Reform UK declared war on PIP claimants and on advice agencies in a press conference last week, as they promised to slash the benefits bill by more than £9 billion a year.  

Amongst their plans are:

  • stopping PIP for 80-90% of claimants with depression and/or anxiety, instead these claimants will be put on a fast track to work, involving talking therapy,
  • incentivising PIP assessors to fail applicants,
  • stopping alleged “gaming” of PIP assessments by Citizens Advice,
  • replacing Motability cars with dangerous three wheel trikes.

Dodgy stats and appeals to patriotism

MP Lee Anderson MP and Reform UK head of policy Zia Yusuf justified their attack on PIP by claiming that awards, especially for depression and anxiety, are costing the taxpayer too much and ruining young people’s lives.  Anderson argued:

“We cannot and must not allow our young people to be labelled as disabled because they may have the odd bout of anxiety.  It’s not fair on the taxpayer and its not fair on our young people.  We are literally throwing them on the scrapheap.”

Yusuf, who argued that PIP was a “de facto out-of-work benefit” because only one in six people who get PIP are in work, took a similar line claiming:

“Pip staggeringly now accounts for 1% of UK GDP, not public spending, 1% of GDP is being spent on PIP. . . New claimants for PIP for under 25s in this country have tripled in 5 years, so we are betraying our young people. Reassessments are basically not happening anymore, so these young people are being labelled, they are being tossed onto a scrap heap for the rest of their lives.”

In fact, the number of PIP awards for claimants under 25 has gone up not by 300% in the last five years, but by 80%, according to the DWP’s Statxplore, from 232,512 to 419,222.

And as for reviews “basically not happening anymore”, that doesn’t appear to be anywhere near the truth either. In fact, in the year to July 2025, there were 697,000 reviews.  Of these, 63,000 involved claimants aged under 25.

Anderson also framed working as a patriotic duty, saying:  “. . . if you want to live a good life in a great country, then you must do your bit.  You must get up in the morning and go to work for your family, for your community and for your country.”

War on mental health

In order to save claimants and the country, Reform say that they aim to stop the awards of 80-90% of all those claiming PIP for:

  • Anxiety
  • Depression
  • Mixed anxiety and depression

Instead they will be placed on a Fast Track to Work Programme which will be centred around talking therapy. 

As of July 2025 there were 572,000 people receiving PIP for these conditions meaning that Reform are aiming to remove around half a million PIP awards for mental health.

Anderson explains:

“We are going to end payments for non-serious anxiety disorders in terms of PIP and move those people on to a fast-track to work programme . . . by 2029 it will save £9 billion a year.”

“Our assumptions are, we worked with the Centre for Social Justice to come up with this forecast, around 20% - somewhere between 10% and 20% - of those half a million we would expect to be recategorized into a different welfare category.”

Anyone older claimant comforting themselves that Reform are only targeting young people, should be aware that just 58,000 of claimants with these conditions are under 25.  So almost nine out of ten of those projected to lose their award under a Reform UK government would be 25 and over.

And those half a million former PIP claimants will also lose eligibility for the health element of universal credit under Labour’s plan to abolish the work capability assessment.

However, some mental health conditions would be entirely exempt from the Fast Track To Work according to Anderson:

“We would probably disapply schizophrenia, bipolar, PTSD, personality disorder, I think we can all accept they are very serious mental health illnesses.”

There was a great deal of detail missing from these headline grabbing proposals. For example, Anderson failed to explain who would decide which claimants have “non-serious anxiety disorders” or how they would do this.  If it is to be left to XXXX

There was also no explanation of whether the and Fast Track to Employment based on talking therapy would be voluntary or mandatory.

If mandatory, given that these claimants would already have lost their PIP, there was no explanation of whether, for example, universal credit would be sanctioned instead, if they received it.  And, again if mandatory, there was no explanation of how the ethical and legal considerations of forcing people to undergo therapy with threats of benefits sanctions would be dealt with.

But one thing was clear, at least in Anderson’s view:  this plan does not amount to cutting PIP:

“It’s not cutting PIP benefits, it’s getting people who are able-bodied back to work.  The genuine people who are disabled suffering things like schizophrenia, bipolar, PTSD, personality disorder, they will be kept on PIP and they will be supported.”

