Statistics released this week by the DWP show that 32% of all claimants sent a universal credit (UC) migration notice up to the end of February 2024 failed to make a successful claim and had their legacy benefits terminated.

In total, a shocking 284,660 individuals did not make a valid claim and had their benefits stopped.

The DWP are quick to point out that “households who have been sent a migration notice to date may not be representative of the complete population who will be sent a migration notice” because the majority are tax credit households.

The reality is, however, that the DWP have no idea whether the number of people who will disappear from the system when it is income-related ESA claimants who are being transferred, will be smaller or even greater.

The department have not done any detailed research into why so many claimants are failing to migrate and it may well be that ESA claimants will face even greater barriers to claiming than tax credit claimants.

At the moment, Labour have still made no announcement as to whether they are going to postpone or slow down the forced migration of income-related ESA claimants to UC, due to start next month.

But the closer we get to the deadline to begin sending out migration notices, the more likely it seems that the move is going ahead.

You can read the latest UC migration statistics here.

Comments

Write comments...
or post as a guest
People in conversation:
Loading comment... The comment will be refreshed after 00:00.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Hoolay · 23 days ago
    I won't be claiming it.

    It's toxic and it's far more important to me to be free of all this worry and stress even if it does mean struggling financially.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      wibblum · 21 days ago
      @Hoolay I understand how you feel, but for myself, the knowledge that they begrudge me every single penny only makes me that much more determined to fight for absolutely everything I'm entitled to.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Noggin · 21 days ago
      @Hoolay I'm not bothering either, I want the dwp out my life.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Bud · 23 days ago
      @Hoolay Hoolay, I’ve seriously considered this too.  But I’m going to see how it’s goes.  It’s a lot of money to lose out on, & you’re entitled to it.  It may not be easy & cause much stress, but it might not be that bad.  Sometimes it’s just the dreaded thought of things.  

      I don’t suppose you could just claim for your rent could you, without them chasing you to find work?  
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Anon · 23 days ago
      @Hoolay I know what you mean but if you can't work then how will you manage? 
      I'm considering not claiming UC either but I live alone and I'm not well enough to work, I don't think I have a choice.
      You need to consider all of the other things you will no longer be eligible for if you don't migrate to UC such as, free prescriptions, free dental care, warm home discount, housing benefit and council tax reduction.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Matt · 24 days ago
    Many will have seen the headline in tomorrow's Sunday Telegraph and Observer quoting Keir Starmer saying things will get worse before they get better. He is giving a major speech in Tuesday: we may get some clear indication of what we can expect in the Autumn. It won't be good...
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    A · 24 days ago
    This article is worth reading, as it discusses Liz Kendall's upcoming plan, called "Duty to Engage", which will force and require all disabled people and people with long term health conditions to engage with Job centres regularly, just like those on jobseekers allowance, and the WCA would take place more frequently at Job centres, rathe than at separate centres as it's now to force people into work. And failure to comply, tough sanctions would be applied. Disability benefits cuts are also coming up.

    Therefore, worrying about migrating from ESA to UC, or PIP in vouchers is way too simplistic, as with such a "Duty to Engage" plan, you can easily lose your benefits all together, or simply be reduced to jobseekers allowance level.

    The article is not from the Daily Mail but from disability news service.com

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      wibblum · 22 days ago
      @A I'm 60 years old in six months' time, Level 2 Autistic with various sensory processing issues, and social phobic with a thirty year long history of agoraphobia, and with continually deteriorating chronic physical mobility issues that mean I can't now walk more than 10 metres, and still recovering from a recent heart attack brought on by the stress of my last session of 'engaging' with the DWP.

      I look forward to discovering exactly how this Labour-in-name-only government expects me to 'engage' with the workplace.

      I'm prepared to bet it's going to involve a lot of lies and weasel-words from 'professional experts'.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      A · 23 days ago
      @Bananaboom Sadly, they don't care.

