Reform’s new would-be chancellor Robert Jenrick has begun his tenure with a speech calculated to stir up hatred against claimants.

In a press conference yesterday, he told supporters that “Reform will always protect the vulnerable” but went on to define vulnerable people as “those who worked hard but have fallen on hard times.”  No mention of those who have never been able to work.

He went on to attack claimants with conditions like ADHD, saying:

“The number claiming benefits for an attention disorder has more than doubled since covid. We all know a significant number of these claims are spurious and that we’re now just giving up on over half a million young people who are being discarded as unfit for work.”

In fact, according to the NHS, ADHD is “under-recognised, under-diagnosed and under-treated”.

Jenrick then turned to claimants with mental health conditions:

“We will stop those with mild anxiety, depression and similar conditions from claiming disability benefits and instead do everything we can to encourage them into the dignity of work.  We will reinstate in-person assessments and require clinical diagnosis to weed out those who are choosing a life on benefits.”

And no attack on disabled claimants would be complete without denigrating users of the Motability scheme:

“We will end the abuse of the Motability scheme where expensive cars are handed out for conditions like tennis elbow and paid for by working people who could never afford those same cars themselves.”

In reality, nobody gets higher rate mobility for tennis elbow.

Somewhere between 275,000 and 480,000 people in the UK develop tennis elbow each year and in a tiny proportion of these cases it can develop into a serious condition. And in an even tinier number of cases it will be serious enough to give rise to a claim for benefits.

At October 2025 there were 1,997,967 claimants in receipt of the enhanced rate of the mobility component, making them eligible to join the Motability scheme if they choose.

Of these, just 116 are listed by the DWP as having tennis elbow as their main disabling condition.

But every one of those 116 claimants will have at least one other condition which actually affects their mobility.  It’s just that a DWP case manager – not a health professional - has chosen to list lateral epicondylitis (tennis elbow) as the main disabling one.

It’s worth noting that 112 claimants get standard PIP mobility for tennis elbow.  But the standard rate isn’t awarded for physical health.  Instead, it is for people with sensory, mental health or neurodevelopmental issues. So, clearly some DWP case managers are selecting tennis elbow as the main disabling condition even where other – probably more serious - issues are present.

But Jenrick isn’t interested in accuracy or fairness.  And there were no concrete proposals in this speech.  No indication of how Reform would change the Motability scheme or reduce the number of claims for ADHD or mental health issues.  

Instead, this was just more disabled claimant bashing, with the aim of picking up a few more votes in this month’s by-election and May’s local elections.

We just hope that the 10,000 PIP claimants and the almost nine thousand UC health claimants in Gorton and Denton get to hear what Jenrick has to say about them, before they decide how to cast their votes.

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    · 4 hours ago
    He sounds just like a Tory or a Labour party minister. The three parties constantly all use the same rhetoric. And on occasion the LibDems join in. It is the political consensus and thanks to the UK media appears to have public support. That the ill and disabled are no longer viewed as deserving but as malingerers. Only the Greens and Your Party and a small number of Labour rebels buck the trend. And that is not going to be enough to stop the tide.

    So it is going to come down to who is still going to be considered genuinely deserving. The LibDems just claim there is mass abuse of the system with lots of people receiving disability benefits who should not. It is unclear who they think are genuine. Reform and the Tories seems to consider people with severe mental illnesses as genuine. Severe defined as mental illnesses with psychosis (hallucinations and/or delusions). And also post traumatic stress disorder presumably because they think of military veterans. And people with intellectual disabilities or autism. Labour does not appear to even consider the above groups to be necessarily genuine and deserving of protection from cuts. So we wait with a sense of impending doom for Labour's various supposedly independent expert reviews and co-produced reviews to report later this year.

    What sets Reform and the Tories apart at the moment is their plan to remove benefits from people who are not British nationals. I say at the moment because Labour is also considering doing this. UK politics is becoming evermore right wing with our media seeming cheerleading this trend. To the point I wonder how can you define politics that targets disabled people, non British nationals, trans people, Muslims. As anything other than far right. Regardless of if they call themselves Labour, Conservative, Reform, Restore UK, Advance UK, UKIP, British Democrats, Homeland, Britain First, Patriotic Alternative, etcetera.   
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    · 4 hours ago
    I find it astonishing that he is allowed to get away with these exaggerated statements uncontested by the media. The words he uses are nothing more than click bait for the Reform voters who " WORK really HARD " in their low paid jobs but feel they're carrying disabled people & immigrants. How do we educate genuinely good people who are struggling because of the effects of Monopoly Capitalism and not the rubbish, Jenrick and his peers suggest. I don't have favour with any political party at this time. It's a total shambles with no rainbow in sight. 
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      · 2 hours ago
      @Jollies Maybe we should all vote for the Greens in the next General election.
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    · 5 hours ago
    The greens are odds on the win gorton Plaid Cymru should get wales and snp for Scotland mays locals should give a good idea just depends on if people
    vote tactically in England it’s definitely between reform and the Green Party Labour is finished for decades now everybody hates them and Starmer too