Prime minister Rishi Sunak appeared to blame claimants for high taxes and high migration numbers as he set out his five point plan for welfare reform in a speech given yesterday at the right-wing think tank, the Centre for Social justice, founded by Iain Duncan-Smith.

The five welfare reforms the Conservatives will introduce if they win the election are:

  • the WCA will be made harder to pass;
  • GPs will no longer issue fit notes;
  • legacy benefits claimants will move to UC sooner and work requirements will be increased;
  • PIP will no longer always be a cash benefit and fewer people will be eligible;
  • DWP to be given powers to seize goods, arrest claimants and impose fines.

Irresponsible burden

In his speech, Sunak claimed that there 850,000 more economically active people in the UK since the pandemic, due to long-term sickness.

He argued that the country “can’t afford such a spiralling increase in the welfare bill and the irresponsible burden that would place on this and future generations of taxpayers.”

 As well as increasing taxes, the rising number of claimants is to blame for high migration numbers according the prime minister:

“We can’t lose so many people from our workforce whose contributions could help to drive growth.  And there’s no sustainable way to achieve our goal of bringing down migration levels, which are just too high without giving more of our own people the skills, incentives, and support, to get off welfare and back into work.”

Sunak went on to set out five welfare reforms the Conservatives intend to introduce in the even that they win the next election.

Reform 1:  the WCA will be made harder to pass

Sunak argued that in 2011, only 20% of those assessed under the work capability assessment (WCA) were found to be unfit for work.  But the figure now is 65%.

“That’s wrong. People are not three times sicker than they were a decade ago.” Sunak argued.

The solution is to make it harder to pass the WCA, something the government is already drawing up plans to do.

“So we are going to tighten up the Work Capability Assessment such that hundreds of thousands of benefit recipients with less severe conditions will now be expected to engage in the world of work – and be supported to do so.”

Reform 2:  GPs will no longer issue fit notes

The Conservative’s attempts to replace the sick note with the fit note, which says what work you can still do with support, has been an abject failure.

94% of fit notes still sign people off completely.

So, now the Conservatives plan to stop GPs issuing fit notes altogether and give the job to people who may not even be medically qualified:

“So we’re also going to test shifting the responsibility for assessment from GPs and giving it to specialist work and health professionals who have the dedicated time to provide an objective assessment of someone’s ability to work and the tailored support they need to do so.”

A consultation on reforming the fit note process was launched yesterday and will run until 8 July 2024.

Reform 3: legacy benefits claimants will move to UC sooner and work requirements will be increased

Sunak announced that “we’ll accelerate moving people from legacy benefits onto Universal Credit, to give them more access to the world of work.”

The DWP have since used X (formerly Twitter) to reveal that

“The Prime Minister’s welfare reform speech earlier today announced the acceleration of the Managed Migration of legacy ESA/ESA & HB cases to #UniversalCredit. All migration notices will now be sent by the end of December 2025. We will work with stakeholders on the detailed plans.”

The rules around UC and work should also be tightened according to Sunak.

Instead of nine hours, “Anyone working less than half a full-time week will now have to try and find extra work in return for claiming benefits.” 

In addition, “Anyone who doesn’t comply with the conditions set by their Work Coach such as accepting an available job will, after 12 months, have their claim closed and their benefits removed entirely.”

Reform 4: PIP will no longer always be a cash benefit and fewer people will be eligible

Sunak claims that spending on PIP will increase by 50% over the next four years unless the rules are changed.

He argues that whilst some people need money for aids such as handrails or stairlifts “Often they’re already available at low cost, or free from the NHS or Local Authorities.  And they’re one-off costs so it probably isn’t right that we’re paying an ongoing amount every year.” 

In addition, claimants with mental health conditions are to be targeted because “for all the challenges they face it is not clear they have the same degree of increased living costs as those with physical conditions.”

In fact, Sunak wonders if these claimants should be given money at all:

“And we’ll also consider whether some people with mental health conditions should get PIP in the same way through cash transfers or whether they’d be better supported to lead happier, healthier and more independent lives through access to treatment like talking therapies or respite care.”

Sunak announced that a consultation will be launched in the next few days to decide how to stop the PIP assessment system being “undermined by the way people are asked to make subjective and unverifiable claims about their capability.”

The government wants to see more medical evidence required to substantiate a claim and “a more objective and rigorous approach that focuses support on those with the greatest needs and extra costs” with a limit on “the type and severity of mental health conditions that should be eligible for PIP.”

Reform 5:  DWP to be given powers to seize goods, arrest claimants and impose fines

Sunak announced that the Conservatives are preparing “a new Fraud Bill for the next Parliament which will align DWP with HMRC so we treat benefit fraud like tax fraud with new powers to make seizures and arrests. And we’ll also enable penalties to be applied to a wider set of fraudsters through a new civil penalty.”

In other words, the DWP will be able to search claimants homes, seize possessions such as computers and mobile phones, arrest claimants and impose fines.

The plan to give the DWP police powers is something we have been warning about for some time.

