Labour are rushing to get the first vote on personal independence payment (PIP) and universal credit (UC) cuts over and done, with the second reading scheduled to happen on Tuesday 1 July.   The earliest the vote on the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill could have happened is the day before.

The government may be hoping the tight schedule will reduce the chances of organised opposition both within and outside Parliament.  There are also reports in the Independent that Labour are trying to crush opposition from backbench MPs by threatening that they will be ruled out of government jobs and could lose the Labour whip if they vote against the cuts.

But the resignation of former shadow disability minister Vicky Foxcroft from her position in the whips office last night in protest at the bill will have come as a blow to ministers, who will be hoping there will be no more high profile resignations in the next few days.

Meanwhile Disabled People Against Cuts had already announced a protest rally in Parliament Square on Monday 30 June, starting at 4.30pm and it’s likely that other protests will take place around the country.

Campaigners will now have just a week to try to persuade sympathetic Labour MPs to follow their consciences, rather than allowing tribal loyalties or fear of consequences to dictate how they vote.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 days ago
    Hi I've updated the list I hope it has been published by Benefit and Work.  Please can you share this wherever possible.  Things are hopefully moving in our direction!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @CaroA That list is absolutely MASSIVE 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @CaroA Shared. Thank you!
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    · 3 days ago
    Countdown to the crucial disability benefit vote – Version 6
    Updated 21st June

    Thank you, Vicky Foxcroft.
    Your resignation — in protest at these cruel cuts — will be remembered.
    As a former shadow disabilities minister, you spoke up when it mattered.
    History will show who stood up — and who stayed silent.

    The Government’s disability welfare bill — which includes sweeping cuts to PIP and the health element of Universal Credit — was introduced this week and is due to be voted on in Parliament on July 1st.


    ---

    So Sir Keir Starmer, you know better than:

    Disability rights organisations across the UK

    Major mental health and epilepsy charities

    Poverty, food bank and homelessness networks

    Leading journalists, lawyers and legal charities

    Trade unions representing millions of workers

    Cultural and arts institutions

    Faith organisations including the Church of England and Quakers in Britain

    The British Medical Journal (BMJ) and frontline doctors

    All carer support organisations

    Over 170 MPs and peers across Parliament

    International watchdogs including the UN CRPD

    All the voices of disabled people and unpaid carers



    ---

    Key Ministers Driving the Cuts

    Liz Kendall, Work and Pensions Secretary – leading the £5 billion package cutting PIP and health-related UC supports

    Rachel Reeves, Chancellor – endorsed the reforms as vital for fiscal credibility

    Sir Stephen Timms, Minister of State for Disability – defended the policy in public forums while meeting resistance from activists



    ---

    Disability and Advocacy Organisations

    Scope, Disability Rights UK, Inclusion London, Inclusion Barnet, Disability Sheffield, Community Integrated Care, NSUN, WinVisible, Crips Against Cuts, Disability Benefits Consortium, Mencap, Sense, RNIB, RNID, National Autistic Society, Leonard Cheshire, Business Disability Forum, Disability Positive, VoiceAbility, VODG, Stay Safe East, Three Guineas Trust, Fightback4Justice, Benefits and Work, Disability News Service, Action on Disability (AoD), POhWER, Disability Can Do, ME Association, Action for M.E., #MEAction UK, 25% ME Group, MS Society UK, MS Trust, Rethink Mental Illness, Well Adapt, DPO Forum England, Black Triangle Campaign


    ---

    Charities Supporting Marginalised Groups

    Age UK, Independent Age (older people)
    Contact, Council for Disabled Children (families with disabled children)
    METRO Charity (intersectional/LGBTQ+ and disability)
    Mind (mental health)


    ---

    Homelessness and Poverty Charities

    St Mungo’s, Crisis, Shelter, YMCA, Homeless Link, Centrepoint, The Passage, Thames Reach, Depaul UK, Single Homeless Project, Justlife, Hope Housing, The Connection at St Martin’s, Groundswell, Turn2us, Joseph Rowntree Foundation


    ---

    Food Poverty and Anti-Poverty Networks

    The Trussell Trust, Independent Food Aid Network (IFAN)


    ---

    Faith-Based Organisations

    Church of England, Quakers in Britain


    ---

    Advocacy and Rights Groups

    Citizens Advice SORT Group, Minority Rights Group, Campaign for Disability Justice, Carers UK, Carers Trust, Coalition Against Benefit Cuts, Money and Mental Health Policy Institute, Trust for London, Liberty, Justice, Amnesty International


