The Labour Party has published its manifesto today.  Astonishingly, its 136 pages provide not a single concrete action relating to welfare benefits – the issue has been almost entirely airbrushed from the document, leaving disabled claimants with no idea what Labour has in store for them.

The closest thing to an actionable idea relating to benefits is on page 78 of the manifesto, which says:

“Labour is committed to reviewing Universal Credit so that it makes work pay and tackles poverty. We want to end mass dependence on emergency food parcels, which is a moral scar on our society.”

So, a review will take place at some undefined time, but with no hint of whether the intention is to increase or reduce UC for disabled claimants, increase or reduce sanctions or anything else.

The document does say on page 42 that:

“We will tackle the backlog of Access to Work claims and give disabled people the confidence to start working without the fear of an immediate benefit reassessment if it does not work out. We believe the Work Capability Assessment is not working and needs to be reformed or replaced, alongside a proper plan to support disabled people to work.”

 But this tells readers nothing concrete. When will reform or replacement of the WCA happen and what form will it take? It sounds like Labour has no clear ideas on the subject, just a vague aspiration.

There is, though, the obligatory threat on page 42 to people who are not in work but, in the view of the Labour Party, should be:

“Labour will reform employment support so it drives growth and opportunity. Our system will be underpinned by rights and responsibilities – people who can work, should work – and there will be consequences for those who do not fulfil their obligations.”

On child poverty, the document says on page 79:

“Labour will develop an ambitious strategy to reduce child poverty. We will work with the voluntary sector, faith organisations, trade unions, business, devolved and local government, and communities to bring about change.”

This suggests that there is no intention to increase benefits payments related to children or to remove the two-child benefit cap introduced by the Tories in 2017, which has been such a driver of child poverty.

Aside from that, there is an undertaking to retain the triple lock for the state pension and a stern warning that Labour “will not tolerate fraud or waste anywhere, whether in social security or the excessive use of consultants”.

And that’s all we could find, please do tell us in the comments section if you discover anything else.

This is a cruel manifesto from the point of view of disabled claimants. 

The Conservatives put in motion some ferociously anti-disabled claimant plans, including moving forward the forced migration to universal credit, making the WCA harder to pass, consulting on replacing PIP with vouchers and spying on bank accounts.

But it will be Labour, not the Conservatives, who are virtually certain to be in charge of claimants’ fate after the election. 

Labour’s decision to give no hint of which Tory plans they will reject and which they will adopt will leave many claimants in a state of real distress for weeks to come.

You can download the Labour Party manifesto from this link.

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    Amanda Johnson · 9 days ago
    Just as alarming as Conservatives and no better, in fact very scary and secretive. 
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    Alice · 10 days ago
    At 42:50 Rachel Reeves speaks to a caller asking if she plans to get rid of PIP. This was just a month ago on LBC. You can watch here and forward to the right part. 
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    Ashf · 10 days ago
    I have emailed facebooked and twitter to my mp Lillian greenwood to ask why is there policy for disabled people and pi and other benefits 3 mo the on still no response I emailed again last week and as they are in election mode you think they would have the common sense to answer especially as I stated the many thousands of labour disabled people who have a vote would most likely not vote for them anymore if they are dishonest about there intentions still no reply so my gut feeling is it's not looking good for us 
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    Hazel · 11 days ago
    I think Labour are just trying to get elected and avoiding certain topics.  That doesn't mean they won't be fairer.  I definitely think they will be better than the current Conservative Government (and they did mention not using private companies for health matters).  I will be voting for labour because they are the only real option if you don't want the Conservatives any more.  Depending on where you live as tactical voting is an idea as well.
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    J lee · 11 days ago
    very worrying...
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    CaroA · 11 days ago
    I've sent the following email to the local candidate canvassing to be our labour MP and to an email address of somebody helping to run the labour campaign.  I don't know if it will be read or do any good......

    Dear Labour party representatives

    I am writing this email to ask if you can please make clearer your views on reforms to disability benefits and how this will be taken forward by labour? Disability forums are full of people in abject fear of what is to come. Its hard enough living with these disabilities and this insecurity day in day out but having total uncertainty of where labour stands is making it's almost impossible to decide how to vote.