Will any of this ever happen?

These plans are largely based on the Conservatives winning the next election.  There is no indication that any of them will be supported by Labour if they win.

Of them all, the one most likely to come about whatever the election result is the earlier date for moving income-based ESA claimants to UC.  The move was delayed by the government until 2028/29 in a bid to save money and the pause was never popular with the DWP, who would prefer to complete the process in one go.

There is a real possibility that whichever party is in power next, they will decide that yet another change of date will cause too much confusion.

For the rest of the reforms, the best we can say is that when it comes to voting, claimants now have  a clear picture of what the Conservatives have planned for them - even if Labour’s intentions are still unclear.

You can read the full text of Sunak’s speech here.

You can read more about the PIP changes and find out how to take part in the consultation here.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    looks like the (duty of care) goes from GP to DWP now 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Fred Or close the subsidised bars in both the 
       Commons and Lords. How can our politicians make life or death decisions under the influence of alcohol.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Donald They highly likely won't. The point is, as already someone commented, how labour will deal with it, because they didn't express properly on these reforms plan 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Fred Let's hope they don't win the next general election then 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @john b So are GP's more worried about their work load, or protecting their patients from harm? As if any of this lunacy gets implemented there will be major repercussions for many. Maybe if MPs all took a major pay cut that would help.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    They don't seem to realise that most of those on benefits now that they will subsequently kick off through their ultra strict rules will end up on unemployment benefit, jobless, homeless even, and just adding to social problems and more work for overstretched social services and NHS. Being taken off long term benefits and saying "you can work" does not make someone suddenly become employable! No, those words aren't magic, you will still have all your physical and/or mental problems and conditions that employers won't touch with a barge pole. We'll end up in the dregs of employment at best.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @MJ And at worst destitute and/or homeless, in prison or we all know where.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    That just makes me so mad reading all the crud coming out of that man's mouth (a MULTI MILLIONAIRE) saying now we have to jump through hoops to satisfy the " CRITERIA " I mean are people here actually going to put these Sadomasochists back in power 
    We had 2 very hard years with  covid we all tried to protect our country by staying home and now benefits are being targeted yet again I paid my taxes for many years unfortunately in 2005 my Dr told me if I did not give up work I'd be in a wheelchair alot sooner because of my career standing in one place most of the 7 hours a day I worked 
    Now are they expecting me to jump well MR MILLIONAIRE SUNAK kiss 💋 my ass 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    The family in Number 10, who happened to be billionaires, seem to have it for us peasants. I am feeling scared and worried about what could come next.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Well there will be a number of ex NHS hospitals that they can convert into workhouses for the elderly and disabled and we can return to the Victorian times that they crave.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Crippled with arthritis. In a lot of pain. Incontinent. They're my main issues, more going on than them. And now I've got a cancer scare. 
    Come on sunak. Change places with me for a week. Please
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Who is going to employ depressed people who are low mood and unmotivated due to their bad mental health 
    They will be sacked in no time and have no income, eventually no home and up to their eyes in debt then the government will have a bigger problem than a mental health crisis.

    But I doubt rishi rich will care with his multi million house and wife 

    "We are the government who listen to the country and we have given record benefits to the most vulnerable in history now you can go to work and pay us back because we don't really care about the people who we were not elected to serve"


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    So the DWP will be given the same powers as The Post Office investigators have.  Look how that worked out. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Not surprising that claims for benefits have risen in the last ten years, the conservatives have ruled in that time.Throw in brexit, changes of prime ministers, covid and wfh together with a worldwide depression monetarily it is surprising that recovery is starting to seem a reality. However giving the dwp the same powers as the police is a massive mistake no matter what the dwp say today.Once that power is released they will need more court rooms and prisons to contain the sick, elderly,disabled and genuine disabled people in this fine country of free speech and innocent until proven guilty.

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Mike Don't forget Osborne and his 'difficult decisions' undertook as part of his austerity agenda;difficult my arse! Every single measure made life worse for already poor,needy and desperate people.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    How much lower can this Tory 'government' (small g because they don't govern, they have screwed up everything they've touched since they got in - except their and their corrupt mates bank balances) stoop? Any lower and they'd be in the sewers below the parliament building. These 'reforms' are designed to cull anyone on any kind of benefit. I have CPTSD, ME/CFS, Anxiety and Depression, FQAD (poisoned by fluoroquinolone prescription 'antibiotics' - in reality chemo), BPD/EUPD and recurrent cancer. I've had two TIA's directly linked to the stress caused by dealing with the DWP incompetents. I have a BSc in Psychology and a PGCE and worked in the care sector and education for over two decades until I became too unwell to work. I'm currently waiting for a tribunal date to try to get my ESA reinstated. I'm not holding my breath on that one. I'm in a long queue apparently. My ESA was stopped in March 2022. I would give anything to be able to give Sunak, our unelected prime minister, a two week intense dose of everything that's wrong with me and let's see how he feels about the rug being pulled out from under his feet. And the same goes for any of his benefit 'reform' supporting colleagues.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    They wrote the rules, manipulated the rules, the rules they wrote didn’t yield the results they expected those rules would get them SO THEY HAVE NOW RIPPED UP THEIR RULE BOOK.