    ---

    Medical and Healthcare Organisations

    British Medical Association (BMA), British Medical Journal (BMJ), Epilepsy Action, Royal College of Nursing (RCN)


    ---

    Trade Unions

    PCS, Unite Community, BFAWU, TUC, Scottish TUC, Equity, Musicians’ Union, NUJ, Cardiff Trades Union Council, TUCG, UCU


    ---

    Disabled People’s Campaigns and Activists

    DPAC, GMCDP, #TakingThePIP campaign, Elaine Clifford, John Pring, Michelle Cardno (Fightback4Justice), Steve Donnison, Holiday Whitehead (Benefits and Work), Joy Dove, John McArdle (Black Triangle), Samuel Miller, Mark Anthony Bastiani, Campaign for Disability Justice (Caroline Collier & Geoff Fimister)


    ---

    Public Figures

    Liz Carr, Rosie Jones, Ruth Madeley, James Taylor (Scope), Martin Lewis (MoneySavingExpert), Cherylee Houston, Kim Tserkezie, Daniel Monks, Jack Hunter, Neil Duncan-Jordan


    ---

    Arts and Cultural Institutions

    National Theatre, Graeae Theatre Company, Equity, Disability Arts Online, Disability Arts Cymru, University of Atypical for Arts and Disability, Disability Arts International (DAI), Arts & Disability Ireland


    ---

    House of Lords Advocates

    Baroness Grey-Thompson (Crossbench), Lord Addington (Liberal Democrat), Lord Holmes of Richmond (Conservative), Baroness Sherlock (Labour), Lord Shinkwin (Conservative), Lord Touhig (Labour), Baroness Ruth Lister (Labour)


    ---

    Journalists and Media

    Frances Ryan (The Guardian), May Bulman (The Independent), Disability News Service (led by John Pring), The Canary, Novara Media, Prospect Magazine, LabourList, The Guardian, The Independent, ITV News


    ---

    International and Human Rights Organisations

    UN Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD) – Previously found “grave and systematic violations” of disabled people’s rights in the UK
    UN Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (CESCR) – Called for “corrective measures” to address welfare changes harming disabled people
    Amnesty International – Condemned welfare changes affecting disabled people as human rights violations


    ---

    Parliamentary and Political Opposition

    Over 170 Labour MPs
    Vicky Foxcroft MP – resigned from her government role in protest against the cuts
    Diane Abbott, Andy Burnham, Sadiq Khan, Rachael Maskell, Steve Witherden, Ros Jones, Leeds West and Pudsey CLP, Debbie Abrahams MP


    ---

    Local Authorities Taking a Stand

    Lutfur Rahman, Mayor of Tower Hamlets – pledged £8.5 million in local support and called the cuts “cruel”


    ---

    Parliamentary Groups

    All-Party Parliamentary Group on Disability (Chair: Marsha de Cordova MP)
    All-Party Parliamentary Group on Poverty


    ---

    Legal Support and Advice Services

    Disability Law Service (DLS), Public Law Project (PLP), Leigh Day, Bhatt Murphy, Aoife O’Reilly (solicitor), Tom Royston (barrister), Liberty, Justice


    ---

    42 Labour MPs Who Signed the Opposition Letter

    Diane Abbott, Paula Barker, Lee Barron, Lorraine Beavers, Apsana Begum, Olivia Blake, Richard Burgon, Dawn Butler, Ian Byrne, Stella Creasy, Neil Duncan-Jordan, Cat Eccles, Barry Gardiner, Mary Glindon, Sarah Hall, Chris Hinchliff, Imran Hussain, Terry Jermy, Kim Johnson, Mary Kelly Foy, Peter Lamb, Ian Lavery, Brian Leishman, Emma Lewell, Clive Lewis, Rebecca Long-Bailey, Rachael Maskell, Andy McDonald, John McDonnell, Abtisam Mohamed, Grahame Morris, Charlotte Nichols, Simon Opher, Kate Osborne, Richard Quigley, Andrew Ranger, Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Zarah Sultana, Jon Trickett, Chris Webb, Nadia Whittome, Steve Witherden


