We’re already hearing from lots of readers wanting to know if the announcement of the election date will make any difference to the proposed changes to PIP or the new date for employment and support allowance to universal credit migration.

We’ve set out our thoughts below, but do make sure you’re getting our free, fortnightly newsletter to be kept informed, as we hopefully learn more.

PIP proposals

The Health and Disability Green Paper, published last month, suggested a range of alternatives to paying PIP as a cash benefit, including:

  •  A catalogue/shop scheme
  • A voucher scheme
  • A receipt based system
  • One-off grants
  • Therapy instead of cash

If the Conservatives win a working majority, then it’s likely that the Green Paper will be followed by a White Paper which will set out which of the proposals the government plans to take forward.  This will be followed by legislation.

If Labour win then that’s probably the last we will hear of the Green Paper.

However, that doesn’t mean it’s the last we will hear of some of the ideas it contains.  It’s entirely possible that Labour will also be looking to reduce the current rapidly increasing cost of PIP.

Or they may be aiming to bend it more towards encouraging at least some recipients into work – even though PIP is not supposed to have any connection with whether or not a claimant is employed.

Alison McGovern, standing in for DWP shadow secretary of state Liz Kendall and responding on Labour’s behalf to the publication of the Green Paper, said:

“Labour will carefully review the detail of the Green Paper, because the country that we want is one where disabled people have the same right to a good job and help to get it as anyone else. We will judge any measure that the Government bring forward on its merits and against that principle, because the costs of failure in this area are unsustainable.  The autonomy and routine of work is good for us all, for our mental and physical health—and more than that, for women, work is freedom, too.”

McGovern went on to disown PIP to some extent, pointing out that:

“PIP was the creation of a Conservative Government, so where is the analysis of what has gone wrong? PIP replaced DLA, and now we are hearing that PIP is the problem. How many more times will we go around this same roundabout?”

 So, whilst there is a strong chance the Green Paper will go no further, many readers may conclude that it is still worth taking part in the consultation to send a strong message to whoever forms the next government.

ESA to UC forced migration

Earlier this month, the government announced that it is now going to begin moving income-related ESA claimants onto UC from September 2024, with everyone being notified to make the move by December 2025.

This is much earlier than the previous plan, which had seen the move for ESA claimants put off until 2028.

The Treasury has provided additional money to fund the accelerated move and the DWP are now working on the details.  The DWP is known to favour an early transfer, as they would prefer to complete the whole process in one go, rather than taking a break of several years and then starting again in 2028.

The move from ESA to UC was originally delayed as a cost saving measure, because the government thought that they would be paying out more under UC than under ESA. But the unexpectedly high proportion of claimants who fail to make the transfer from legacy benefits to UC means that this may no longer be the case.

The only real question mark is whether the department has the capacity to move this many claimants on schedule – very little to do with UC so far has happened on time.

But if the Conservatives win a majority at the election, there is no doubt the transfer will begin this year.

If Labour win and take no action then the transfer will still begin this year, as it requires no legislation of any sort.

Only if Labour choose to actively intervene and put the move on hold, will the process be stopped.

We know, from statements like the one above from Alison McGovern, that Labour’s social security policy is likely to focus on moving more claimants into work.  If they see transferring claimants from ESA onto UC as increasing the probability of getting more people into work, then there’s a strong chance they will let the process continue.

However, there is no doubt that many disability and advice charities will be lobbying hard for the transfer to be put on hold.

At this point we can’t know which way Labour will jump and, we suspect, they will remain tight-lipped on the subject throughout the election campaign.

