One of the major issues with the Pathways to Work Green paper is the number of questions it leaves unanswered.  But now, with the government’s hastily created “concessions”, things are even more unclear.  Especially whether the concessions mean current claimants are permanently protected or have just been granted a temporary reprieve.

Below are a number of questions, some of which you might want to ask your MP before Tuesday’s vote, because they should be clear what they are voting for.  Or you may have others you want to ask.  The important thing is to keep reminding MPs that there is still the option of voting to scrap the bill on Tuesday, regardless of any concessions offered.

But do bear in mind that many Labour MPs who signed the amendment have said they are still going to vote against the bill, as will many opposition MPs, so your MP may still be an ally.

In her letter to Labour MPs Liz Kendall writes: “Therefore, we will ensure that all of those currently receiving Pip will stay within the current system. The new eligibility requirements will be implemented from November 2026 for new claims only.”

This implies that current claimants will not be protected from the results of the ministerial review of the PIP assessment, due to make changes to PIP eligibility criteria in 2028.  Given that the governments overriding concern is to halt the rising cost of disability benefits, the review can only result in a tightening of eligibility criteria – quite possibly including retaining the four-point rule .  So, this concession may be no more than a short reprieve for current claimants.

Q.  Will existing PIP claimants stay on the current test for life or be subject to the new criteria created by the ministerial review of the PIP assessment, to be completed in 2028?

Many thousands of adult DLA claimants are still waiting to be reassessed for PIP through no fault of their own.  If things had run to the original timetable they would by now be PIP claimants and protected from the 4-point rule.

Q. If current adult DLA claimants, awaiting reassessment for PIP for many years, are finally dealt with after November 2026 will they be assessed under the current rules or the new 4-point rules?

Kendall writes “. . . we will adjust the pathway of universal credit payment rates to make sure all existing recipients of the UC health element . . . have their incomes fully protected in real terms.”

How long does this protection last? 

Q. Around 600,000 current UC health element claimants do not receive an award of the PIP daily living component.  When the WCA is abolished in 2028  and receipt of PIP daily living becomes the qualifying criteria for UC health element, will they continue to have their income protected?  Or is the protection only temporary?

If your MP is one of the Labour rebels, they may be considering withdrawing their name form the amendment, as a number have already said they will.

Q  If you are considering withdrawing your name from the reasoned amendment, does this mean that you are resigned to many thousands of future claimants being plunged into poverty, even though you think it is wrong for current claimants?

Kendall writes in relation to the review of PIP assessment criteria: “At the heart of this review will be coproduction with disabled people, the organisations that represent them, and MPs so their views and voices are heard.”

Q.  If it’s important that the views and voices of disabled people are heard in respect of future changes, why are their voices not important in relation to the enormous changes in the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill?

Q.  If the main aim of the government is to put disability benefits on what they view as a sustainable footing, by cutting the rise in costs considerably, what possibility is there of disabled people genuinely being listened to as PIP criteria are rewritten?

Q.  The PIP  four-point rule does not come into effect until November 2026, almost a year and a half away.  So why is it so important to get the legislation through the Commons in the next two weeks, without consulting on it?

Q.  Given that there are so many unanswered questions about the proposed reforms, and that the government is already going to have to find £3bn to fund their concessions, would it not be wiser to scrap the whole Green Paper process and start again in genuine coproduction with disabled people?

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 hours ago
    Fully agree with all these and adding my own:

    Will getting 'credits only ESA' to establish LCWRA before going on UC, if you get the LCWRA before the date the new plans apply from, mean the lower UC LCWRA or the current UC LCWRA applies?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    Kendall states : Therefore, we will ensure that all of those currently receiving Pip will stay within the current system.

    To me current system is exactly what we are in now.  Surely there would be a legal challenge if pip get descriptor changes…. We surely will be under the current descriptors?  BUT we know they like to twist their words …..
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    · 2 hours ago
    "If you are considering withdrawing your name from the reasoned amendment, does this mean that you are resigned to many thousands of future claimants being plunged into poverty, even though you think it is wrong for current claimants?"

    This is the key question in my view. It cuts through all the noise and uncertainty around everything else, where it is impossible to get answers. Whatever any of it all means, new claimants will be subject to the wicked judgement originally proposed.