    ---

    Public Opinion Speaks

    The vast majority of people in the UK do not support cutting disability benefits. Polls show most believe these reforms are about saving money, not helping people into work — and that they risk pushing more disabled people into poverty.
    When it comes to supporting those who need it most, the public is clear: enough is enough.
    (Sources: More in Common, Community Care, Ipsos)


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 days ago
    Posted on my Bluesky (so potential to be viewed by two followers, ha ha ha!!!):
    Labour has shredded, burned and extinguished its credibility in going after the poorest in our country. Not learning from the WFA, they're now going for disabled people. Reform-lite Labour is finsihed. 
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    · 4 days ago
    Wouldn't surprise me if the Bill is pulled at the end of next week (for review). My guess is that it will end in budget legislation come the autumn.
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      · 3 days ago
      @Matt Oh jesus h Christ that's all we need.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @tintack This. We must find a way of delaying this. By "we" I mean the disabled community, organisations, disgruntled M. P"s and the general public. Delay this to the autumn and the assessments and I believe they will be scrapped entirely. 
       
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      · 3 days ago
      @Neil Cook Anything in a budget is contained in a money bill: much easier to pass through the Commons and Lirds
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @Matt What would that mean?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @Matt How would it make it more like to pass if they did it that way
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 days ago
    Sir Keir Starmer scrambles to contain 'mass rebellion' among Labour MPs over welfare reforms

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    · 4 days ago
    I reckon that what the legendary Vicky Foxcroft MP did was pretty monumental. If I read right that she was only one of three whips, especially. But even if not, the reverberations around parliament will be strong this week. And I think no one will be fooled by them filling her post with a ‘popular’ MP. 
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    · 4 days ago
    "A senior government figure told The Times that about 12 of their colleagues had privately indicated they would find it impossible to support the measures that are due to be voted on a week on Wednesday."


    "Another leading opponent said that as many as 80 Labour MPs were “holding firm” in opposition to the plans and believed the government would ultimately have to pull the vote."

    "one government source suggested that contingency plans to pull the vote altogether were being prepared, in case Starmer’s team concluded that they did not have the numbers."
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 days ago
    It's going to be a comical sight if we all have to pitch up with our various aids and assistants for meetings with the work coach. There wont be time or space at the job centre, let alone jobs.
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      · 3 days ago
      @Bill How dreadfully condescending, that they see disabled people as ignorant of the normal interview process.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @john Sadly, there's not much in the way of personal tailored support to help disabled people find jobs. I know because l sought this support and it was no more than sitting around a table with other disabled people organised by a certain Trust and being told what to say and not say at interviews, how to dress for interviews and how to write CVs. There was literally nothing about helping people get the interviews which was my problem despite having 20+ years experience in work. When l asked what they do to get people interviews, l was told they didn't cover that aspect so the whole exercise was pointless as l know what to say and how to dress for interviews 
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      · 4 days ago
      @rtbcpart2 The government says jobcentres will be providing intensive personalized help towards work, and also wants carer's to get jobs too.

      While the 4pt rule means people unable to manage their toilet needs, unable to wash below their waist, unable to dress below their waist, unable to use a cooker, and unable to cut up their food will lose PIP after Nov 2026 and UC health after 2028. Which is blatantly absurd.

      In a world of I just give up and don't give a damn. People could just turn up and stay at the job centre asking for that intensive personalized help towards work. Cannot get a job if soil themselves, cannot get a job is dirty, cannot get a job if naked from the waist down, cannot get a job if starving to death, so provide that intensive help towards getting a job. And oh what job does the government/DWP think they can get, that is easier than using a cooker and easier than cutting up food, and will provide a onsite personal carer.

      Not that the DWP and our lovely country would give a damn if they did that. The Tories demonstrated you can cause lots of disabled people to die through welfare cuts and reforms and get re-elected again and again with according to polling promising ever bigger cuts to disability benefits being a vote winning policy. 
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    · 4 days ago
    From behind the Times paywall.  I've kept it to the important bits as I'm aware that newspapers have to make money, too, but this story could be remarkably important to us all if it's true.

    As many as a dozen members of government are prepared to resign rather than support Sir Keir Starmer’s controversial welfare reforms, it has been claimed, as backbench critics accused ministers of betraying Labour values.

    A senior government figure told The Times that about 12 of their colleagues had privately indicated they would find it impossible to support the measures that are due to be voted on a week on Wednesday.

    Another leading opponent said that as many as 80 Labour MPs were “holding firm” in opposition to the plans and believed the government would ultimately have to pull the vote.

