How do you think Labour will treat disabled claimants if, as seems increasingly likely, they form the next government?  Will they be better or worse than the Conservatives?

Last week’s Labour party manifesto left our readers divided on what the future might be like for disabled claimants under Labour.  The document made few references to benefits and gave no clues as to what its attitude would be to major issues such as ESA to UC migration, proposed Green paper changes to PIP or how exactly the WCA might be reformed.

Many readers felt that Labour was just being cautious, because any hint of being soft on claimants would be jumped on by the right-wing press.

Others thought that Labour were saying little because they do not have anything positive to say to disability benefits claimants.  Some think there is little difference between the two parties and some commentors even believe that Labour would be worse news for claimants than the Conservatives.

Certainly, the manifesto could have offered some hope to, for example Carer’s Allowance claimants. A change to the current cliff edge earnings limit would not have major cost implications.

And, to ensure claimant safety, Labour could have offered to look again at the very tight ESA to UC migration deadline imposed on the DWP by the Conservatives.  Delaying the transfer would not cost anything, given that it was previously delayed to 2028 to save money.

Labour could also have stated in the manifesto that they would look at the Green paper proposals for PIP, but that it was unlikely that a voucher system or a catalogue would play any part in any future plans.  Again, this would not have had cost implications.

None of these undertakings would have offered much in the way of ammunition to the right wing press, but all of them would have reassured claimants that Labour would give them some respite from the current relentless attacks.

On the other hand, no part of Labour’s plans include cutting benefits in order to raise cash for other purposes, such as tax cuts.

And, whilst they have said they will replace or reform the WCA, they have not suggested that they will reform PIP.

So, if benefits will play a major part in deciding who you will vote for, readers will have to make an educated guess as to what Labour might do based on minimal information.

Knowing what other claimants are thinking may be helpful in reaching a decision.

So, please take part in our poll to tell us whether you think life would be easier, harder or much the same under Labour rather than the Conservatives and, if you wish, give your reasons in the comments section below.

You can only vote once and we’ll publish the results on Monday 1 July.

This poll is now closed

 

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Hannah Walker · 16 days ago
    People need to realise - and soon - that Keir Starmer is a cuckoo in the Labour nest. He is not, despite his denials, a democratic socialist; nor does he have the slightest intention of becoming one in No 10. He is a ruthless bureaucrat suffused with an overwhelming need for personal power.  Look at his expulsion of many thousands of Labour members on spurious grounds. Look at his clinical and detached changes to the Labour Party ( for which he had no mandate)
    We will get nothing from a man who at every turn becomes more right wing than the Tories. 
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    Anonymous · 16 days ago
    Sadly Labour seem to want to be Tory lite, but anything other than Reform would be better than the Tory vendetta on the weak and the vulnerable!
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    Damien · 16 days ago
    Labour & Conservative are pretty much singing from the same hymn sheet - a uni party that pass the baton.

    Anybody ever remember Punch & Judy or theatre, as this is pretty much what goes on - and both these parties are merely puppets that are controlled by globalists.