War on advice agencies

Anderson is also set on demonising the organisation that unquestionably does most to help people claim PIP:

“Before I came into politics I worked for Citizens Advice Bureau and we were the first point of contact really for people who wanted to claim PIP, or DLA as it was at the time, and we used to fill the forms out for clients before that application form went in, and I can tell you now we were gaming the system.  It was a competition between the adviser, ie the person who’s filling the form out and the DWP

“And I can tell you I know people who worked for the CAB, they’d got a 100% hit rate on a benefit form.

“I could take the fittest man in Ashfield and we could get them a 100% claim on DLA.  That’s how skilful the advisers were at filling these forms out.  It has to stop.”

We’re not really sure what “gaming the system” means in this context.  If, for example, you encourage a claimant to complete a DLA or PIP form thinking only about their worst day, but their condition is a variable one, that’s not gaming the system, that’s just fraud. 

You are also doing your client a huge disservice.  Because they are the ones most likely to be prosecuted if they claimed that they could only walk 20 metres without symptoms such as pain or fatigue seven days a week, when in fact that is only true on two days a week and they can walk more than a hundred metres on most days and they are observed doing so.

But if you are simply ensuring that your client takes into account such things as how long an activity takes them and whether they can do it to a satisfactory standard, that’s not gaming the system, that’s just explaining the law.

What we are sure about, however, is that if you knowingly got a “100% claim on DLA” or PIP for a perfectly fit person, then you absolutely unquestionably would be taking part in a conspiracy to defraud.

We do not believe that Citizens Advice train staff to put themselves or their clients at risk in this way.  So when Anderson says “It has to stop”, we hope very much to hear from Citizens Advice  that it doesn’t have to stop because it never started. 

If, however, they let this accusation stand, they risk serious harm to both their funding and their good name as they become yet another enemy of the people, along with the likes of  judges and lawyers.  And PIP claimants will lose another of the few sources of free support available to them.

Rigging the assessment

Reform say they will make all PIP assessments face-to-face, because the success rate is lower for these assessments compared to remote assessments.

But, alarmingly, another way that Reform wants to cut the benefits bill is by “incentivising” assessors to fail PIP applicants. 

In case Reform UK should deny that this is what they meant, here is the exchange between a GB News reporter and Yusuf:

[GB News]  “Assessing seems to be right at the heart of this, to try and work out who is seriously suffering from anxiety and who is not.  Can I ask who will do the assessing and how will you make sure that those people are incentivised to get people back to work because Fraser Nelson’s documentary revealed that very junior civil servants are essentially being paid to get through as many claims as possible.”

[Yusuf] “That’s exactly right. So part of our proposals will be to fix the assessment process.  So that is one problem, So you’ve got to look at the incentives for the assessors who, not necessarily universally but in a lot of cases, probably the majority of cases, are being incentivised on volume not on perhaps the incentives we would think about a) for the life outcomes of the people involved and [b)]for the taxpayer. The nice thing about this is that in some ways those two are very much aligned.”

There’s a certain amount of nudging and winking in this statement, but given Reform’s belief that PIP ruins lives and that the taxpayer is bearing too great a burden, the only way the two goals could be “very much aligned” is by incentivising the assessors to fail claimants. 

War on Motability

And in case anyone believes Reform only have awards based on mental health in their sights, here’s Anderson on Motability, in response to a question from the Daily Express journalist, Christian Calgie:

“The Motability scheme has got completely out of hand.  One in five new cars on the road now are a Motability car. 

“I know people through doing this job and working at the CAB before, that will claim PIP the higher rate mobility for a family member and that family member will never get to use that car apart from maybe once or twice a year.  They go to hospital in the car and the rest of the time the family are driving about in a brand new BMW on their drive. Its not fair. . .  I remember back in the day if you were on disability and you wanted a car from the state, it was a blue three wheeler.  Anybody remember those?  What’s wrong with that?  Lets go back to that. You’ll quote me on that, won’t you, Calgie?” [Laughs aloud] 

In fact, the blue three-wheeler Invacar was so dangerous that they stopped making them in 1981 and the few still on the road in 2003 were recalled.

They were underpowered, unstable in high winds, unreliable when braking, had a flimsy fibreglass body and had only one door, which could make getting out very difficult when they overturned.  They also had the petrol tank mounted under the front bonnet, increasing the risk of a fire in a collision.

Racing driver Graham Hill road tested one and said afterwards “ I was so appalled at what I found that ever since then I have tried everything within my power to publicise the fact that such vehicles should not be allowed on the road.”

