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
    The are regressing back to the thought of the undeserving poor?
    There is a cost to disabled facility grants and the NHS don’t give equipment away if it can be funded by another department.
    The only way of disabled facilities grant is free is if someone lives in local authority Association or privately rented accommodation. This is only Free if you can get your landlord to agrees the work.
    If a homeowner has a DFG then a lien is put on the home for up to 10 years to reclaim the money.
    Disabled people pay higher costs for heating, washing and paying for services like cleaners and carers. Goods are often priced with a premium and the 20% off nowhere near covers the higher rates charged.

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @JF Cast your mind back to the early 1940's. In Germany they did not care for the disabled, elderly, sick and the Jewish population. Is our present Prime minister really considering abandoning the care and welfare of this country's most vunerable. He shows his ignorance in several sections of his speech and should be ashamed of himself and his so called advisors and I have voted conservative all my life and can honestly say this lot are hopeless.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Anon Why did my cousin have to pay the bathroom improvement grant back 3 years after my aunt died.  My cousin sold the house as she was moving into sheltered housing.  Therefore grant money is repayable.  
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @JF This is not true, disability facilities grants are available to renters and homeowners alike, up to £30000. The Council do an assessment on the property, usually carried out by an OT. If works needs carrying out to enable the disabled person to remain in their own home,  then a request is put into the finance department at the local council. A financial assessment is carried out and if the homeowner has savings of less than £16000, then the works are usually approved.
      As it is a grant the money for the adaptations is not repayable EVER.
      I know this is true because I used to work in the finance department of my local authority and my parents have just had some big improvements done to their privately owned bungalow. We have it in writing that the monies are not repayable, even when my parents pass away.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    This is very much about cancelling disability as a welfare status. These proposals are the first stage: start by diluting and restricting access, then cancelling it altogether with so-called alternatives (and likely more pressure on carers and families to take over, thus reducing the "independence" dimension of PIP).
    This writing has been on the Tory wall, and to some extent the Labour wall too, for the last 20 odd years. We all know what talking therapies means: CBT for everything and everyone even though it is well documented that this approach does not suit everyone. Notwithstanding the very long waiting lists and the many hoops to get on them in the first place (locally it can take 18 months just to be assessed then approved to go on the waiting list). I'm not so sure Labour would not support restricting access to PIP for mental health and neurodivergence issues. Frank Field, who has just died, did get that the welfare reform ball rolling many moons ago.
    For me, that would be curtains. I would not survive that. I am not even sure I will survive my current PIP re-assessment (1 year and counting, due for an in-person assessment at some point soon, expecting to be rejected and having to go through all the shitty steps we know). I've been through this before and it was absolutely crushing. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    There is a large amount of 25 yr olds unemployed and they want to cause undue stress for those that have disabilities. I can't get mobility part because apparently having arthritis in the knees, bad back, neck, trapped ulna nerve for over a year now, IBS....if I haven't been somewhere before I need a couple of weeks preparation. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Sunak (in his reform speech) saying that mental health disabilities don’t involve the same costs as physical is a purposeful denial of the facts.

    The tories want the old, poor, sick and disabled to just disappear altogether; so that they can make as much money as possible at the expense of those who are able to work. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    I have always said that the far right fascists are just waiting in the wings in order to take over.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Would think the new car industry / motorbility will be lobbying against pip changes.  Disability employs many and  puts money in the economy. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    My mental health was actually starting to slightly improve due to medical cannabis and I even went to the local shop which was really difficult but with help i managed, this news has seriously set me back to the point I’m bed bound again, just feel worthless and completely give up at this point my medicine costs around £250 month alone the thought of loosing it now after improvements is a last minute attack by the Tory’s to try and blame disabled people for high taxes etc, how this government has managed to stay in power so long is beyond me , they be diggin me back up out of my grave sending me to job centre if they get in power the worry of loosing the little things that make things easier, I’m absolutely sick to stomach and it’s deffo set off my ptsd and having frequent anxiety attacks now 😥
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Adam Williamson You just described me. I suffer from severe mental health. Clinical depression, severe anxiety, complex ptsd, emotional unstable personality disorder. Honestly my anxiety is going through the roof reading this and honestly I do not know how I will cope if all this come to pass
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    I’ve suffered with chronic anxiety, depression paranoia and OCD for 37 years.