    Please also see my submission to the green paper about the proposed PIP reforms below.

    I think one of the main things to consider from this submission is that there is such a large underlying scandal behind the abuses of the DWP that if this fully comes to light it could easily compete with the post office and blood scandals. I think the next government should be incredibly careful with the reforms to not push us to the point of mass litigation against the abuses already acknowledged as traumatic and needing redress by the UN. The proposed PIP and ESA reforms would be the last straw for many of us pushing us to this.

    I'd be grateful if somebody can consider responding to this email.

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    VOTEREFORMNOT · 12 days ago
    Labour will give sweeteners to help Disabled / Sick people attempt some kind of low level employment because then they will be able to turn around and say we got X amount of Disabled / Sick people back into employment and then laugh at the opposition.

    Under the last Labour government I was given £250 one of payment to go back into employment.  £40 a week for a year.  Plus I can't remember how much it was but the Disabled Element of Tax Credits (hopefully something like this could be implemented into UC).  It didn't work out and I just went back to my original sick benefits without any hassle.

    They can hardly publish such a giveaway in their manifesto.  Perhaps they won't be so generous who knows but I really can't see them being any worse than what the Tories are saying.

    I really don't feel a massive amount of fear with an incoming Labour government.  Nothing compared to how the Tories have made me feel for a very long time.
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    Craig (pseudonym) · 12 days ago
    I'm a disabled person and claim ESA and PIP, and I'm worried about the move to Universal Credit. I'm voting Labour tactically to get the Tories out; I do not want to waste my vote on Reform, Greens, Lib Dems, or other candidates. I certainly do not live in Keir Starmer's constituency; if I did, I would have voted tactically for him to lose his MP seat.

    For those that are not voting, please do vote tactically to get the Tories out; I do not want them to have a surprise return!

    I'm fully aware of the abuse the Tory administration has done to disabled and vulnerable people, which caused people to commit suicide with their diabolical welfare reforms. They should know why crimes like robberies and shoplifting have gone up because their diabolical policies are the cause of it! People need to spend money to get their essential goods and services, regardless of whether they are employed or not. Of course, a slice of the money does go back to the Treasury in the form of VAT, alcohol, fuel duties, etc.

    If the Labour Party fails to deliver improvements to the benefit system, I suggest putting pressure on the general secretaries of the Labour Party Affiliated Unions, which are: ASLEF, Community TU, Communication Workers Union, Fire Brigades Union, GMB, Musicians Union, National Union of Mineworkers, TSSA, Unison, Unite, and USDAW.