In addition, they could only legally hold one person, so would be useless for anyone who needed someone else to drive them.

But, for Lee Anderson, bringing them back would just be a bit of a laugh.

More to come

Reform are only just getting started on their war on claimants.

As they explained last week:

“Reform will have sweeping welfare reforms that we will announce in the coming months and years.”

But, if you are a disabled claimant or carer, you have probably already heard enough to be certain that a vote for Reform is a vote for ignorance, discrimination, bullying and, for many people, a deep dive into poverty.

You can watch the Reform UK PIP press conference on Facebook.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 days ago
    The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change think tank is influential on Labour Party policy. It's disability welfare recommendations are:

    Remove Motability tax exemptions except for the 10% of Motability venicles that are adapted for disabled use.

    For claimants with mental health conditions reduce eligibility to PIP Mobility component. Change the eligibility threshold for planning and making familiar journeys to never able.

    Shift future welfare spending from benefits to prevention of ill health and disability unemployment.

    Use AI to do benefit assessments and identify benefit fraud.

    Review disability payment amounts so they reflect the individual needed extra costs due to disability and are not being used as income supplements.

    Move away from disability cash benefits and instead provide support (payment for specific goods and services) or direct support for specific costs of disability. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 13 days ago
      @John It's always worth knowing what that war criminal, Blair, is up to. He lied about WMD's. He's received millions from advising ruthless dictators after leaving parliament. Anything he'd involved in is purely about making lots of dosh.
      It's no coincidence that BLiar is so enthusiastic about ID cards when his billionaire mate, Larry Ellison, in the US donated a ton of cash to his institute. Guess who's company is hoping to run the ID card system?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 16 days ago
      @John To down voters I am not agreeing with or endorsing the recommendations of the Tony Blair Institute. I am making people aware of them as the think tank is influential in shaping Labour party policy. So is likely to be indicative of the direction Starmer and co want to go in.

      Labour policy tends to be influenced by The Tony Blair Institute for Global Change.
      Conservative policy tends to be influenced by The Centre for Social Justice founded by Conservative Ian Duncan Smith.
      Reform policy tends to be influenced by The Centre for a Better Britain founded by rich Reform party donors.
      All political parties policies tend to be influenced by The Policy Exchange run by right wing free market capitalists.

      Look at these think tanks policy suggestions then look at what policies the political parties propose. The think tanks exist to either lobby for policies or to create "impartial" evidence to support policies and provide "intellectual" legitimize what are in reality ideologically motivated policies. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 days ago
    I just want to clarify one point. For the life of me, I cannot understand why the Government are resisting having contained within the annual review the question of whether harm is being done, because that is, to be fair, the only way we will learn whether the legislation is operating in the way the Government wish it to, and then whether any changes in the system are needed. When we had the work capability assessment, it took us 10 years and more than a thousand suicides before people accepted that there was a problem, because there was no review mechanism publicly available. That is all this amendment is asking for. All I am asking for today is for the Minister to put on the record very clearly that it is perfectly appropriate for the independent reviewer to look at the harms that could have been created by this legislation.

    John McDonnell’s words, from the Fraud, Error and Recovery Bill Hansard Report.

    What happens next?
    The bill returned to the House of Commons for consideration of Lords amendments on Wednesday 5 November. The House of Commons have returned the bill to the House of Lords disagreeing with their amendments. The Lords debate is 11 November. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 days ago
    I work for Citizen's Advice, in a paid role. I would have lost my job if I falsified a clients PIP claim, or at all twisted the truth to make them eligible, or anything of the sort. I'd have been sacked, in disgrace, and lost the respect of my colleagues entirely. 

    We do have to "assess" the client as a PIP assessor does whilst form filling for them, using the same standards (but be a lot nicer about it) and we do have to genuinely consider whether a client does meet a descriptor to ensure the right information goes on the paper... we can't twist things, or make things up. 

    If a client doesn't seem like they are eligible, we are supposed to complete the form anyway with what they tell us, but tell them they're not likely to score enough points to get an award.

    There is absolutely 0 benefit to us lying on a claim. We don't get anything for it, and if we're caught lying we could not only bring ourselves into disgrace, but the organisation too.