But if there’s any news we’ll let you know.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Anneb · 3 months ago
    As Appointee for my son who is in the Support group of ESA and who gets the two disability premiums of Severe Disability Premium and Disability Income Guarantee, I dread the forced move to Universal Credit, not only because UC is not a benefit for people with disabilities so the way one claims it is not appropriate, but also because those two disability premiums will be taken away over time - claimants will not get the annual rise in line with inflation, and the amount of rent rises will eat into the amount, until the amount of UC will be the same as a person without disabilities. The two disability premiums are currently worth £102 per week ! How can it be right to take disability premiums away when people with disabilities have more expenses - it is immoral.
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    Isla · 3 months ago
    I'm looking forward to my review that isn't due (far too early) tomorrow with SSS. I don't believe any political party has the best interests of our most vulnerable as a priority. They'll do what the need to do to gain favour with their membership. I can't wait to experience the respect and dignity I'm promised in Scotland but I'm a tad sceptical. Maybe I'll be proved wrong but the anxiety caused since the arrival of the dreaded letter is off the scale. I won't become a suicide stat though, I'll fight them publicly if need be. I'm a professional who retired on health grounds after 22 years employment. My health is a very complex picture so here's hoping I get someone with a little medical knowledge, otherwise this is just a fishing expedition to end my support.  
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    Isla · 3 months ago
    Daniel, I really hope you have support and someone to talk to about your concerns. Please don't act rashly, as usual they're making lots of threats to appease the people who see those claiming benefits as scroungers. Anyone with any compassion and sense knows that's not true for the vast majority of claimants. Stay strong. 
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    Ashley · 3 months ago
    I am currently receiving highest rate pip for me and my son, I am worried sick about this voucher scheme both me and my son have disabilities that adaptions and vouchers wouldn’t even work for yet both also unable to work due to chronic pain fatigue and severe autism. I was on income support and just been forced on to UC last month, I’m about to receive my first payment and they have messed up leaving me over £500 short already and when you ring UC they say only your work coach can fit it which I have messaged her and still 3 days later waiting for a reply for her to fix it! The migration protection they have extra funding for they have not even applied to my payment and I’m having to appeal it as even my letter says they need to pay it if done within the 8 weeks deadline which I did. UC is not better they make you lose more money leaving you even more struggling and all this stress is causing so many flare ups making my conditions worse right now but none of them care! 
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    Sara · 3 months ago
    Daniel, please try not to worry, none of the crazy ideas are anywhere near happening. There is advice available to make sure you are looked after, so ask someone you know to help you get what you need. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Daniel · 3 months ago
      @Sara I am just getting very upset at the moment because of this because I do also get esa and I'm also getting very concerned and very worried about this aswell because I suffer pains in my fingers and i wouldn't couple if the government changes to vouchers it won't be right for people with disabilities like me and other people with disabilities 
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    Sara · 3 months ago
    Daniel, please try not to worry, none of the crazy ideas are anywhere near happening. There is advice available to make sure you are looked after, so ask someone you know to help you get what you need. There are cheap broadband and phone deals if you get any benefits besides pip, for example.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Daniel · 3 months ago
    I am getting very concerned and very worried about this because I am autistic, have dyslexia and i saver with depressed and if my pip ends i have decided to end my life because I can't handle it because I don't want vouchers because I have to pay for my wife broadband and my phone bill it is not my fault if I have a disability but the government doesn't care about people's disabilities 
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    keepingitreal · 3 months ago
    Here's the thing, we're all confused because the government and labour et al, don't understand the relationship between the various welfare benefits and how they interact.  I'd say they're  confused, but actually they just haven't bothered their bottoms properly researching the subject. It's so irresponsible. They have, especially, lately conflated the concept of job search conditionality within means tested and contribution related income replacement benefits (including those with disability elements, such as esa new style esa, uc lcw and lcwra) with the non work related award of the expenses based (and non means tested) benefit, pip.

    It's particularly insulting to bang on about getting the disabled into work when many pip claimants are in work, and need the pip money (for support workers, drivers, adapted transport, assistive technology etc etc) to stay in work.

    Proposals from all parties, without basis in a full understanding of the system, simply fail to take into account the catastrophic knock on effect of tinkering with eligibility and awards and how that could also affect related schemes giving concessions on utility bills, council tax, broadband etc.




  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Sara · 3 months ago
    My post was cut.

    As keepingitreal has said below, there was no plan to merge pip with uc, even with the proposed changes to the wca. It would still be possible to claim pip on its own, with no commitment to a job search, because pip is not, and it has not yet been proposed that it ever will be, related to employment. There is no obligation to look for work or undertake work related activity with pip.

