Not timid

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Sir Stephen Timms has been told by disabled people in Wales, that his department has failed,

A protest group in Wales campaigning against planned cuts in disability benefits have alerted the UK minister with responsibility for policy to their huge concerns that the only ‘consultation’ process in the country was suddenly cancelled, and that his department has failed.

in an angry letter to Sir Stephen Timms, MP, Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) declared: We are concerned you still do not understand the failures of your department. We have had no indication from you, or the DWP, whatsoever, in any statement, that you understand that the consultation was organised in a way that was unsuitable for disabled people.

“You should thank the venue for saving your skin by cancelling at the last minute. The DWP’s arrangements were so poor that if the consultation had gone ahead as planned, it would have been blatant disability discrimination.

DPAC protesters have alerted the minister responsible, and have said they had almost no faith in the UK Government’s ‘consultation’ anyway

“The failures were staggering, and happened despite repeated warnings. We needed to know the venue so that we could plan our journeys, accommodation, and access requirements. We were ignored. We were promised a central location. Disabled people hoping to travel across Wales to take part were given merely three working day’s notice of a remote and inaccessible venue.”

DPAC members have requested an urgent meeting with Sir Stephen to talk about their worries, and this is set against a backdrop of growing controversy about the proposals, amid signs there could be a U-turn as with winter fuel payments.

He could be facing a sea of troubles

The Guardian reported about this change of heart:  “The reversal comes despite Downing Street ruling out making changes to winter fuel payments after the Guardian revealed that it was rethinking the cut amid anxiety at the top of government that the policy could wreak serious electoral damage”.

Even before Wales’ solitary ‘consultation’ meeting was cancelled, there had been enormous controversy about it.

Earlier this month DPAC Swansea held a demonstration in the city, with a simultaneous protest in Cardiff proclaiming:  We have almost zero faith in a consultation process that starts, on day one, by outlining all the areas it will not be consulting on. The most controversial proposals are not even up for discussion. There is one, and only one, in-person consultation event for the whole of Wales. Our MPs are ignoring our letters”.

But these are only the latest of several revolts against the plans which have rocked the UK Government, and they may now be ready to make adjustments to the legislation, although it will NOT be called a ‘U-turn’.

Ministers are examining a potential change that could allow up to 200,000 people to keep their disability benefits by tweaking assessment rules.

They are looking at potential changes to mollify Labour backbenchers and others, whose anger has been obvious.

The Financial Times (FT) reported that one of the alterations may be in the proposed assessment rules for Personal Independence Payments (PIP), so that individuals who receive a high overall score continue to be eligible, even if they do not receive at least four points in any category.

Another potential tweak could mean more time is given to claimants who lose access to one disability benefit to apply for other support they may be eligible for, and benefit claimants could be given longer “transitional periods” to ease the impact of losing support.

This is a difficult time for Sir Keir Starmer

Sir Keir Starmer has been under huge pressure over his welfare cuts since they were blamed for Labour’s poor local election results in England, so ministers are looking at potential changes to the disability benefit cuts as a way of staving off a major backbench rebellion against them.

Like the proposed disability cuts, other benefits too are in the spotlight, with Wales at the heart of the drama.

Eluned Morgan First Minister of Wales (FMW), urged the UK Government to scrap the two-child benefit cap, saying it was “damaging for lots of families in Wales”.

Rachel Reeves points to a future of cuts

Meanwhile the Chancellor Rachel Reeves’ local Labour party was to call for her to abandon the controversial proposals.

The Leeds West and Pudsey Constituency Labour Party (CLP), which campaigned to return Ms Reeves to the UK Parliament last year as its MP, had agreed to write to her “as soon as possible” to make clear it does not support the cuts.

Opposition on Ms Reeves’s home patch, echo those in South Wales, and come as the UK Government grows increasingly anxious over appeasing its backbenchers concerning the scheme.

How many MPs oppose the cuts?!

About 100 Labour MPs, more than a quarter of the party’s parliamentary numbers, are reported to have signed a letter urging ministers to scale back the benefit cuts.

Some MPs have expressed resentment at how the leadership is said to be handling opposition to the changes.

One newly elected MP said: “There hasn’t been any real attempt at engagement. It’s been left to backbenchers to hustle for a meeting. They almost see it as a virility test. It’s not helpful politics”.

They wrote a letter, but didn’t get a reply…

Relations have been further strained after a highly critical letter published in The Guardian – in which 42 MPs told the Prime Minister that planned disability cuts would be “impossible to support” – did not get a response from Sir Keir’s office.

The MP added: “You’d think the leadership would say: ‘I’m a bit pissed you went to the papers but let’s talk about what you said.’ No one has made any overtures”.

There is understood to be unrest among newly elected MPs who feel they are being expected to defend policies they were not elected for while not being allowed any input.

Irrelevant?

One MP said: “Unless the government comes up with the idea, it doesn’t count. It’s a case of the new intake thinking: ‘I haven’t realised I’m irrelevant’”.

Another senior backbencher said: “I strongly think Number 10 see the PLP as a problem to be dealt with. The advisers around Keir think the PLP is an inconvenience…”.

The growing protests may become more than an ‘inconvenience’ for the UK Government if a minister has been told by disabled people that his department has failed.

 

Good reading material…

Details of our Editor (who is himself disabled) Phil Parry’s astonishing decades-long journalistic career (when protests against Government policies were often covered), as he was gripped by the rare and incurable neurological condition Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP), have been released in an important book ‘A GOOD STORY’. Order it now.

Tomorrow – how during that career for Phil analysing statistics has always been central, but he is not very good with numbers and this is now put centre stage by the news that Russian casualties in Ukraine are this month likely to reach a million, yet the sources are from journalists, as well as outside the Russian government.