    We can't expect everything to be fixed on day 1 once the Labour Party gets into 10 Downing Street.
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      lesley · 11 days ago
      @Craig (pseudonym)
      Loved "I certainly do not live in Keir Starmer's constituency; if i did, I woud have voted tactically for him to lose his MP seat" made me laugh out loud.
      I live in Tulip Saddiq's constituency and may vote lib dem tactically.  Normally vote labour but what a shower!! Gone are the old style labour like Stan Newens.
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    bluejay52 · 12 days ago
    Im going to be frank and honest here.
    I have no idea who to vote for,the tories are going to shaft the disabled on pip.
    For gods sake who can live out of a catalog.
    Now we have no idea what the hell labour are going to do its as clear as mud.
    Reform are a unknown quantity? but I will say this.
    If anyone knocks on my door I will scrutinise them closely,for instance if Labour knock I will ask then where they stand with PIP Likewise Reform and the rest of the shambolic people that knock.
    If they cant answer I will be asking them to leave.
    The DWP are a law to themselfs as far as im concerned,and cant be frusted.
    The problem is that most politicians have never lived in the real world and dont know what its like to  struggle.
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      Helen · 9 days ago
      @bluejay52 My Labour candidate came round last week,  I'm bedbound so invited her in. We spoke for 45 minutes,  she agreed with everything I said about the persecution of disabled people and carers, she expressed disappointment that the Labour Party were not saying what support disabled people would get under Labour, and her frustration at what we're going through,  but could not promise anything because she just doesn't know. This was before the manifesto was published, so neither of us are any the wiser now. If Labour win my MP is unlikely to become a Minister. I feel frightened. 
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      FiWearsVintage · 9 days ago
      @wibblum It amazes me that any disabled person would even consider a vote for Reform UK Ltd. People really do need to read into their ‘contract’ a little further. They want to abolish the NHS in favour of insurance based healthcare. How on earth would people with our sometimes very complex health needs get favourable health insurance that we could afford? 
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      FiWearsVintage · 9 days ago
      @bluejay52 Perhaps Labour’s plan is to leave alone for the time being and prioritise getting health and social care into better shape so those wanting to work are better supported. I’d be kinda of relieved in some way to know where I stand without any major surprises at least for their first term. Then we can work on our Labour MPs who will hold the majority and push for change. Lib Dems have some good ideas but I have serious doubts about how they could be funded right now. The main priority for me is to get rid of the Tories and kick their disgustingly hostile anti-disabled policies into oblivion! 
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      Tony · 9 days ago
      @Craig (pseudonym) My mp is tory, I'm labour thru n thru BUT on many occasions my mp has come up trumps on personal matters inc PIP.
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      wibblum · 11 days ago
      @bluejay52
      I have no idea who to vote for either, because it seems like there is no-one who can  realistically form a government that will serve the interest or improve the situation of those with disabilities. Quite the opposite, in fact.

      The only parties that have openly expressed any intention to treat those on disability benefits fairly and humanely are the Greens and the Lib Dems. Make of their promises what you will, but it is certain that neither party can realistically form a government by itself at the present time (and it's objectively fair to point out that the Lib Dems already have a proven history of abandoning their promises and going back on their word so that they can hop into bed with whichever party will offer them a spare key to number 10).

      I can however say this: Reform are most definitely NOT an unknown quantity - they are a party comprised entirely of money-grubbing, self-aggrandising one-note grifters like Farage, partnered up with all the frothing loons who are too right wing even for the tory party of today. Reform don't just want to cut disability benefits, they want to abolish the welfare system entirely.


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    Daniel · 12 days ago
    My wife and I were fully intending to vote Labour, mostly because I have a grey area disability that makes me not disabled enough to claim benefits but disabled enough to be unemployable. My wife and I have been struggling immensely with staying afloat with her as the only stable earner and we were hoping, praying, that Labour were going to make our lives easier. We are absolutely devastated at this manifesto. We are broke, up to our eyeballs in debt, and there’s absolutely no light at the end of the tunnel. Me dying is literally the only hope now, because of my life insurance will help my wife pay off the debt and she will receive more help with me gone. We’ll probably not even bother voting because what’s the point? We”re screwed no matter what.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      john lewis · 9 days ago
      @Daniel If you do not vote though, you will get the tories and you will DEFINITELY be completely stuffed. It is hugely important to vote..
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    feebee · 12 days ago
    Good Morning. I feel that all of us who rely and depend on the Benefits in this country are more worried by the cruel tactics the DWP are made to do by the rich Tories. We need  a Government that believes in Disabled people whatever your need may be, and stop the anxiety it causes the millions of us who suffer at their disposal. WHO wants vouchers?? Because you won’t be able to use them when your paying bills and council tax and rent shortfalls?? These Parties are all the same, entitled liars all sharing the same script. If It wasn’t for the fact that my illness entitles me to a postal vote, I wouldn’t be wasting my time going to vote. 
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      VOTEREFORMNOT · 10 days ago
      @wibblum I meant the extra element that people get on ESA because they are in receipt of PIP is covered by transitional protection.  Judging by the comments here though I am well of with how people feel about it.  I just know from myself I cancelled my ESA made a claim for UC.  I did take a loan to cover the first month and paid it back over a year.  I am getting £30 a week more than I was getting on ESA.  I had to go to the Job Centre once to show them ID and no work coach has bothered me ever since.  Perhaps I am the dumb one somehow and should of stayed on ESA.
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      wibblum · 11 days ago
      @VOTEREFORMNOT Don't get the fear? Well for one thing, there's the enforced nature of it and the prospect of being left entirely without support if you don't comply in exactly the 'correct' manner (judgement of which is usually subject to an individual DWP caseworker's whim) and within a certain time frame.

