There are probably only two weeks to go until the first vote on Labour’s cuts takes place in the Commons.  Labour backbenchers suspected of planning to rebel will be bombarded with threats, bribes and misleading propaganda about the reform plans.

But there are still steps you can take to counter the pressure they are experiencing and also to encourage MPs of all parties to vote against the cuts.

Contact local councillors

This really is worth doing.  Cuts will have a very damaging effect on local authority budgets as care services, housing, health services, advice services and education will all be hit and everyone will be worse off as a result. So, it’s an issue councillors really should be raising with their MPs.

Tower Hamlets local authority has called on the government to reverse the cuts, which they estimate will cost them £8.5 million a year.

Two Labour councillors in Cheshire have resigned, in part over the cuts.  This is not earth shattering, but will be big news locally and will draw attention to Labour’s plans.

One reader who contacted 58 councillors has heard back from some who say they have contacted the local MP.  Our reader has also heard from the MP herself, who says she has been contacted by councillors, after residents raised the issue with them.

There’s more details and a sample email to send to councillors here.

Make your MP aware of these reports

There are an awful lot of facts and figures washing about at the moment.  But sometimes knowing who objects to a measure can be as important as why they object.  So, please make sure you local MP knows about these reports – you can copy and paste this information if you wish:

Citizens Advice (CA) literally works for the DWP, having had over £20 million from them to run the Help To Claim service. But it hasn’t stopped CA publishing Pathways To Poverty, a searing report on the cuts, which begins:  “By refusing to properly consult on its plan to cut billions from disability benefits, the government is choosing not to ask questions it doesn’t want the answers to. The cuts will have a devastating impact on disabled people (and their children), sending hundreds of thousands into poverty, and many more into deeper poverty.”

Money saving expert Martin Lewis is probably the most trusted figure in the UK when it comes to financial issues.  So, when his charity produces a report on the planned reforms headed “Lead shoes instead of a life ring”,  and says “We strongly urge the government to ditch these plans, which will cause misery and hardship for some of the most vulnerable people in society” you can be sure people will listen.

The Commons All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Poverty and Inequality is hugely dominated by Labour MPs.  Yet it has condemned the “sweeping cuts” in a report that argues thatThese proposals won’t remove barriers to employment—they will add new ones by stripping people of the income they rely on to survive. “

The Commons work and pensions committee also has a Labour majority, yet their interim report asks for any changes to be delayed and warns that the proposals: “might not incentivise work, as the Government hopes, but rather push people deeper into poverty, worsen health, especially in more deprived areas, and move people further from the labour market, as evidence suggests has happened in the past with similar reforms.” 

And then there’s the DWP’s own opinion about its chances of moving disabled people into work. At 4pm on Friday 2 May 2025, on the eve of a bank holiday and on a day when the news was dominated by the results of the local elections, the DWP quietly buried two reports.

In “The Experience of Additional Work Coach Support” the DWP found that more time with a work coach improved mental well being for claimants with mental health issues, but had no effect where physical health conditions were concerned and that “Feeling meaningfully closer to work was an outcome for only a minority of those interviewed.”

 “Evaluation of the Employment and Health Discussion” found that employment and health discussions make claimant’s briefly feel more positive, but the solutions they produce don’t work and fail to address may of the barriers to work that disabled claimants actually face.  Yet the Green Paper argues that claimants will benefit from “a new support conversation” which will “enable people to get help early, providing access to more rapid and timely support.”

When so many respected organisations cast doubt on the Green Paper proposals, surely it’s time to pause the plans and carry out more research and consultation.

Don’t be fooled

Most importantly of all, don’t listen to Labour claims that the rebellion has collapsed, that’s just them trying to make their own backbenchers feel isolated and scared.  Instead, keep encouraging claimants to contact their MPs and also offer your own words of support to those MPs brave enough to openly declare they will not vote for Labour’s cuts.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    I am sure my memory is not wrong when I say that wasn’t it Labour under the leadership of Tony Blair that had the let’s get “Britain back to work” plan. Didn’t they want to cut benefits then too? Seems like history is repeating itself. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    once again the labour government are attacking the old and disable this government got in by false promises. and all they can do is blame the previous government. If there is not enough funds for looking after the elderley and disabled why do we keep sending money abroad to help other counties. we should look after our own first 


  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    Emailed all Councillors in Metropolitan Borough of Calderdale, West Yorkshire.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    Yet another nail in the coffin of the disabled and vulnerable people in the UK. I having trying for over 20 years, to get back to the work environment.  Excuses included; 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    Laughable that they claim that people with mental health issues felt better after talking to a work coach. What 'level' of mental health issues did these people have? It's meaningless and dangerous claiming this. Particularly for those with severe mental illness.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    We need proper political representation so we cannot be treated in this disgraceful way by this or any future Government again who decides to cut our benefits without appropriate consultation.

    Representation and a recognised body would help to stop this and uphold the rights all of us should have to a fair and adequate amount to live on. 

    What decent Government is repeatedly warned that this will cause extreme hardship and distress to its voters and yet still blindly carries on! 