    “If this goes through this will be our version of tuition fees,” they said. “The optics of taking away money from people who find it difficult to go to the toilet are terrible.”

    The government has a working majority of 165, meaning that 83 Labour MPs would have to rebel for Starmer to lose a vote.

    Whips are warning potential rebels that they will be blacklisted for any future government job for as long as Starmer is prime minister — even if they simply abstain. Anyone openly opposing the plans faces a threat of having the whip suspended entirely amid growing concern in No 10 that the vote could slip away from the government.

    But one government source suggested that contingency plans to pull the vote altogether were being prepared, in case Starmer’s team concluded that they did not have the numbers.

    ....  
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @SLB Oh SLB, can we dare to hope? 
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      · 4 days ago
      @SLB Thanks SLB for posting this very encouraging report from the Times, it's lifted my spirits up. 
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    · 4 days ago
    Watchin the Sky Newspaper review, there is a story on Saturday in the Times where it says up to 12 MPs might resign their government post because of the cuts.  It's fair to say that the Guardian columnist who was the guest, wasn't convinced, and said she wants to know the names.  Don't we all.  But she did say there were genuine talks about defections to the Greens by backbenchers - not just because of the cuts, but because of the whole direction of travel under the new govt. The other guest did point out that the problem with the welfare bill is that the 5bn savings have already been spent by the govt, so a U-turn is very unlikely, and it's probably why it hasn't already happened.  But, again, that shows utter chaos within govt.  Who spends the money know the vote is that controversial?  It's like us spending money we're planning to get from a PIP assessment.  You don't spend it until it's in your pocket.  
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @truth Ah, thank you for the correction. Me and my typos! haha
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      · 4 days ago
      @SLB
      " Who spends the money know the vote is that controversial? It's like us spending money we're planning to get from a PIP assessment. You don't spend it until it's in your pocket."

      The government source who said that the money from the cuts had already been spent then went on to say that the government had to win the vote because "we can't spend money we don't have". And yet the government has spent that money before knowing if it is going to have any of it at all, as the cuts could still be voted down. That is a textbook example of spending money they don't have. The hypocrisy is off the charts. 
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      · 4 days ago
      @SLB Yes they’ve already allocated the 5billion savings elsewhere hence them not u turning already , this is the arrogance of this government. Welfare in general is a very touchy  political hot potatoe ,always has been , especially when it involves cuts to the poorest in society. 
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      · 4 days ago
      @Dez £1 billion for work support.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @Gingin I agree. Is so arrogant to have already spent the money. Also really irresponsible 
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    · 4 days ago
    Westminster menu in 2020  Desserts Gooseberry and Hazelnut cake. Fig Cream Cheese and Orange Mess. Crème Caramel with Raspberry Compote. Homemade Ice Creams and Sorbets. All desserts £2.71 A Selection of British Chesses £3.35! Hopefully this awful Labour government will get their just desserts with Labour rebellion MPs and backbenchers!.
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      · 4 days ago
      @Mouseclickkeyboardtap What a farce- you couldn’t make it up. My work lunch is a tuna sandwich and mini mars bat (supermarket brand)
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    · 4 days ago
    Taxpayers charged £17m to subsidise MPs’ food.
    That is without their MP salary of £93,904 annually.
    Government secretary salaries are between £152,000 and £200,000. 
    Leader of the opposition annually (including £93,904 MP salary).
    £166,786 per annum 
    Government minister salary £166,786, which includes £75,440 
    (including £94,904 MP salary)(including £94,904 MP salary)
    Westminster spent more than £14,000 last year trying to find the best duck to serve at Christmas. all of this without their expenses!
    You should see their menus from one of the restaurants for MPs at the Palace of Westminster. It is all in 2020 they had soup of the day for £2 was one starter. Mains were between £7.33 and £9.19 including "Chargrilled Ribeye steak with hand-cut chips served with tomatoes and mushrooms in a £2.71"rebellion

