The DWP confirms that draconian āsavingsā are coming down the track. Are we a nation that will repair hospitals, but not help a nurse with long Covid?
In the days after the budget, the headlines were dominated by talk of Rachel Reevesās ātax and spendā bonanza. The message was clear: austerity is officially over. When there was concern about squeezed incomes, it was solely for workers. As the Mail front page put it: āReevesā Ā£40bn tax bombshell for Britainās striversā. Almost a week later, there has still barely been a word about the policy set to hit the group long scapegoated as Britainās skivers: the billions of poundsā worth of benefit cuts for disabled people.
Making up just a couple of lines in a 77-minute speech, youād have been forgiven for dozing past Reevesā blink-and-youād-miss-it bombshell. With a record number of Britons off work with long-term illness, the government will need to āreduce the benefits billā, she said, before noting ministers had āinheritedā the Conservativesā plans to reform the work capability assessment (WCA). That plan, letās not forget, was to take up to Ā£4,900 a year each from 450,000 people who are too sick or disabled to work ā a move that the Resolution Foundation says would ādegrade living standardsā for families already on some of the lowest incomes in the country.
Thatās on top of Tory proposals to tighten eligibility for personal independence payments (Pip) ā which Labour has been consulting on since the election ā that would push the cuts to a steep Ā£3bn.
āWe will deliver those savings as part of our fundamental reforms to the health and disability benefits system that the work and pensions secretary [Liz Kendall] will bring forward,ā Reeves went on. It turns out austerity isnāt over for everyone.
Itās no wonder that many disabled people ā and charities and journalists for that matter ā thought this meant Labour would implement the outgoing Tory policies. In fact, the government has no such plan. When I spoke to the Department for Work and Pensions, it confirmed it will make the same āsavingsā the last government committed to ā but it cannot as yet say how those savings will be made.
A spokesperson confirmed to me that the WCA needs to be āreformed or replaced as part of a proper plan to genuinely support disabled people into work ā bringing down the benefits bill and ensuring we continue to deliver the savings set out by the previous government. But these sorts of changes shouldnāt be made in haste. Thatās why weāre taking the time to review this in the round before setting out next steps on our approach.ā When I pressed, they added that changes to the WCA ā whatever they may be ā will come into effect in early 2025.
There is something faintly ludicrous about the government announcing billions of pounds of cuts to disability benefits before working out how it is going to do it, akin to the Child Catcher wielding a big net and not caring who it is he traps. It is right that the WCA ā long known to be a dangerously faulty assessment ā is consigned to the scrapheap. But āreformā should not mean less funding, and reducing funding should not be the purpose of reform.
Much like when George Osborne aimed to cut the disability benefits bill by a fifth, āwelfare reformā based on arbitrary cost-cutting says the quiet part out loud: benefits wonāt be awarded based on who needs them ā just on what they cost. It is social security by spreadsheet, severing the social contract that promises the state will be there in times of sickness and disability, and adding a footnote that says, ābut only if we can afford itā. That last weekās budget revealed huge investment for infrastructure at the same time as disability benefit cuts exposes how even the affordability argument is largely fabricated. There is money to fix hospital buildings but not to feed a nurse bedbound with long Covid.
The financial impact of such āreformā on those relying on benefits is well established but the psychological toll should not be underestimated. Since gaining power, Labour has drip-fed the rightwing press sound bites and op-eds on potential benefit cuts, leaving news outlets to speculate wildly for clicks. The budgetās half-announcement has only added to the confusion and fear, issuing vague dog whistles of āfraudā and high ābenefit billsā while forcing millions of people to wait months to find out if they will lose the money they need to live.
It is not simply that such delays create uncertainty for those affected, they also create space and legitimacy for a politics of resentment and prejudice. In the days after the budget, Reform MP Rupert Lowe took to X to list some of the health conditions people receive Pip for and pronounce to his followers which ones were least-deserving. Hours later, former Sunday Times political editor Isabel Oakeshott went on TalkTV to call disability benefit recipients āparasitesā.
It would be easy to say this stuff is repulsive ā it is ā but it is also a very real symptom of years of stagnating wages, high bills, pressured public services and a media ecosystem that too often distorts and divides. Crudely, these conditions do two things to a population that we are already seeing fester in Britain: they make some people sick and reliant on the safety net ā and they turn other people against them.
By the end of this parliament, the Office for Budget Responsibility says, half of all claims for the main benefit will be on health grounds, as the impact of NHS delays, a pandemic and increasing poverty continues to bite. As Labour mulls over what it will cost our society to provide this support, it might be worth considering what it would cost us not to. That particular price cannot be measured in bills and debt but is altogether more ruinous: a nation doomed to repeat the same mistakes, growing ever meaner and colder towards those who have less.
That Kemi Badenoch ā a small-state zealot whose culture war targets include autistic children ā is now leader of the opposition only reinforces the urgency of a Labour government that stokes the best, not worst, of our instincts. By its own timeline, the party now has a few months to hunt for its conscience. Disabled people can only hope it finds it.
fucking conservatā¦ wait a minute, itās not them anymoreā¦