      Remember when D. Cameron's government  sanctioned claimants severely and cut their benefits, removed disability benefits from many people through ATOS, and forced them into voluntary jobs en mass, which led also to destitution? He used to claim that it was all about supporting people find decent jobs. Two years later, when he was criticised and told that if they could create jobs (voluntary), they could also make them paid ones, he confessed that it was nothing but all about saving money from the welfare budget.  

      Liz Kendall, to justify her wicked plan to force as many ill and disabled people as possible into poorly paid jobs, she parrots that millions of people who want to work were written off sick without their consent by the Tories, therefore, I'm supporting them into work, which dishonest to the highest order.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Bananaboom · 23 days ago
      @A Many disabled people cannot engage and there will be a significant backlash if they try this, not to mention court cases.

      For example you can't take someone with severe autism and mute alongside learning difficulties and "sanction them" for bot complying when it's part of the condition and discrimination.

      Another example someone who is agoropobic and incapable of leaving their home

      And another 
      Someone with cognitive impairments that limit their menory or/and understanding.

      Unless there's an exclusion for people like the above, this simply won't be possible and will result in a lot of dwp being sued court cases.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      MJ · 24 days ago
      @A My post above should be "there" not "their" :)

      From her interview with the Observer:
      Kendall suggested there would be serious reforms to jobcentres, freeing them up from monitoring benefits and linking them with the NHS to help those struggling to work for health reasons. “We have got to put jobcentres back to where they were initially meant to be, which is a public employment service,” she said. “That isn’t how they are. Their overwhelming focus is on monitoring, assessing and policing benefits. We’ve got 16,000 work coaches and we want them to do what they say on the tin.”
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      MJ · 24 days ago
      @A I read previously about Liz Kendall saying their are thousands of work coaches ready to help those on benefits back to work. She wants them dealing with less benefit issues and more helping the disabled and ill into work. Looks as if they will move from not just the unemployed but to us also. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Jon · 24 days ago
    For the government to reduce the benefits bill rather than issue vouchers why don't they just freeze ESA and pip benefits for say 3 or 4 years obviously this would make us worse off but wouldn't be catastrophic.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    m shirker · 25 days ago
    looks like its going ahead the esa to uc enforcement from 2028 now till only a weeks time dreading the whole thing although their is 600,000 people to get threw and do get 3 months notice so probably unlikely to happen until around easter time my friend just been moved over from jsa said its a shambles nobody knows what they are doing still nothing sorted after 8 weeks 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    A · 26 days ago
    Liz Kendell is a perfect example of a dishonest.

    She keeps parroting that the Tories have written millions of people who wanted to work off sick.

    She's all about cutting benefits to people in one way or another - the same disguised rhetoric of the era of Cameron.

    And when you hear her saying that she has always dreamed of becoming the secretary of the DWP, you can guess her demonic so-called reforms to come up.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    (No) hope · 26 days ago
    I can honestly say, unashamedly and unreservedly, that after a blood cancer diagnosis some years ago, and remaining on treatment ever since, and after experiencing the level of prejudice, harassment and spite that I was subjected to in the workplace post-diagnosis, and eventually being deemed unfit to work,  I have neither the desire nor health to set foot in a workplace ever again. 
    So Mrs Kendall/ Mrs reeves, show me the box where I can tick to opt out of your ill-conceived/doomed to fail scheme to get the disabled back to work. Clueless bureaucrats.
    I’m sure there are lots of similar stories out there.
    Have a nice day folks.👍🏻
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Anon · 26 days ago
    Tony Blair is pushing for greater use of AI in the DWP to a) cut down on jobs, saving money and b) to constantly scan claimants bank accounts for signs of fraud and error.
    It has echoes of the bank surveillance plans that the Tories wanted to bring in via the data protection act. However, this may not require the same act of parliament to enact, as it is simply an upgrade in technology.
    The Tony Blair institute that offers advice to the Government and this is one of their ideas which, they say, will save billions of pounds.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      philip · 22 days ago
      @Anon The thing to understand here is that the TBI takes massive donations from american tech companies who have contracts with virtually every government department. Thats what his so called institute was set up to do. Make him rich. And it has.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    CaroA · 26 days ago
    The Tories left a £12 billion hole in the budget for benefit cuts so much for this being a consultation it was a done deal all along - the cuts were going to happen anyway.  And of course if labour got in they would be left with this gap in the finances for the treacherous Tories to use as tabloid bait to gode labour with headlines such as 'soft on benefits/scroungers etc.  We will have to keep on with this interminable wait to see what is in store but in the meanwhile we need to keep fighting with what little resources and energy we have.  
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Matt · 27 days ago
    Hello all, I did write under the PIP response thread three days ago that the Government may be keen to force disabled people into some form of self-employment. Given the reluctance of most employers to employ disabled people this may be the only way to reduce the benefits bill....but self-employment is bloody hard work with far more risk than being a wage slave. How appropriate that the Budget is the day before Halloween! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      george · 26 days ago
      @MJ Brilliant post MJ
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      MJ · 27 days ago
      @Matt From an interview in the Observer by Liz Kendall:  "I think the people who really shirk their responsibility were the people who last sat in this office because they wrote off millions of people who actually want to work"