    If Anderson was committing fraud, that says more about him totally as an individual, not CA, and certainly not the rest of us. That alone should tell you the nature of this political party.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 17 days ago
      @Danny Danny, just shows what out and out liars they are. Not to be trusted at all costs. 
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      · 17 days ago
      @Danny They are a party of division and hate run by dinosaurs for dinosaurs. I really believe and hope most Brits are fair and decent people who can see past this hatred and turning us against each other that is all Reform can offer.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 days ago
    I hope people who are reliant on benefits will take time to think and perhaps research a little as to what a Reform party in government would do. 
    If for instance you are concerned about migration if you lend them your support and vote they already have plans for people on benefits not just migrants. Even if they somehow stop migration which after the Tories conned us with Brexit will be almost impossible they will still have sights on people on benefits.
    Its up to people to vote as they wish but what benefit would an end to the migrant crisis do for them if they find themselves losing their benefit lifeline have no income no chance of appeal or reapplication trying to find a job in an econmy that simply does not care or want disabled people.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 days ago
    It's clear that these 2 members of reform don't have any disabled members of their own families, for if they did, they wouldn't be so heartless. It's so much harder when you are disabled, you have to fight 10 times more to get anywhere, if you're lucky. Where are all these jobs coming from that they are planning to force PIP claimants into? Labour has tried going down that route and they haven't got the right answers. Hopefully reform will start making some enormous slip ups and the voting public will see them for what they really are......
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 days ago
    I see the Torygraph has published an article entitled Work is Good for Us. Try telling that to the millions on mine wage jobs with bad management and psychologically bullying 'work colleagues'. These people are particularly nasty to disabled staff (and one of the reasons more considerate employers are reluctant to employ due to potential HR issues).

    If I could financially retire now, and do voluntary work, where you'd be appreciated, I would.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 14 days ago
      @Annatar Couldn't agree more. @Matt is spot on and so is @Annatar. I have CP but it was work that gave me PTSD! I loved my first volunteer job but my parents were totally groomed into thinking I would be safe there by the he people that ran it. 
      At least two of them had worked on care and knew what they could get away with, the police knew there were dodgy men hanging around to pick up kids but the safeguarding was utterly pants. It was child sexual exploitation at its worst. I wasn't actually assaulted until I was 17 but in a volunteer role there is no come back anyway. There were some great kids but the adults were either blind to the grooming and drugs or up to their necks in it. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 17 days ago
      @Matt Works abit like school really tossed together with people you wouldn't normally mix with,some of them bully boys.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 days ago
    The Reform party use the Centre for a Better Britain think tank.

    Their policy recommendations on welfare benefits are:

    "• Tightening the eligibility criteria for disability benefits and ensuring that all assessments and reassessments are carried out on a one-to-one basis;
    • Reinforcing the requirements for claimants to be looking for work to qualify for out of work benefits;
    • Controlling out-of-work benefits if more than one offer of employment is declined;
    • Limiting the level of out of work benefits over long periods of unemployment. For example limiting the new Unemployment Insurance (which replaces Job Seekers Allowance and Employment Support Allowance) claim period to 6 months would reduce spending by £1.4bn annually
    • Limiting benefits to UK nationals (and EU citizens given permanent leave to stay under the succession agreement, unless a qualifying period and amount of NI contributions has been met)."

    "Setting goals for claimant number reduction and the overall budget available for claims would underpin projected cost savings. These would also be based on 2019 levels"

    "Total claimants across all categories have increased to over 6 million currently from under 4 million in 201914. For example, PIPs (Personal Independence Payments) claims have increased from a little over 2 million in 201915 to almost 4 million today" 

    "Overall spending on disability and incapacity benefits for working age adults has increased from £34.6bn in 2019 to £53.9bn in 2025, £19.3bn over the period a 56% increase"

    So they want to cut PIP claimant numbers by just under 50% and disability benefits spending by over a third. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 9 days ago
      @Pissed Off Cripple Yes welfare spending has increased significantly since 2019 but so has ALL other governmental spending .i.e. education, nhs, police, defence/military, and elderly care. This is mainly due to inflation which typically increases the costs of wages, goods and services by 2-6% a year. As a percentage of GDP (the country's income) we're spending no more now than we did in 2019 which was around 10%. However, 55% of the total welfare bill is spent on pensioners which includes the state pension, pension credit, winter fuel allowance, free travel pass, and care costs. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 14 days ago
      @John Spending may  have gone up but that's because they keep putting billions into the likes of Atos and Maximus all the  money into assessments and assessments and reinventing the wheel. It's not disabled people seeing the money! 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    In other news. OFCOM is considering giving people on DWP means tested benefits eight second class stamps and five first class stamps per year. Total value £15.46
    Alternative ideas are people on DWP means tested benefits registering with the Royal Mail to buy stamps at a discount. Or having people on DWP benefits able to use free post to send letters to the DWP, HMRC, NHS.

