "If you tell a lie big enough and keep repeating it, people will eventually come to believe it"    Straight from the Conservatives and comunist play book..

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 15 hours ago
    Tried reading the lords talk on it was hard to understand alot but little things did jump out it seems just baroness Sherlock and a Torie lord  wants  the cuts and on one of the bits  tried to read it she was saying that they had to see if it paper passed in parliament  don't think I seen anything that they hopeful it will but could be wrong and her talk was longer than the others something fishy going on .
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 15 hours ago
    Can we write to the secretary of each major trade union. If they could join this fight, it holds much more power and many of their members will be affected? 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 hours ago
      @Anniesmum Trade union are all for labour, just look at how labour when they first got in power last year. They caved into the unions demands just to keep them sweet.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 11 hours ago
      @Anniesmum Thanks I think we should ideally all be allowed to join a union and somehow have them fight for us.  At least we would be able to feed back our real views that way.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 15 hours ago
    The pcs union is against it and they will be there on Wednesday 26 th March in London protesting 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 22 hours ago
    Good news!

     The Equality and Human Right Commission is investigating Labour’s benefits cuts for potentially breaching the Equality Act.

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 23 hours ago
    "All UK families ‘to be worse off by 2030’ as poor bear the brunt, new data warns."

    "Keir Starmer has been dealt a fresh blow to his living standards pledge in advance of the spring statement."


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 23 hours ago
    @Neil Cook 

    "These plans were developed through engagement with disabled people and a public consultation has been launched to guide the reforms going forward"

    Well we know how genuine that is. I can't see how Labour's 'consultation' can be seen to be legal when the Conservatives' wasn't.

    "Alison McGovern, MP
    Member of Parliament for Birkenhead"

    Once.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 11 hours ago
      @rookie Personally I would put in a FOI (Freedom Of Information) request to the DWP using the reply from your MP as proof requesting a list of all the disabled people, orgonisations and charities that have been consulted to develope the plans set out in the green paper.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 12 hours ago
      @rookie A case of believing their own propaganda! "The emperor has no clothes on!" 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    I work part time and get pip will you lose your pip if you work under the new proposals Liz Kendal announced??
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 hours ago
      @Ala That's it, they really don't get how one thing affects another, and heartless though they seem, I think they would care if they knew more about it because they would be afraid of what they were doing and what that said about them. The ignorance and incompetence is more dangerous than the ideology.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 11 hours ago
      @John They claim you won’t be called for a review sooner just because of a job. But as I’ve seen before from MODS on the forum if your job undermines your reasons for getting PIP this could be taken into consideration when you are next reviewed.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 12 hours ago
      @John ????  Big question!!!   I think the problem is, the MPs don't understand the benefit system, and they do not care.   
      There is so much that doesn't make sense!  
      They can only memorise few slogans.   No brain work involved.

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