    The only support I have other than my go is a once a week visit to a support group. 

    I was discharged from mental health services over 10 years ago and ever since they have done nothing but downplay  be very dismissive to my conditions.

    Talking therapies have never helped but tablets have to a certain extent.

    Friendships and relationships have always ended in disaster.


    Currently, I am 54 and live with my parents who are as supportive as they can be.

    Each day is extremely hard as I have constant racing anxiety and never ending paranoid thoughts along with bitterness and resentment.

    I do regularly think that if my benefits are taken away that it would be the last straw.


    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Anon Try to remember that most politicians can’t be trusted. How do you know this? Their lips are moving and they are spouting scare stories or self congratulatory rubbish that has no actual substance to it. These scare tactics are nothing new. Nothing will happen quickly even if anything does change. Just look upon it as fake news. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Anon I am the same age as you and I empathise with your story. I was badly treated by my local mental health service and told to complain  even when I approached my local advocacy servicewhen I was in Crisis due to social isolation after Covid.  due to my autism after they took away a clinician who looked after my mental health for years. I used to have an older relative who looked after me but passed away 5 years ago from Cancer . Another older brother left me to cope on my own to go and live somewhere else. So having autism I was left to cope, struggle for nearly a year  and also cut loose from social services when I was struggling with my own mental health when I reached out to them they couldn't deal with my struggling mental health due to a non empathic psychiatrist who denied me any further help from my local mental health team after only meeting him once which was a terrifying and intimidating process ..A year on I had to arrange private care through a community organisation which is how I use my pip. I try not to focus on the negative but every day is a total struggle for me due to being diagnosed with supposedly "unstable personality disorder" and apart from other mobility issues I would really struggle . The thought of the GP not being allowed to write or send supporting information to the DWP terrifies me after the government announcement last week. It is not our fault that we aren't unwell and I am fed up living in fear and being re-assessed by medical and health experts who have never met me. Why should people like ourselves be forced to justify our ills and ailments through no fault of our own. If I could work I would I worked for nearly 20 years before both my physical and mental health treatment worsened and I am paying for private treatment which I cannot really afford but need. 



  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    I work part time and get pip I don’t get ESA or Universal credit will these changes affect people like me who work and get pip 
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      · 7 months ago
      @John Yes,I'm afraid they will,like everyone is saying,it's purely a cost cutting exercise, they don't care about disabled people, they proved that when the cancelled the help to work for the disabled community a few days ago
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @John John,

      Yes 
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    · 7 months ago
    What an absolutely set of repugnant people. 

    Without being too political, governmental decisions over the past several years has lead to this crisis and as usual, they are 'raiding' the 'Social Care Pot' as a quick fix to their incompetence. 

    The level of delusion of these fools is completely off the scale. 

    Who do they think will vote for them after this (and their other litany of failures)? 

    And as usual, these ignorants, will be completely void of how any idea how this would 'play out' in the legal realm. 

    Look at when they first got rid of DLA and sidelined all those with Mental Health problems, they were taken to court and lost. 

    No political party is 'perfect' however, this is a 'typical' Conservative manoeuvre; create problems through incompetence, corruption, conflicts of interests etc and then target welfare benefits as a quick fix (without addressing the real issues at hand). 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    All this is making me think about giving up completely. 

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Anon Whatever you do don’t give up because if we give up we’re letting them win 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Old mother Yes,  but the DWP are going to create their own 'police force' , which will gve them more power than the 'real'  Police. Also, they are going to be able to decide if someone is guilty of fraud without absolute evidence or even taking a person to court. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Anon Hang on in there.  It’s all performative cruelty. We still have a legal system in the U.K.  to check what is blatantly unjust. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Best thing for everyone on here now is to flood the PIP consultation process that the Tories have stated they will produce in the "next few days".