    The right wing media is outraged at the largesse. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    Just in case anyone is worried about UC migration telephone interviews/calls. I arranged a three way call with a CAB advisor. It worked really well because the advisor had copies of all my documentation, as did I and the DWP. We discussed what might crop up in the call beforehand. And he could step in and advocate on my behalf if/when I became confused (chemo brain fog!) or couldn't find the relevant info among the copious documents the DWP demands.
    I really hope this info helps and this service is available in your area. You can arrange these three way calls from your home, while the CAB advisor is at one of the CAB offices. It's so convenient and supportive. And it often suits the (very busy) CAB advisors too as they might be working in different locations on different days.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @george25 Sorry for the late reply. It's really important to contact your local CAB or a local advice organisation who can support you. They will be able to advise you about how to present your claim. There is also excellent advice and guidelines here at Benefits and Work. There are also services that support people with specific disabilities and illnesses. And advice service for older people too such as Age UK. Your local MP may also be supportive if you feel that you have been treated unfairly by the DWP. I hope that info helps.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 17 days ago
      @Spectralis Hi , I'm just about to have this next week , im just concerned I may not have all info i need ? When talking to the dwp adviser,  what kind of info will I need ? 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    We won't be voting for reform
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    A word of reassurance in the torrid fear of, and rage against Reform: Caerphilly. Let's not get sucked into the self aggrandising hysteria that is the barrage of Farage.

    Obviously Plaid Cymru is a Welsh nationalist party, so might not influence the vote outside Wales, although the Caerphilly constituency sentiment 'that's not who we are' in response to Reform's extremism could well resonate elsewhere.

    What supreme hypocrisy, and irony, too, that Reform is an English nationalist party seeking to find a home in another country. No surprise that someone graffitied on the Reform Caerphilly office: "NOW U CAN F*CK OFF HOME". They used the Anglo Saxon there, Nigel, just so you'd get it.



    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 18 days ago
      @Frances Fantastic post! I love the graffiti. This shows that when there's a progressive alternative to Reform people vote for taxing the super rich and supporting disabled people.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    Wow! Just watched the Mamdani campaign and victory report on Channel 4 News. It's so uplifting and inspiring. We are not powerless we can fight back and celebrate our lives despite the bully boy tactics of Reform and Starmer's Labour.
    But we can't wait for UK Labour or the US Democrats to do it for us. Trump is hated judging by record numbers who voted against the Republicans this week.
    Trump won the US election this time with one of the lowest majorities of any US president despite his lies. We hold the power not Centrist/Neoliberal or Far Right politicians.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    I’m no raving lefty or anything but I think Reform need to reform their ideas on PIP. I’m certainly not voting for a party that will likely see me go into health poverty!
    I’ve already said this on social media but as you can guess, I’ve had some nasty comments thrown at me. I hope Reform’s PIP idea’s will get as much bad press as Labour’s PIP proposals and gets absolutely destroyed.
    To say I’m angry at them is an understatement.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 17 days ago
      @Me Reform peddle hate and division. Right wing politicians always find an enemy to point at and history has shown what can happen when hate grows.People like Farage a millionaire spits venom at minorities. He told us Brexit would solve our problems how wells that worked out.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 18 days ago
      @Me There's no such thing as a 'raving lefty' that's a slur used by the right wing to discredit sensible policies that benefit ordinary people. I'm a socialist, and proud of it.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    Sorry, I'm posting quite a bit on this issue. But I just want to nail Anderson and Reform's lies about people with mental illness.
    I have terminal cancer. I'm half way through 25 months of chemo. Before that bone marrow transplant and more chemo. I had to wear a back brace for a year otherwise my spine would have collapsed. I get depressed sometimes and take antidepressants but I receive a lot of support from Macmillan and my health care team.
    My friend, who I love and care about, does not have a physical disability. He was a teacher and lives on a work pension and doesn't claim benefits. I nearly lost him this year due to anxiety and depression. It hit him out of the blue and he struggled to get support that led him to try to take his own life (sorry if this is triggering.)
    The point I'm making is that mental illness can happen to anyone we love for multiple reasons. It is as real and dangerous as cancer or any other illness. Maybe I cope with it because I get a lot of support but the majority of people don't due to cuts in NHS services that Reform want to make worse.
    So when Anderson spouts on about pit working it makes me furious and I want to bury him under a slag heap. He is a disgrace to all the miners who fought Thatcher and lost their livelihoods. He had no pity for their plight then or the struggle of disabled people across the UK now.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    I’ve so had enough of all the witch hunting BS being said about disabled people and the BS stats and delibrate false incorrect information being said by idiots who know nothing about mental health and anxiety and other disabilities 