    In the government proposals relating to changing then abolishing the wca, uc conditions would apply only to a uc claim, which could be made as well as, or independently of pip. If uc were awarded, it could be enhanced by a health element if the claimant also qualified for pip. The pip award would not be affected by whether or not the claimant was employed, nor is it yet means tested, therefore not conditional on anything other than passing the pip assessment.

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    The dogmother. · 3 months ago
    I would honestly rather do without and struggle than ask for vouchers. Having said that, re pip and uc together,  weren't they waffling about combining pip with uc, thus doing way with the Wca  and if you didn't get pip then you weren't getting uc. Or am I way off track here? So you'd be fighting to stay afloat on UC to be given useless vouchers for your trauma. Absolutely cosmic. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      The dogmother. · 3 months ago
      @M shirker @M shirker ,dreading the migration. It's on my mind all the time. They do love to pile the misery on.

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      The dogmother. · 3 months ago
      @keepingitreal I thought that was the idea re wca then started to think I'd dreamt it.But then I got myself all mixed up. Thanks for that @keepingitreal.
      Sometimes it's hard to keep track. 

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      M shirker · 3 months ago
      @The dogmother. The Dog Mother thats right on combining pip and uc and would have to do a job search with that too not worth begging for vouchers labour is going to be bad also am hoping for a 12 month short delay to the uc migration 2028 I think has gone now they still could go ahead should know around August time that a month before they start sending the letters out 
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      keepingitreal · 3 months ago
      @The dogmother. Hi the dogmother. Doing away with the wca was connected to needing to qualify for pip in order to be entitled to a 'health element' in uc. The 'health element' would be a replacement for any disability payment previously awarded as, or with, esa. Pip would not be merged with uc, it would be the gateway to getting additional income replacement within uc.

      All seems to have gone quiet about those proposals, though, perhaps because they would be incompatible/unworkable in conjunction with the whole pip/treatment/vouchers/disabled-made-to-work cosmic combo 😂
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Peter Carstairs · 4 months ago
    What are the Disabled to do if the Tories take away a person's right to use their mobility component payment to get a car, so they can easily get to work, taking this away will create most if not all disabled people to give up on work as public transport is not geared up for wheelchairs and mums with kids in pushchairs. You're lucky to get 1 or 2 spaces on a bus.
    You do not get help from bus drivers to get on and off buses.

    This would make disabled more dependent on family or neighbours generous enough to give their free time up, and with only vouchers being given for whatever the Tories deem acceptable, how do I pay for the daily and nightl support I get, 

    Have the disabled not have the right to pay family and friends for helping out and giving up their valuable time.

    This is utterly shameful of any government but in the Tories it does not surprise me, they pretend to seek better outcomes for the tax payers yet this Tory government have thrown tax payers money down the HS2 drain pit, the tax payers paying for no good PPE equipment but they do not get held to account, the waste more tax payers money holding pointless public enquiries which never seem to find government guilty and even if they did what would be done absolutely nothing....we just get told if you're not happy you get the chance to vote any government out every 5 years.

    Just an absolute Joke.....

    Government of the people, fir the people, by the people!!

    Not a government of the Rich, for the Rich, by the Rich!!

    When will this country wake up and hold their government's to account for wasteful projects and bad decision making?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Peter Carstairs · 4 months ago
    Vouchers and all these Tory proposals remind me when I was at school. They used to have queues with kids that paid for school dinners and a separate queue for the poorer kids who got free meals. The put an end years ago as it stigmatised poorer children.
    This was back 62 years ago, yet here is the Tories stigmatising the Disabled how sick is this.

    These Tory plans to remove individual payments from disabled people will remove disabled people's rights to spend the money they are entitled to to go and choose where to spend their money for things to give them independent living.

    Example..... I need help through the day and night and it makes me heavily dependent on my daughter and son-in-law who give up their time and often need time off work, my pip money helps me to compensate their losses.

    I'm sure the Tories will be happy to remove my capability to live as independent life as I do at this time.

    David Cameron and cohorts tried through dragging every disabled person through those degrading ATOS reevaluation assessments. 

    The Tories did nit get the savings on disability costs this way, so here they are once again attacking the most vulnerable in society.