      This is worrying, how disingenuous she is, she thinks that millions are desperate to get back to work. That's easy, go to the job centre online, apply for jobs, get one and then sign off your benefits. But millions don't because they can't work! She actually thinks millions, her words, are wanting Labour to get them back into work! It is like she's tone deaf, we are saying we can't work but she's pretending that sounds like "we want help into work". No we can't work! Don't worry we'll help you all back into work which we know is what you really want. Lalala, can't hear you.

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      mrfibro · 27 days ago
      @Matt Will the government, and or the employer pay compensation if having forced the claimant into work fully knowing all of their disabilities wobeit mental and or physical health.  I doubt it, and nweither will there be work place adjustments to suit all disabled people in the UK's work places.

      Absolutely absurd, and ridiculous.  I thought these so-called MP's / minister are supposed to be savvy !  Just a load of dozy Muppets walking around like headless chickens.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    (No) hope · 27 days ago
    So basically, we’ll have a quick flick through your 16000 consultation responses at five to five on a Friday, then just do what we’d already got planned all along.
    I’ve read that there are now over 40 mp’s with disabilities in parliament out of 650. Now is a good time for them to find their voices.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      mrfibro · 27 days ago
      @(No) hope The 40 + MP'S  will keep their gobs shut more likely.  As the goverments argument will be oh my god we have 40 disabled mp's grafting falling asleep in the house.  So going by that all claimants can go out and graft all day.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    MJ · 28 days ago
    I did state previously before the election that I expected Labour from past experience in the 2000's to be no different to the Conservatives with welfare benefits. I did hope I would be wrong but it seems not. In fact they could be worse. Let's hope not!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Kevin · 27 days ago
      @MJ It was Labour that started the ESA changes and the Tories fine tuned it to cause even more misery. I personally don't like to call them Labour anymore and it should be renamed to the Tony B Liar party
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Rik · 28 days ago
    It’s just been announced that Rachel Reeves is planning to raise social rents by more than inflation for the next 10 years. This next 5 years is going to be far worse than anything the conservatives had planned.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      mrfibro · 26 days ago
      @Rik Whats reeves reason for doing this?  Is it to get people to try to buy affordable homes, in order to free social housing up.  Theres no affordable housing to buy in Britain.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      mrfibro · 27 days ago
      @Anon Looks like were all heading back into the 17th, 18th century, but having to live a life with a 21st century cost of living.  
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Rik · 27 days ago
      @keepingitreal Yep. And I’m sure this completely unnecessary extra spending on housing benefit/UC housing, will be used as a reason why disability benefits need ti be cut etc. They are deliberately creating a problem.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Anon · 27 days ago
      @Aw They are expecting to push (force) as many of us into work as they can. There is going to be much more engagement with the jobcentre than before, Liz Kendall has already stated this. She also said there won't be an option of life on benefits. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Aw · 27 days ago
      @Rik So any transitional protection will be gone even faster then. By my reckoning mine will be gone in 2-3 yrs as it is, how do they expect us to absorb a £200 per month loss of income at all, let alone so quickly? I despair...
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Am · 28 days ago
    Guardian reporting benefit cuts in Reeves October budget. Why did I bother voting?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Matt · 27 days ago
      @Am The turnout was historically very low for a General Election. Due to FPTP and reform doing well, Starmer got a 174 majority with 35% of the vote. We're heading towards America where only about 50% vote in a Presidential election. What happened to Truss proved to most of us that the real power is in the City, and not in Parliament 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    James · 28 days ago
    Faced with the choice between changing one's mind and proving that there is no need to do so, almost everyone gets busy on the proof.
    -John Kenneth Galbraith
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      keepingitreal · 28 days ago