    Also the media is not helping by continuing to blame the uk financial state on disabled people and benefits 
    Such as in the bbc.com stating 

    The number of sick and disabled people out of work is putting the UK at risk of an "economic inactivity crisis" that threatens the country's prosperity, according to a new report.
    There were 800,000 more people out of work now than in 2019 due to health conditions, costing employers £85bn a year, according to the review by former John Lewis boss Sir Charlie Mayfield.

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    Ok answer is DONT VOTE FOR REFORM !! im certainly not going to now ,stuff Farage and sadly he us our mp in Clacton 🤬🤬
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      · 15 days ago
      @Suzy Does Farage spend much time in Clacton? you've more chance of finding him simpering to Donald Trump.
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      · 17 days ago
      @Bern400 Sadly they will vote for it then we will see their posts on Reddit under leopardsatemyface as the us under trump and Brexit has shown turkeys will vote for Xmas. It's everyone else I feel sorry for
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 18 days ago
      @Suzy Suzy, you are on the frontline. That's quite a difficult and intimidating situation because Reform will possibly concentrate their efforts there.
      But we have to cope with disability everyday so we're not lightweights! Even a small individual amount of opposition to Reform locally (whatever is achievable without worsening our health) is invaluable because it contributes to the larger campaign against Reform. Also we can find support from others locally who want to stop multi-millionaire Farage implementing a witch hunt against disabled people.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 18 days ago
      @Suzy @JR. Any disabled person voting for Reform or the Tories at the next general election are like turkeys voting for Christmas!!! Both these parties gleefully boast that they will slash PIP and UC (health element) spending by £billions per year by stopping disability benefits to hundred's of thousands of current claimants and restricting eligibility to hundred's of thousands, possibly millions, of future disabled claimants. But at the same time of taking £billions from the poorest and most vulnerable in society they openly brag about using these huge savings not to increase spending on public services like the NHS, Schools, Police, and Prisions, but instead to abolish Nom-Dom taxes, lower business taxes for multi-conglomerate companies like Amazon, Google and Facebook.  
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    · 18 days ago
    Reform are doing what all fascist parties do - Claiming to be "for the people", while working in the interests of the rich and powerful, and targeting the most vulnerable.

    I'd even vote Tory for the first time in my life if it meant that was the only way to keep Reform out in my constituency!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    We all know the reality of claiming PIP and keeping it For the vast majority this is not the picture we think of being talked about by Reform As someone one higher rate mobility I take offence that I would choose a badge over helping me deal with my disability Especially as I cannot get a car on the scheme Due to my PIP being required to pay for other items which help  my mobility needs Most people who can afford a deposit need it to be as small as possible So choose the car that fits their needs with the lowest deposit So called Luxury cars are out My needs are a car that I can get in and out of with enough room for my mobility scooter and/or wheelchair  A dangerous 3 wheeler would never do
    Many disabled people need help to complete their claim Without help they would not be able to claim Calling it a scam is a disgrace 

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    · 19 days ago
    All this is nothing but a continuation of the on-going theme for cutting public expenditure, to simply aid even more indirect transfer of wealth to the super elites, billionaires etc, instead of taxing them appropriately for funds to filter down to where they are desperately needed in society. Disgusting times we are living in now!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 19 days ago
    Basically, just don't vote for Farage and his band of vile individuals he calls his party. Yes, labour and the Tories have got their faults and it's unlikely that the lib dems will get into government but we cannot allow this fascist party to be allowed to govern. They need to get their facts right first before criticising people who's claiming PIP for mental health and consult the DWP for the actual figures. It just shows how incompetent they will be in running this country. They just cannot be trusted.