    So tell us,

    "are [you] resigned to many thousands of future claimants being plunged into poverty, even though you think it is wrong for current claimants?"

    Are you resigned, after people have actually resigned, after the monster national effort that has been put into opposing the cuts? Now you dare to give up?



  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    Great questions. I think these are considerable concessions however, and most Importantly have laid down a marker that backbenchers are not just going to accept any old legislation, if it goes against the values of the party. My hope is that future proposals bare this in mind. Timms discussion with the select committee this week, states very clearly that a lot of people who currently get pip, won’t in the future. Rachel reeves is going to have to look down the back of the sofa, and reevaluate this, in light of what’s happened.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    ‘New claims’ in all their stats, include everyone who has a review. We are still not safe. 

    The unnamed ‘age discrimination’ clause is still in there. 

    The ‘arbitrary decision-making’ clause is still in there. So we will not be able to use other people’s wins as Case Law. 

    The Bill needs to go in the Bin. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @ANGELA Angela, how do you think the decision-making clause and not being able to use case law will affect us in practice? 

      At the moment there seems to be a large amount of case law that supports us at tribunal level, and which is used extensively in B&W guides.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    Thank you.  This is really helpful.  I will email them to my MP.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    The concessions are gimmicks and will not reduce devastating harmful outcomes.

    Concessions that reduce harm:
    1. Keeping the Work Capability Assessment.
    2. LCWRA eligibility to remain separate from PIP eligibility.
    3. PIP eligibility to remain 2 points per descriptor.

    Vote against the bill. The concessions offered are gimmicks that don't reduce harm.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 hours ago
    The concessions are not great. I feel the government are pitting new claimants coming down the line against current ones. Everyone should be assessed under the one criteria. It's going to become a two tier system. Every disabled person should be treated fairly.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    Shared under a video of Meg Hillier on X saying she will now vote yes going forward. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    I've used most of these questions in a template to write to my MP, thanks, they were very helpful. 
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    · 3 hours ago
    IMO  they should scrap it entirely, and they  should not  fuse the 2 different benefits  with very different  criteria into 1  assessment,

    I
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    I want to know when the 'new claimants for UC health element' starts. Many of us have yet to migrate from ESA support group to UC LCWRA and as we know, we are treated as new claimants by UC and subjected to the 5 week wait just like new benefit recipients. If they move to label new claimants as anyone who claims from the date they sign the bill into law that's going to mean that anyone not lucky enough to have had their migration letter in time is going to lose half of their health element. This needs to be urgently addressed imo. They might be tempted to refer to transisitional protection as an answer to this but of course it won't be because the underlyi g entitlement will mean a much greater loss once that has eroded away with rent rises etc.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    there pulling a fast one.
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      · 1 hours ago
      @MrFibro There absolutely is! So sneaky! What on Earth is the massive rush?! 
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      · 2 hours ago
      @Jim Yeah a right master stroke.  Why rush it through shortly for the parliamentary summer recess.  There's definitely a smell of a big fat  rat here.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    Will existing PIP claimants stay on the current test for life?

    If current claimants may be subject to a movement of the goalposts in 2028 then it's not much of a concession. Personally, I can't believe they would consider running 2 assessment systems indefinitely. Looks like a short-term reprieve for current claimants. As always, they propose things without clarity
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @Quietplease Sounds right dodgy to me.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @Quietplease I agree. By redesigning it for 2028, with different scores etc, they can mask the difficulty level of achieving a positive assessment, far better than requiring a 4 instead of a 2. I think the reason, a seemingly large concession was made quite easily, was they knew this.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago


    Thank you to Benefits and Work for your thorough analysis of today’s developments. Like many others, I’ve had very mixed feelings about the government’s so-called “concessions” — they feel like a classic divide-and-rule tactic designed to placate existing PIP claimants while leaving future claimants exposed.

    I wanted to share the letter I’ve now sent to my MP. If your MP has also shown concern about the bill, you may want to adapt this letter — or draw from the questions it raises — to keep the pressure up ahead of Tuesday’s vote.


    ---

    Dear MP

    Thank you again for signing the reasoned amendment to oppose the Welfare Reform Bill as it stood — it meant a great deal to me personally, and to many others who rely on your integrity and understanding in these critical moments.