      @James Shame they changed the schedule for esa/esa+housing benefit uc managed migration from 2028 to...whatever it is/might be now. Obviously couldn't be arsed with the proof bit.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    (No) hope · 29 days ago
    I struggle to comprehend the thinking behind policy that, during a cost of living crisis that shows no sign of abating, today’s news reports further rises this autumn to energy bills, and yet we continue to pursue cruel policy to reduce or take away the incomes from the already poorest and hardest hit in society, to pay for a fictional financial black hole and financial deficits that your failed policies have caused. Is the aim to drive even more people into poverty?within six months of being elected? The so called party that is meant to represent the ordinary and under privileged? Awful state of modern day Britain and its politics.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      MJ · 27 days ago
      @(No) hope They have deceived everyone, wolves in sheep's clothing, although to be honest I was dubious of them before the election, just hoped I was wrong. Worse than I thought!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      mrfibro · 28 days ago
      @DJ Typical double standards.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      DJ · 28 days ago
      @(No) hope And yet they promised our energy bills would be cut by up to £300. Also, they are claiming on expenses to pay their energy bills in their second homes.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Darren · 1 months ago
    They won't slow it down or postpone it because it's going to save them money. They don't give a toss about the disabled.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Matt · 24 days ago
      @Anon I pity the poor sods who will be manning the phones. I've worked as a customer service adviser and the level of abuse can be awful. Just multiply it tenfold for the DWP. 

      I do wish Governments, of any persuasion, would stop the fiction of 'good jobs'. The vacancies that exist are for crap jobs, little pay, long hours and bad management. 

      It also explains the "scrounger' prejudice amongst what Americans call 'the working poor'. Remember politicians use focus groups, and base their policies around the views expressed 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      mrfibro · 28 days ago
      @Old mother They will find the staff.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Anon · 29 days ago
      @Old mother I live in the north east and there have been a lot of DWP jobs advertised for call centre staff dealing with UC claims. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Old mother · 1 months ago
      @Darren They may not have the staff though. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Rik · 1 months ago
    From tomorrow’s observer newspaper: “the work and pensions secretary pledges today, as she warns that rising welfare spending is unsustainable. In her first newspaper interview since taking the role, Liz Kendall told the Observer that a drastic overhaul was required to fix a "broken" back-to-work system, warning that the number of people who are economically inactive was now bigger than the population of London.
    Describing her task as "one of the biggest challenges the country faces", she said that she would be bringing in major reforms to a system that was failing too many of the near record 2.8 million people now out of work due to long-term sickness.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      James · 28 days ago
      @CarolK The study of money, above all other fields in economics, is one in which complexity is used to disguise truth or to evade truth, not to reveal it. The process by which banks create money is so simple the mind is repelled.
      -John Kenneth Galbraith
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      James · 28 days ago
      @CarolK Agreed! Hayekian economics that were brought in 44 years ago has clearly failed in the redistribution of wealth and more glaringly stagnation and inflation! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      mrfibro · 28 days ago
      @CarolK Exactly debt = money, but not for us.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      CarolK · 29 days ago
      @James Ultimately the government is trying to run itself like a household and the government isn't a household - it can make its own money and we cannot. That might increase inflation but not if it's done properly. The City also needs government debt so the government can sell bonds to them, which means the government LIKES having national debt all the time, and all this talk of trying to reduce the debt is rubbish! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      James · 29 days ago
      @Michael Yes I do and have a university degree on it but you seem to be trolling around here
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    MariW · 1 months ago
    From The Observer