      Then there's the whole aspect of it being entirely the claimant's responsibility to apply for it (which some are practically and/or mentally and emotionally unable to do for themselves entirely *because* of their disability), which means that it isn't technically even a 'transfer' at all because the word 'transfer' implies an automatic process. There is also the fact that as a matter of course the whole process can usually only be initiated and administered online, when many claimants have little or no regular internet access.

      Being in receipt of PIP should have no bearing or impact whatsoever (good or bad) on anyone's ESA>UC migration and PIP has nothing to do with receiving transitional protection, either. So unless you're just mixing up PIP with Support Group status then I'm not sure why you've brought PIP into it. Citing PIP to claim that people will be 'better off' under UC is technically a false equivalence - despite the DWP hype, there are too many variables involved in calculating UC entitlement and so there's no guarantee at all that ESA claimants will get more on UC than they would on ESA.

      And if you have no other income or savings, then the wait for that first UC payment (which can and does stretch further than 5 weeks in some cases) could reasonably be considered as being rather more than just 'a pain'.
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      Rik · 11 days ago
      @VOTEREFORMNOT Perhaps it's that those on ESA with the Severe Disability Premium will be worse off.
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      The dogmother. · 11 days ago
      @VOTEREFORMNOT You won't get it if you aren't in that position @VOTEREFORMNOT
      Some of us can't begin to face the f2f with a workcoach even if it's just to sign a claiment commitment. 
      Both physically and or mentally unfair to do so. It's all the other baggage that goes with it never mind the wait. It should be an automatic transfer. They want us on it ,we don't.
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      Michelle · 11 days ago
      @Anon Yes thay can  because  it's only  on green paper  has not actually  gone through  parliament  and parliament  has been  desolved 
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    lesley · 13 days ago
    I used to receive milk tokens back in the seventies for my two children.  I used to be able to take them into a local corner shop and redeem them for food. Oh my would never want to go back to those days.  Used to save co-op stamps up too and then go to the co-op when I was broke and redeem them for food.  Are we going back to those days? Could not go living back to hand to mouth. It all sound horrendous!
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    Agent No.1 · 13 days ago
    "give disabled people the confidence to start working without the fear of an immediate benefit reassessment if it does not work out."

    Ashworth has already outlined this about a year ago maybe 2, they (Labour) will allow you 1 year to try out a work placement or a job on full LCWRA benefits, and if you don't succeed within that year and fail to stay in employment, you won't have to go through the WCA reassessment process again and then return back to your pre benefit status, but with PIP it doesn't say if that will be effected if you took employment, as you have to notify the DWP for any change of circumstances so that brings the question of how Labour would handle it all and there is no detail in that at all. He outlined this as Shadow DWP minister, he is now Shadow Paymaster General so this is nothing new.
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      PaulaW · 9 days ago
      @Agent No.1 As stated by Annie, PIP is not means tested and you can get it even if you work.
      This is what worries me about speculating like this and Labour should verify its stance on disability benefits as people who are not aware of the laws regarding benefits are making statements that are terrifying disabled people. The impact on mental health is terrifying.
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      ANNIE BANANA · 11 days ago
      @Agent No.1 Why would you have notify pip if your working? It's an in work/ non means tested benefit?
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      Old Mother · 11 days ago
      @Agent No.1 This is great ! They have my vote!  