    Participate in the process. Ensure that you make it clear no change to the current set up 


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    They rubbed it in a little further on channel 4, they put some celebrities in a makeshift work house, just to hammer the point over to people. Channel 4 is a government media outlet.
    Perhaps it might help if people really looked into where they got this business model from.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    I wonder if anyone has looked at something called the poor law of 1834. The rich decided that they no longer wanted to help the poor and directed a parliament of the time to set up workhouses. What they were saying about the poor then is exactly what they are saying now. It was about 40 yrs later the children they stole from their parents were sent to war, ww1. They are using the business model. But think on this, how did those rich men get their money, by the backs of the poor.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    In the immediate term, it doesn't matter whether any of this comes to pass or not, or whether it gets watered down or not. Because like (I imagine) many here who suffer with real depression, this news has instantly plunged me into a downward spiral. Real depression is impervious to the application of reason. Real depression isn't just 'feeling down and bluesy', but a state of being absolutely crippled by logic-defying despair to the point of no longer seeing any point in even waking up in the morning. It is a state that exists beyond fear, beyond even resignation. And it is clearly far beyond the limited comprehension of any of the self-serving moral hypocrites who infest government. So in terms of simply creating a climate of despair, it's a case of 'Job Done' already. Drinks all round in The Commons Bar.

    All this is just back to business as usual for The Nasty Party. It's no more morally-repugnant than anyone with a functioning long-term memory should expect from them. It's their media cohorts that are as much (if not more) to blame for fuelling their divisive and discompassionate 'message', and their political 'opposition' that are little (if at all) better in their own vainglorious pursuit of power.

    But then eventually, I remember that my despair, and then my resignation, and then either my ultimate compliance or my death, is their actual goal. To them, I am not a human being, I am only an economic unit that is either productive or unproductive. Useful, or useless. To them I am nothing more and nothing less. And that knowledge will always restore my determination to survive and overcome whatever they throw at me, in literal spite of them, for long as I am able.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @wibblum You are amazing.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @wibblum It’s seriously ruined my progress that was slow but was able to do fairly out tasks thanks to medical cannabis, but now I’m bed bound again and feel sick to stomach, its disgusting how they using disabled people as a target, and threatening to take what little money we receive I mean it’s hardly a fortune , fun fact in Norway and Scandinavian country’s everyone out of work gets the same amount which is around £1200 monthly we’re jobseekers here get around £300 monthly, I mean having a Tory government for so long has destroyed our country’s social services it’s like maggie all over again but maybe worse !
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @wibblum Absolutely 100% ,I got immediate chest pain when I read it. 
      And my MH has gone south.
      I'd only got past my very recent WCA even if it was paper based.The wait was cruel for the results as it was for pip last oct from getting the murderous phone Interrogation.
      Talk about frantically paddling to stay afloat, take it all in try to digest it with a swirling mind.
      No matter what 'THEY' like to think we are still valuable members of society, valuable to our friends,our family.Worthwhile citizens and we still contribute.
      Having said all that, I am in utter desperation for a life free of the benefits system. Free from the dwp breathing down my neck. 
      But it's never going to happen,so we are their mercy.
      Each time I hope things isn't get any worse'.. Hey, Presto.'
      Good vibes to us all. We need every one of them. 

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @wibblum Yes.... that is so true "real depression is impervious to the application of reason."  Trying to tell myself Labour must be better than what the Nasty party have planned, this won't come in until next year and then we don't know what will make it through the process.  None of that works.  Just still that sick feeling and dread/worry.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Thing is,most of those goading with absolute hate over social media don't realise its going to directly affect them to,I had a guy message me yesterday saying ( with laughing emojis attatched) you lot can't get any more sick notes,shame,not like the rest of us,I pointed out that no doctors sick notes applied to everyone working or not if this goes through and I recieved no reply,a lot of people do not understand what it actually means for them,all this hate directed at us must stop,but I doubt it will,lots and lots of trolls doing the rounds atm so I think I will step away from social media 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Anon Stepping away from social media is probably the best option, just in general.