    Anybody who thinks we live in a democratic society with any political party in this to assist us "peasants" are seriously mistaken.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    KayOtik · 16 days ago
    They're all the same. They don't understand what being disabled/long-term ill is like, because none of the politicians have gone through the benefits system themselves. Perhaps one of them should!
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    Vanessa · 16 days ago
    Both Tories & Labour are just 2 sides of the same coin. Reform just strikes me as paid opposition, so I suppose it'll have to be the Lib Dems for me.  Their slogans are all eerily reminiscent of the "work will set you free" that the Germans were using in 1939
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    Sandra · 16 days ago
    Makes no difference who ever gets in dusabled people will still have fight fir everthing and will still be treated wirse than third rate citizens
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Thelma & Louise · 16 days ago
    Labour will continue where the conservatives left off - they are remaining quiet as they don’t have an answer that they can fulfill - so make no promises therefore tell no lies!! These two are as bad as each other!! 
    The Labour Party is no longer what it was made up of!! 
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    Daren · 16 days ago
    New Labour is basically the red wing of the current tory party, most Labour mp's with any compassion have been moved or removed 
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    Richard Parker · 16 days ago
    I have 2 life long chronic illnesses and recently been diagnosed with cancer I am 61 with what both conservative and Labour are contemplating have caused great deal of stress and under the terms of these two parties do not give me any hope for the future 
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    Melissa · 16 days ago
    If they win, and it seems likely that they will, the mess the Conservatives have left will take them months
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    Jos Flassendale · 16 days ago
    The Labour party under Starmer is just as controlled by the establishment as the Conservative party. The clue is in Starmer's title of 'Sir'. 
    Democracy is a farce in this country.
     Trickle down economics has been proved to not work but we will continue to be subjected to such thinking under Labour.
     Disabled people are considered by them to be a 'drain on society' and are considered to be expendable.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    V · 16 days ago
    I think they will be just as bad only thing that will change is the name, from cons to labs.. cos to them that's all we are lab rats..they don't see us as people.
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    Nigel Cox · 16 days ago
    Labour are left with massive debts but they will still be better than conservative, a vote for any of the others is a wasted vote 
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    Yabba Dabba Dooooo · 16 days ago
    Whether it's Labour or Tories, it makes no difference - we are all just numbers to them.  
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    Carol K · 16 days ago
    They introduced ESA and the WCA in 2008, I remember very well. They might not be as harsh as the Tories with cutting benefits but I think they will introduce more back to work schemes for disabled claimants and use the "work is the cure for all your problems" spiel they use repeatedly. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    D · 16 days ago
    Also to add

    If only the disabled realised their power as a voting bloc due to the large number of voting age adults with a disability or illness, unpaid carers and upset family and friends

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    D · 16 days ago
    Labour will have very early chances to signify their position on disability and welfare from the 2 following events:

    - though the dwp has announced they want to bring forward the uc migration groups of esa & esa+hb legacies and complete 600-800k notices in 12 months, that timetable doesn’t look like it will be officially confirmed till after the GE……………….meaning labour (if they get into power) will most likely have the opportunity to pause rollout (to solve the multiple issues) or lengthen the timetable (to a dec 2026 or longer completion date) or even go back to the ‘original’ timetable of 2028-29…………………….labour signing off on dwp plans as is would speak volumes of where they view disabled

    - the pip consultation ends at the end of July after the gr. labour would have the opportunity to look through responses and draw conclusions (and decide if and how it could reshape pip going forward)…….the tories published their findings of the previous wca consultation about 2 months after that consultation had ended……………….therefore the pip consultation findings and response documents could very possibly be published later this year in oct/nov………………this doc could be hugely revealing in how labour intend to go forward with sickness & disability welfare payments


    I personally think with the recent language used by labour (designed to scare), the change in attitude towards disability labours top tier seemed to have ordered the past 12 months (the appointment of Kendall, that shadow ministers like foxcroft have gone to very vocally supportive to quiet & restrained………..as if silenced/change in labour policy) and shadow ministers having as poor an upstanding of pip as their Tory counterparts……….

    ……………I’m honestly expecting red tories 


    But will be happy to be proven wrong!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Holly · 16 days ago
    When a labour man came and knocked on my door and gave me a leaflet I asked him straight up are labour going to cut disabled benefits pip he said oh no we are not going to do that

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    Jane · 17 days ago
    It's a shame we don't have PR because the lib dems and greens have far fairer policies for the disabled, but I will vote tactically for Labour. I think they will be focused on WCA, they have already promised more MH workers to get people back to work. Just whom they will be, and whether it will be in the form of carrot or stick, I don't know, and I suspect they don't either. I do believe that timely treatment will quite probably keep people in work, but look at waiting lists and that will take serious investment
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      TwistedWitch · 16 days ago
      @Jane In a sense we have the Lib Dems to thank for that, not having PR I mean. They campaigned in 2010 on the basis of a vote on PR, and they climbed into bed with the Tories in coalition on the same basis. The Tories watered the option down to AV which was a very poor alternative, and the Libs went along with that. Subsequently there was no support for AV so the status quo remained. Now I am not saying the public would have voted PR if they were given that choice, but it was a given they wouldn't bother with AV and the Tories knew that and the Libs should have stood their ground to have a referendum on the actual voting version they had promised!

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