    It’s time to end blame culture over benefits bill, says Labour minister

    Exclusive: Work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall pledges to halt Tory ‘salami slicing’ of benefits, but Labour under fire for union pay deals

    Michael Savage Policy editor

    Sat 17 Aug 2024 19.00 BST

    Share

    Labour will end the blame culture aimed at people out of work and will not repeat the “salami slicing” of the benefits bill pursued by the Tories, the work and pensions secretary pledges today, as she warns that rising welfare spending is unsustainable.

    In her first newspaper interview since taking the role, Liz Kendall told the Observer that a drastic overhaul was required to fix a “broken” back-to-work system, warning that the number of people who are economically inactive was now bigger than the population of London.

    Describing her task as “one of the biggest challenges the country faces”, she said that she would be bringing in major reforms to a system that was failing too many of the near record 2.8 million people now out of work due to long-term sickness.

    She accused a series of Conservative politicians of using anti-welfare rhetoric against people in need of help. Amid concerns within Labour that welfare will be squeezed as part of chancellor Rachel Reeves’s first budget this autumn, Kendall said she would not make reform “merely about cuts and blame”.

    Citing large projected increases in welfare spending, she added: “I do not think it’s sustainable when you’re seeing those levels of increases, but we can do something about it.”

    She criticised the previous government’s approach, which she described as “salami slicing cuts [and] divisive rhetoric that blames people and doesn’t support them.

    “We’ve never seen more people written off. The last parliament was the worst for economic inactivity on record. It is for us to put this right. But we will need big reforms and big changes. I know people worry about this, but I want to say, we are on your side. We are not going to write you off and blame you. We take our responsibilities seriously. We’re going to bust a gut to give you the support you need to build a better life.”

    Reeves has already made it clear that she will make “tough decisions” on welfare spending in the forthcoming budget, describing spending as “out of control”. Over the next six years, spending on incapacity and disability benefits for working age people is projected to rise to £63bn – a real-terms increase of almost 48%. However, some MPs are wary of any squeeze that would only save money in the short term.

    Kendall repeatedly took aim at the rhetoric used by a series of Conservative figures. While former chancellor George Osborne talked about “shirkers”, Rishi Sunak denounced a “sicknote culture”. When he was work and pensions secretary, Mel Stride said some people did not work because they felt “down and bluesy”.



    Chancellor of the exchequer Rachel Reeves will be making ‘tough decisions’ on welfare spending. 

    “All of the talk about strivers versus scroungers or shirkers – I think the people who really shirk their responsibility were the people who last sat in this office because they wrote off millions of people who actually want to work,” Kendall said. “It matters deeply for individuals and their ability to have a decent life for themselves. It matters to our economy because it is the major thing holding back growth. But it also matters to the public finances as well.”

    Plans to curb welfare spending come with the Tories criticising the government for reaching a series of pay deals designed to end strikes. A backdated pay offer for train drivers was announced last week: it followed the chancellor’s £9bn package to increase public sector pay and a major increase offered to junior doctors.

    Stride said his party would “take no lectures from the government, who have failed at the first hurdle to signal that they will get a grip on welfare spending”.

    “Labour have made their priorities clear – taxpayer-funded above-inflation pay rises demanded by their union paymasters and scrapping welfare reform that could save the taxpayer £12bn – all while axing winter fuel payments for pensioners. Without taking much-needed action to make the welfare bill sustainable, Labour will once again ramp up taxes.”


    In a frank assessment of the challenge she faces, Kendall said she was “under no illusions” about the size of her task. She said the current system “is broken. It’s not working. But I know that our work coaches are full of passion and ideas about doing things differently.”