      People used to say "I wouldn't wish my illness/condition on anyone else" and I used to agree with them. But not any more.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Please help us against what they plan on 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Johanna Longden Watch out for Tory dangling big carrot's.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Johanna Longden Amen hun x 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Anon They are bound to be better than the Tories.  They may well adopt those but probably won't adopt all the measures as none of them have will have gone through legislation before the next election.  So Labour will probably come up with their own version, which is always going to be somewhat better than the Tories.  People need hope, as all this won't happen until way into next year anyway.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Johanna Longden Labour haven't condemned the plans though, so they may or may not continue with them . Expecting Labour to be better is false hope.

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Angel Please don't worry x hunny. It's only if the tories win. If u look at the polls. Labour is very very much in the lead xx
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    As Rees Mogg said, more "pie" for them. This is a calculated attack on the destitute and will end very badly for this country. Surely if they were serious they would implement it on a date of birth basis like they are doing with the cigarette ban. Rishi gave 75% furlough to 11.7 million people including middle earners for 18 months now wants to put that on the disabled and sick and unemployed. 
    The money is there and there is plenty of it. They just want to pocket it for themselves.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Pip payments help a lot more than useless talking therapy......
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Jlee Watch the talking therapies goes up in price.  These therapists will all want to cash in on this extortionately, and the tax payers will be paying out billion in therapy session.

      Best leave PIP as it is.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 months ago
    Wow Sunak has turned real nasty, I also dont doubt for one moment this has been planned for sometime, the recent news as an example the existing LCWRA wont have any WCA after 2025, well now we know why, because within a year they will be on a UC where LCWRA is getting removed, and if they dont find a job within a year of that they lose all financial support, with no doctors able to legally provide them sick notes either.

    Previously we have had constant welfare reforms as its an easy scapegoat, but what we have seen in the last year or two has gone to a completely different level, and there is very little kick back from Labour, the public, the press etc.

    I expect the threat of the extreme right wing reform party has contributed to these more extreme policies.  As they likely aimed at reform party voters.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @Gambolputty I still think something will go amiss on transfers to UC for claimants in the LCWRA group of ESA, how does our group status go over anyway, Is there anything on the UC form asking if we are already in these groups on ESA already, if we tell them over the phone form filling, because what I have seen of the UC form, its shows nothing were you put down that you are in the LCWRA group, it's just made out for new claimants who are on no benefits yet, there is nothing about your group status for ESA claimants, this is the working part, so it's looks like they would ask for sick notes and reassessment again, we should not need to go though this, they know what we are getting, we should automatically be transferred onto it.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @CC This is what I was thinking all along, when he said nobody who is in the LCWRA group will be reassessed, I knew there was more to it, because when we are on UC, we will be taken out of it, on the government benefits page it gives a list of days of migration dates for legitimate benefits, it says ESA with child tax credits from July, ESA only or ESA with housing benefit at a later date.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 7 months ago
      @CC They've actually said that the reassessments for LCWRA for the majority are switched off already, meaning a change of circumstance, or temproary condition like cancer treatment or pregnancy will be what triggers a reassessment. 
      Also, those with exosting support group/WRAG on ESA will still qualify on migration for their equivalent group.

      This is all on the .gov website here in a truncated form, with a link at the bottom that shows the full consultation results and plans.


      If you go on to follow the link at the end, points 8-10 point 27, and points 81-86 outine this in full. 

      Another thing to remember is that all the new plans hinge on a green paper, future legislation (and parliamentary process) in a new parliament after the general election, which is looking almost certain that the Tories will not win. And even if they miraculously do, it still hinges on Sunak being PM as well. And although Keir Starmer hasn't made any concrete statement, he has said that the problem lies within NHS underfunding, and that should be addressed before benefit cuts.

      In short, it really isn't time to worry yet as many of these plans could be massively changed, watered down, face huge delays, or even not happen anyway.

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