    I’m writing now because, although concessions have been made — such as current PIP claimants being protected from the proposed 4-point rule — serious questions remain, and I hope you will continue to hold the line and scrutinise the wider implications ahead of Tuesday’s vote.

    In particular, I wanted to highlight concerns raised by Benefits and Work that I believe deserve immediate attention:


    ---

    1. Future vulnerability of current PIP claimants
    Liz Kendall’s letter to MPs states that existing PIP recipients will stay in the current system — but only until a ministerial review changes the assessment criteria in 2028. If that review results in stricter rules (as expected), current claimants could still lose support.
    → Will existing claimants remain permanently on the current test — or face reassessment under new criteria in 2028?

    2. Unfair treatment of legacy DLA claimants
    Many adults still on DLA through no fault of their own may be assessed for PIP after November 2026.
    → Will they be assessed under the current rules — or the new 4-point criteria — despite the delay being entirely outside their control?

    3. Uncertainty around UC health element protections
    The government promises to protect existing UC health element recipients — but for how long? Around 600,000 current claimants do not receive PIP daily living.
    → When the WCA is abolished in 2028, will they continue to qualify — or lose support?

    4. Tokenistic consultation claims
    Kendall says future changes to PIP will be “co-produced” with disabled people.
    → If genuine consultation is so important, why hasn’t it been applied to this legislation — which is being pushed through without one?

    5. Rushed legislation despite long lead times
    The 4-point rule won’t come in until late 2026 — so why the rush to legislate now?
    → Why is the Bill being forced through before key reviews like the OBR, PIP assessment, and Keep Britain Working have concluded?

    6. No clear cost justification despite £3bn in new concessions
    → Wouldn’t it be wiser to scrap the Green Paper as it stands, and begin again in genuine co-production with disabled people?


    ---

    These are not minor details. They go to the heart of whether this Bill is built on fairness, evidence, and respect — or whether it’s being rushed through for short-term savings at the long-term expense of dignity, health, and basic human rights.

    I sincerely hope you will raise these points — whether publicly or within the party — and vote against the Bill in its current form.

    With respect and gratitude,
    [Your name]

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @CaroA Thanks you for sharing
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    It may be a good idea to copy and paste all the above questions into a email to the original Labour rebels (and those Labour MPs that have stayed quiet on their position up till now) and add any of your own questions (I don’t think there’s any point asking questions about an mps personal compassion and empathy as they are too easily sold out - disabled can still make a very good argument focusing on economic points (such as most pip being spent in local economy, not enough jobs to go around, extra pressure on nhs - those are very small examples and I sure others can come up with better ones)

    Labour MPs need to be persuaded to take a step back and see if the gov are trying to rush through the bill and not use correct facts & figures that the bill needs further work

    No one disagrees that the welfare system needs reform and most of us understand the need to get the bill down but this bill is counterproductive and is likely to lose, not save money in the long run (and that’s even before bringing up the numerous human rights issues)
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    "The PIP four-point rule does not come into effect until November 2026, almost a year and a half away. So why is it so important to get the legislation through the Commons in the next two weeks, without consulting on it?"

    Because the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Bill includes from April 2026 halving UC health element for new claimants except those in the Severely disabled for life never expected to work group. And includes a uprating boost for UC standard component from April 2026. And the benefit uprating is normally announced in the Autumn budget the year before.  
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    Excellent questions. I had a call from Carers UK today as I have been involved with them throughout this process. They indicated they’re not happy with these changes either and are updating their statement around the proposals. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    Benefits and worker doing a great job and the MPs that are against this and have stood up to pressure are admirable.  Many will feel that getting a commitment to excusing current claimants is a major victory.  In the context of the run up to this it's sort of is.  And every effort should be made to get more concessions and definitive assurances to broaden the benefit of the efforts made by the rebels.  Nonetheless the day is almost assured when in the future the social welfare support landscape is going to be very different and it isn't the fault of claimants that they have got health problems mental or physical or neurodiversity issues all in a disability unfriendly employment climate. I'm not so many years away from retirement age and hopefully I shall hang on to what I've got but I'm bothered about the future for other people younger people and not so younger people who try to claim these benefits in future  and what things are going to do to the assessment in future. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 hours ago
      @Xfactor This isn't a bill of morals, as it should be.  More of a bill of money.  And yes in the future it's going to be extremely tough for existing & for future claimants.
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