    A yardstick that doesn’t measure isn’t a yardstick at all & like the Nazi’s before them they have thrown the brake of mutually assured destruction:they are going down & they will take everybody else with them!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    So they want people who needs aids to get them free from the NHS ... something that they have deliberately under funded ...these lot need to go although I can't see the other lot being much better 
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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    It’s clear that what they want is for all of us to disappear and to be subservient and simply accept their decisions as inevitable. Well we have a choice and we can choose to do something about it, while we still have rights and a vote 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Using one off aids as the entirety of a claimants disabled life is grossly ignorant and also dangerous & irresponsible. Many of us pay for home help at an hourly rate in order to be safe and independent. Despite sole income being hardship many of us are not eligible for direct payments either with councils tightening their belts and shifting goal posts to balance their books. The infrastructure is simply not there for mental health, shifting costs onto mental health services without funding it is also dangerous for the person subjected to this. These proposals, shifting blame on people who have no control over disabilities is an absolute abuse of power simply so Sunak can make more tax breaks for oligarchs and media barons who don’t need any more money. It will cost many disabled lives. I know I couldn’t survive this. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    There was one comment on here that said these proposals are scare tactics by the Government and none of them will happen soon anyway  For those of us with mental health problems, can I suggest we concentrate on comments like this?  Just saying how terrible it is and how bad it is going to be does not help anyone.  Those of us with severe depression/anxiety need to concentrate on the positive.  Also, Labour are always going to be better than the Tories.  They may still go after the people who are playing the system, but they are going to be better than the cruelty of the Tories,  as proven historically, no matter what people say..  We have to hang onto this!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Truism Did b&w say that?  I didn't see that.  Love your terminology though!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @andrea Labour are Tories MK2 in sheep's clothing. Listen to what their DWP's shadow minister comes out with. It's cringe worthy.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @andrea 5 million ppl depending on pip will be voting, as b&w have said….the prime minister has p***** on his chips!

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Giving the DWP the right to monitor bank accounts and arrest people is frankly alarming, and with globalism working its magic life in England more and more resembles a kleptocracy these days, at least for natives. Is it any wonder bankers privately refer to ‘Britain’ (England in fact) as ‘Treasure Island’?

    How unfortunate then that we continually aid and abet the tyrants by encouraging people to vote. It’s part of what seems like the entrenched left-wing editorial standpoint of this website and most often expressed in the wearisome sub-Marxist ‘X years of Tory misrule’ rhetoric of the 1980s. I’ve been a member for years. I don’t recall ever been encouraged to vote Conservative because of the excesses of a governing (and of course saintly) Labour Party.

    Parties are controlled. It doesn’t matter who you vote for. Indeed if you believe these organisations distinguishable by their principles or some sense of ideological commitment then permit me to remind you that alongside John Major’s 1994 restrictions on the right to silence there stands, according to journalist Bob Woffinden, the “various pillars underpinning the criminal justice system … swept away under the Labour governments of Tony Blair and Gordon Brown: protection against double jeopardy – gone; habeas corpus – gone; can’t be convicted on hearsay evidence – gone; can’t be convicted on anonymous evidence – gone; bad character evidence brought into trials; previous convictions brought into trials. And even as it were the inner sanctum of trial by jury, that too was gone because they said you could be tried by judge alone in some circumstances.”

    An unpleasant realisation perhaps but isn’t it time we faced facts? The party system exists to divert  energies few wish to expend confronting injustice when they could be watching Premier League football, in view of which I for one shall be staying home on polling day.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Well if you vote Tory this is what you'll get but I see the courts being kept busy if the get back in.. It was foul before and it'll be far worse.. This is a money saving exercise before they've failed in mental health and the NHS.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    One thing for sure, they always look for their savings at the wrong end of the economic divide! This 'government' has run out of options, squeezed its public dry by years of austerity, taxed everything that moves and doesn't move, highest tax burden since the war, privatised everything for their mates, nothing left now, let the private sector off to rip everyone off on an industrial scale, profiteering unhindered, fiscal drag everywhere, but where too next! DEFLATE the welfare system, the last bastion of what is the British approach to caring for its peoples!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    universal credit are also going into accounts and changing details, a bit like the post office situation , i was a forced migration in september 2018 , my UC account was set up at islington job centre, since this set up they have changed payment amounts on the forst three payments,  my account shows that i have savings of £3612, at december of 2023, wnen i enquired as to where these savings where they told me it was in my declaration of 2018 this was never done by me , i the asked why was it only showing from 2023 and not from 2018 , they explained my account was only updated in december 2023 ??????
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @tony Take regular screen shots of any DWP journal and if they change what's in them you can then show that you never said or did what they try to claim is in the journal. I have friends that do this and the DWP always backtrack on what they are trying to claim.

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