    Kendall suggested there would be serious reforms to jobcentres, freeing them up from monitoring benefits and linking them with the NHS to help those struggling to work for health reasons. “We have got to put jobcentres back to where they were initially meant to be, which is a public employment service,” she said. “That isn’t how they are. Their overwhelming focus is on monitoring, assessing and policing benefits. We’ve got 16,000 work coaches and we want them to do what they say on the tin.”

    She also committed to a review of universal credit, new plans to tackle economic inactivity led by local areas and mayors and a “youth guarantee” ensuring every 18-21-year-old could get training, an apprenticeship or support to find work. More details of her plans will be unveiled in a white paper in the autumn.

    Kendall would not be drawn on whether she was pushing for the Treasury to end the two-child limit on benefits that most experts believe is a driving force behind child poverty. However, the Leicester West MP said that the government’s child poverty taskforce had met for the first time last week and that the issue was a priority.

    “I have got one in three kids in Leicester growing up poor,” she said. “On one of my last visits to one of my primary schools, they’d had to go out to find a young boy who had not been at school. When they found him at home, all he had was a bowl of salad cream for breakfast. I know in my bones how appalling the situation is.

    “I will only make a commitment when I know that we can deliver on it. The last Labour government did incredible things to tackle poverty, but it was so easily overturned by the Tories. We are determined that our strategy will not only take immediate action, but this time it will last.”



    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      MJ · 27 days ago
      @James "The blame culture is what the politicians do, they take action on something like cutting the NI contributions and then blame the disabled and ill for the blackhole they themselves created. "

      You are right about politicians blaming others but you just made that example up. Who is blaming the "blackhole" on the disabled and ill? The Tories aren't as they don't claim there was one, and Labour aren't blaming the disabled and ill for it, they are however using it as an excuse to cut benefits. If they do, they are to blame for the cuts and shouldn't start blaming the previous government for it like you are, 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      MJ · 27 days ago
      @James Although it didn't benefit every taxpayer it did benefit most. And if Labour isn't happy they cut always return it to its previous rate. 

      But you don't moan about a so called budgetary 'blackhole' then give out big pay raises that increases that apparent blackhole by a further 10 million including 28 billion on green projects.  

      They are using that imaginary blackhole as an excuse to cut benefits, already WFA, no doubt all other benefits are in the queue ready for the chop and people are falling for their excuse that they already had planned.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Michael · 1 months ago
      @James There isn't, and never was a 'blackhole' - not 1 credible economist has come out and verified that claim. Not one.

      Surely, please, God, people aren't so financially illiterate to believe Labour cutting pensioners heating money and soon to raise taxes, is to fill that 'hole'!? - it's a (pathetic attempt) at a ruse so they can fund their union paymasters ridiculous salary increases.

      Nothing more, nothing less.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      James · 1 months ago
      @MariW Just wanted to point out the 2% cut to NI which did not benefit every single tax payer was worth 10 billion pounds. It does not take a fool to add up the cuts to the national budget which creates blackholes and also the slowdown in the economy which will also cause cuts to the budget which makes the politicians responsible for their fowl ups
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Bob · 1 months ago
    I had letter from my local Nottingham city council saying the UC migration from ESA to UC will start from January 2025. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      HRH · 29 days ago
      @Bob the help to move to universal credit website is saying Autumn TBC  for ESA and/or HB migration to UC 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Old mother · 29 days ago
      @Anonymous My local council said it had been delayed in our area. South. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Old mother · 1 months ago
      @Bob Not surprising. They don’t have capacity in their systems to rush this through without more problems. Such a mess. And the money that’s been thrown at it. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Anonymous · 1 months ago
      @Bob Does that mean that the entire process of UC migration might be about to be temporarily postponed?
We use cookies

We use cookies on our website. Some of them are essential for the operation of the site, while others help us to improve this site and the user experience (tracking cookies). You can decide for yourself whether you want to allow cookies or not. Please note that if you reject them, you may not be able to use all the functionalities of the site.