    The Tories did not get the disabled before so now they are making us secondhand citizen pleading for help and given vouchers, 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Debbie Bailey · 4 months ago
    I won my case in court to receive ESA for life so does this mean I will have to go on UC as that's wrong if i do and as for PIP this is to help the ill, i have multiple health problems which leave me bed bound most days  so to put extra pressure on us is disgusting I worry about where moneys coming from to pay bills pip is a god send it should not be changed to other methods all there doing is making people more  Ill with worry it's so wrong why target the sick , disgusting 
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    M shirker · 4 months ago
    Assuming labour wins general election which looks like it now they will have to make their plans known about forced esa migration about August time my money is on a short delay I dont think they will go ahead with it straight away maybe another 6-12 months before they restart the process again 2028 is too far away can’t see that 
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      Fibrogal · 3 months ago
      @M shirker IMO there should be no more changes to the way DWP work until they have cleared the backlog of underpayments and claims etc. It’s no wonder they make so many errors with continually changing the rules whilst still having a high turnover of staff 
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    The dogmother. · 4 months ago
    Question,might seem a bit daft but was just wonderering ,if the Pip criteria is changed will the Pip name? Is it lawful to change how its administered without a name change? Might be trivial but I got to thinking about it. 
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    BW · 4 months ago
    How will those people with mobility vehicles & blue badges be affected.
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    Tom · 4 months ago
    Interestingly, the GOVT web site that  has the info about the managed  migration from Legacy IR benefits has  not changed to  reflect this announcement of ESA   , it still shows the 2028 date ,
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Jacqueline · 4 months ago
      @The dogmother. They have no clue none of them all the parties, they could never live on what we live on .
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      The dogmother. · 4 months ago
      @Crystal It's plain evil. They have no clue what our lives are like,we don't fake being sick we fake being well.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Crystal · 4 months ago
      @The Dog Mother fancy scaring disabled people it's disgusting. Did we choose to be di
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Sara · 4 months ago
      @Tom For esa and esa with hb, the most recent government website (Google Move to Universal Credit) states "You will not be asked to move to Universal Credit until a later date". No date mentioned, ie "watch this space". 

      Suggests dwp are waiting to see how their plans to move other groups, up to August 2024, work out, before advising dates for final esa categories.


    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      The Dog Mother · 4 months ago
      @Tom I can't find any up to date info either. It's all only on media sites. 
      But nothing official as such. 
      Perhaps someone else will know more,or maybe its too soon too be sure.Either way I'd like to know too. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    A · 4 months ago
    "We need reform, too. That means a serious plan to get the long-term sick back to work." 
    Rachel Reeves.

    Those who're willing a better treatment from Keir Starmer's Labour might be disappointed big time. God forbid.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      The dogmother. · 4 months ago
      @Craig Tried before,and many employers agreed to make adjustments but didn't. Also if your too sick to work your too sick..  no adjustments mean a hill of beans. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Craig · 4 months ago
      @The dogmother. There's probably some thinking around the margins possibilities mostly around requiring reasonable adaptions by employers so these people can do the job. WFH could work in some cases.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      george · 4 months ago
      @A I don't think anyone thinks there will be much difference in labour but there's always hope and a chance plus the party HOPEFULLY will change and address other things too like housing and NHS unlikely as it may be there is no hope sticking with conservatives so we have to try someone else surely .
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      The dogmother. · 4 months ago
      @A They obviously didn't get the momo that long term sick ,unless they get treatment from the NHS which,let's face it is in such crisis it needs a doctor, will NEVER work again because ill health prevents it.Some is incurable, drug resistant illness.
      I've multiple conditions as do many,I'm unwell daily and some days I can barely move to go to the bathroom. You don't wave a wand and cure all, rhetoric cures nothing also. They need to get real. 
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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    J Stewart · 4 months ago
    I think the Tories are Heartless, To Even think about doing away with Cash Payments for those, in our Society who rely on this cash Benefit..  How can they live if they are to pay bills, Some who claim PIP this is their only income, My Friend who is 65 and riddled with Osteoarthritis, And unfit to Work, is Worried Sick about the Green Paper, The Tories will have a National outcry if they Win and put this Bill through.. The Tories only Care about the Rich not the Poorest in our Society, or disables Shame on them

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