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      Cstcat · 12 days ago
      @Agent No.1 Where the jobs  coming from will they accept lots of sick days I just cannot cope months of tories now this I thought they would help 
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    Carol K · 14 days ago
    What is it they say? No news is good news? Let's hope so
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    diceman24 · 14 days ago
    he all im glad to see people have looked at my post earlier some people gave it a thumbs  up and some gave it a thumbs down  for pip benefit so lets do a quick survey, a thumbs down for a voucher system or a thumbs up for pip to be means tested lets see how it goes
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      Elizabeth Vidler · 13 days ago
      @diceman24 I disagree with any voucher, or invoicing system for PIP, it would managed disaterously by the DWP, and I have told my MP this.  However as for means testing no, I understand that you can work or at least that is supposed to be the idea for some, but for others not, I would not claim it if I was wealthy in anycase, but I do have some savings but I also have a long term health condition, which for me means I would find it extremely hard to get work.  So if I lost my PIP and I have already lost part of it, and if I lost ESA due to its abolition I would need my savings to pay for food, bills and other expeniture, after that I don't know.The whole thing is a disaster, but means testing NO.
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      MariW · 13 days ago
      @diceman24 diceman24 Your post reminds me of Question 18 in the Green Paper consultation questionnaire in which participants are asked to order their priorities. I doubt that PIP claimants would welcome a mean-tested system or a voucher scheme. I wouldn't vote on this post. 
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    Bethan · 14 days ago
    People who are already claiming pip should keep receiving it till they reach the end of there award what is vouchers going to get us that can't pay our bills and some people will feel anxious and embarrassed going into a shop with a disability voucher 
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      Em9 · 11 days ago
      @Bethan I agree with ya Bethan even though after people reach end of their pip claims how are people with down syndrome, people in wheelchair, people who have 1 leg, 1 arm or none at all how are they meant to get into employment and can't pay bills ect with pip vouchers? I find this a disgrace to be honest I seriously hope Labour doesn't change pip cash payments to vouchers they should just decrease bit of amount people get and still be able pay bills
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      Messed up · 12 days ago
      @Bethan Some cannot leave the house
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      MariW · 14 days ago
      @Bethan @Bethan Even the longest PIP awards are short for claimants with lifelong disabilities. The reality that some people are disabled for life or have a progressive condition was brushed over when PIP was initiated. 
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    Goody · 14 days ago
    Labour and reform need to make it plain to all of us with disabilities what they are really going to do.. there saying people with disabilities and health conditions will be made to look for work...so i have a severe health conditions( ipf) and ulcerative colitis both of which make me very tired the meds i take my me drowsy as well so yes i get it get the lazy people into work but show more sympathy and compassion towards us all with disabilities and serious health conditions.. 
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      CaroA · 13 days ago
      @wibblum 'Little sisters of the poor' made me laugh!  Laughs in short supply at the moment so appreciated.
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      wibblum · 14 days ago
      @Goody Reform have made their views on all forms of welfare more than plain, and they make the tories seem like The Little Sisters Of The Poor by comparison.
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      Aw · 14 days ago
      @Goody Reform are not a serious political party, they are a bunch of snake oil salesmen. Interesting how Farage only announced his candidacy after his prospective employer found himself facing jail...
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    andrea · 14 days ago
    I don't think this is cruel.  Labour have to be vague on anything they say about wefare as the Tories are just waiting to use it against them.  By not saying much and being deliberately vague, they are not giving the Tories that stick to beat them with.  That is all I see.
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      Syl · 12 days ago
      @andrea I hope that's the case.
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      Paul · 13 days ago
      @andrea Let's hope so.
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      MariW · 14 days ago
      @andrea @andrea I'd love to believe this even after the vacuous responses from my Labour MP's office but we haven't even heard the usual spiel about looking after the most vulnerable....
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    Holly · 14 days ago
    BBC news are doing an interview with Kier Starmer and have asked what questions should be asked. I would encourage (if thats ok) everyone to fill this in to find out what Labours plans are for PIP. I have done this myself.  its for BBC Panorama. 

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      Diane · 14 days ago
      @Holly I've sent in the same question about pip to bbc, itv and sky. Yet all that gets discussed on each on isthe same subjects over and over again. It's utterly disssapointing 
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      The dogmother. · 14 days ago
      @Holly It's saying page can't be found. 😔
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