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      · 3 days ago
      @john I did also mentioned each of their expenses on top of the leader of the oppositions salary, junior ministers salaries. But it was deleted obviously there were too many characters.
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      · 3 days ago
      @Mouseclickkeyboardtap The chargrilled steak above was served in a Béarnaise sauce.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 days ago
      @john I know I did mention that but it was deleted perhaps too many characters. I did also mention UK PM salaries and the leader of the opposition.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @Mouseclickkeyboardtap You forgot the grace and favour apartments/homes/mansions/country estates government ministers can live in for free.  
      And that most MPs can claim their living expenses including rent, council tax, utility bills, house insurance,  travel costs on their expenses.
      And many people employed in MPs offices or in government quangos are family members, friends, lovers of MPs. 
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    · 4 days ago
    I recall the PM (who needs to wise up) commented that the people who claim the state pension even though you payed NI contributions all your working life is a ‘benefit’ more or less not a entitlement pension as such - if that’s the case does my NI contributions pay for the MPs wages and expenses and allowances and their pensions too and if the PM wants to look at the state pensions for the future of this country (possibly attacking the future pensioners) then I should not need to pay any NI contributions in future therefore, it will be wise to go towards a private pension because that’s what I go out to work for thirty or perhaps forty years so I can have a piece of mind for a disability allowance (if I need to) or a state pension for to retire on.

    Therefore, parliament was supposed to have a duty of care for the people of the UK who elected them to govern this country for the people and by the people in society of all hard working class so the vulnerable can be looked after.

    My clear message to the rebels in Parliament is to keep fighting for us, you are our shining light of hope and despair to make a huge change in a direction for a fairness esteem for the people who are standing up to this Government’s thoughtless idea of attacking the vulnerable in today’s society.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 days ago
    Sort of answering my own previous question but the more info the better

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      · 4 days ago
      @D "Depending on how long the Lords takes to pass the bill (if they do at all), that means it could be late 2029 by the time a terminally ill person would be able to legally access an assisted death."

      if the disability welfare cuts go through we wont need any assistance dying.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 days ago
    Behind a paywall. Interesting…if true so much for Nandys waffle earlier today 

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    · 4 days ago
    It would be really great if benefits and work could publish an article on what happens next with the assisted dying bill and clarify if there’s a circumstance where the bill could still be shelved/fail to gain royal assent & become law

    I’m not 100% but I think all the House of Lords can do is slow the bill down but only up to a year - even the amendments that House of Lords make at the ping pong stage can just be voted down by MPs (I’m not sure if the bill has shortened stages due to being a private bill)

    The big question is will this bill be challenged in courts due to human rights issues

    My big question is as disability allies what were the majority of Lib Dem MPs and greens thinking when voting for (Ed davey didn’t vote and he was known to be against - I hope everything in his personal life is okay and that was the reason he was unable to vote as it would be hard to understand any other reason).

    If you look at many other countries with assisted dying laws approved the majority of govs have abused it to make the lives of disabled more difficult and well shorter

    I wouldn’t say Lib Dem’s have lost my vote because there are very few voting options but Lib Dem’s/greens could of heavily benefited from Labour imploding and disillusioning voters next ge - now they will need to work overtime to persuade us they are on our side

    (The thing is huge disability ally MPs such as John McDonnell also voted for the bill - I hope these like him can give us their reasonings and why they don’t believe disabled won’t be negatively targeted (or why that is a potential consequence worth paying)


    I’m not against the idea of assisted dying but I think now is the wrong time esp with trust in politicians so low (for valid reasons) and a rushed private member bill is totally the way to go about a sensitive subject 

    A referendum or a sizable majority rather than 50%+ (which ironically because of the abstainee less than 50% of MPs voted yes) would of been better - for gods sake a motion of no confidence needs at least 2 thirds of MPs voting for it to end a government early because of fixed terms (even if a government turns out to be breaking laws - few MPs will vote their MPs out of power)

    Only good news - I think this is going to make disabled community more angry and determined to middle finger Labour ministers in 2 weeks and I’m sure many of you amazing emailers and protesters will find a new bonus gear in their effects
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 days ago
    The government keeps saying not many will be affected by pip cuts. What this means cause the government is not touching motorbilty side of pip this government is so crafty and cruel 
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    · 4 days ago
    At first, the whips were saying "No punishment for abstaining the vote". Now there is punishment for abstaining the vote.

    This Government is all over the place. Say one thing and do another. And I mean to their own MPs. 

    Rule by fear, we all know what happens in the movies. It will only last so long before the bubble bursts.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 days ago
    Was on and all highlighted on bbc northwest tonight this evening  and a Labour mp for Bolton said she was against the cuts also was the usual government clap trap response that all the pip claimants will be helped at the job centre etc etc 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 days ago
    What a bunch of cowards, picking on the most vulnerable in society and betraying what should be the core values of Labour.

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