    Show me a humane party that stops building big houses no one can afford, stops wasting millions building rail links no one needs and on nuclear power stations we don’t want and instead supports the sick, the vunerable and the homeless, one that works towards making the U.K a stand out country of equality and fairness and that is the party I will give my vote to.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    My mp is Liz Kendal. Say no more!
    She doesn’t give a crap 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    Wait in four years time, we get are own back. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    I have just received an email from "DWP Consultation Pathways To Work". (consultation.pathwaystowork@dwp.gov.uk)
    It thanks me for my response to question 2 of the Pathways to Work etc.... then it says "We have reviewed your response and noted that it raises concerns around your physical and/or mental wellbeing". 
    It then asks for all my details so a "DWP colleague can make contact with you to confirm that you have the support you need, and – if you do not – signpost you to any further support or information that may be helpful.".
    Is this an email I can just ignore? I feel as though I have been set-up and tricked into making contact with them.  I have signed numerous petitions and emailed my MP, so who else is going to approach me? What else has been sent to the DWP? Isn't anything confidential any more? 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @kevin1342 They do that. I've had Carers Team contact me for safeguarding after completing a survey about thes welfare cuts.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @Kevin1342 That’s the spirit Kevin, fight on
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @Ditty63 Thank you Ditty for putting the email into context, I genuinely feel a lot better now about it. I woke up this morning and my first thought was "they will take my PIP away", but my second thought was "and I will take them on and get it back again". 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @kevin1342 If the DWP are asking for all your details, surely that means they don’t have them. None of these changes are legal atm. I would ignore the email, just as I ignored the 3 letters they sent asking me how I spent my PIP. They offered a £10 voucher for that info! I know you wanted to help but I don’t sign petitions. They rarely , if ever, work and your information is available to the DWP or whoever posts the petition. The Pathways to work “consultation “ was unfit for purpose. I do wonder why no one challenged that. . There was no way to legitimately respond to it, as the whole paper was a farce plus they wanted too many personal details.  My point I suppose is lock down your personal social media. Post nothing, because if they can get away with what they’re doing now they can get away with anything. Also dont give any personal details out. I’m sure you realise all this but also remember these last few months of vile rhetoric from Labour has stirred up a lot of hatred and fear but none of this is law (atm). Good luck Kevin, with this lot in power we’re going to need it.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    It's not the end of the road if they vote it through though is it? Doesn't it go before HOL?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    I wrote my mp several times about this she is labour she also stood on the grounds that she wanted to help disabled people not be forgotten now they are in goverment she is backing the cuts what a waste of space she is as long as she knows her 20 odd years run as mp is going to be over 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @JeanS Me too. My Labour MP ignored all my points and just sent me a load of claptrap, pre-prepared statements.
      They are not fit for purpose. The HOC is one big club of 650 + of mediocre fecal craniums getting overinflated salaries.

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      · 6 days ago
      @Ash6f I wrote to my MP but it was completely wasted too as he is Labours Chief Whip… just got a standard response informing me of the public consultation… I live in Wales and have just read that it has been cancelled in Wales anyway… totally pointless! Saw Clive Lewis on Politics Live some weeks ago… one of the first I’ve seen arguing against cuts… so I wrote to him but got nothing back😕
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @JeanS Mine is a Starmer sheep too

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @Ash6f mine is a new Labour MP,  she just follows the party line that the most vulnerable will be looked after.  she is a waste of space.

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    · 6 days ago
    I have never felt such disgust and contempt for a government in my entire life as the people in government at this time. Morally bankrupt each and everyone of them. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    Isn’t it part of the Human Rights Act that victims should be free from discrimination. Surely this govt is discriminating against the most vulnerable in our society ie the disabled and the elderly?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    People are going to die because of this government’s policy on PIP.
    I have serious mental health issues & the stress of it all is already sending me down a dark path.
    Starmer & his party will have blood on their hands
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @D C I have spent the last few months looking at ways to die. My mental health is in severe decline due to this and that's not the reason I claim pip! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @D C Dc I know how you must feel I have been thinking similar lately but we can't let them push us to this, they would view it as do many less draining the system. I took an petrified for the future coz it means I can't keep my mobility scooter running anymore, batteries are horrendously expensive 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @D C It gave me a breakdown last April when sunak announced his pip plans, now my agoraphobia is really bad again and I'm having to start exposure therapy from scratch, it also made my dysmotility way worse and from oct to Feb I couldn't swallow any solid food,I was on ensure drinks at one point now I'm back on food but blended only food, all because I'm a genuine claimant!!  I can't work,who wants to sit next someone at lunch who's eating blended food with a spoon and still chokes and wretches on that!! Not to mention the agoraphobia and that I can't actually get anywhere, so what job can i do? None!! I know I've lost the last 3 because of my agoraphobia and not being able to turn up!!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    I have emailed my MP a few times, I received a copy & pasted response. 2 years ago I was a Nurse, dismissed last year, disabled by long COVID caught in 2020. I managed to struggle on. I’ve lost my home, I fear that without PIP I will lose even more. I am along with millions of others massively concerned about possible reforms & what the future may hold. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @Vickki I was a psychiatric nurse as well, about the same time as you. I was 'encouraged' to quit because I was diagnosed with severe, uncontrollable Crohn's disease. I didn't want to leave but I had to see a consultant physiologist once a month in staff health. He recommended to management that I wasn't capable of carrying out my duties to the level I needed to. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @M.Morby I qualified in 1987 and worked on our heavy long stay elderly wards for Dementia patients. 28 patients, 4 staff no hoists. Hoists came in in 1993 or 94. So we were lifting 6stone to 20+ stone people manually. I was a Psychiatric Nurse for 32 years. I have hereditary cervical Spondylosis. I'd never have accepted that job if I'd known. In 94 I was diagnosed with Cervical Spondylosis. In 2013 I was tripped and fell on a night shift, backwards onto a concrete floor. Couldn't go to A&E because of staffing. I carried on in pain until 2016 and at a Sickness Review meeting I asked to be assigned to Disability At Work. I was escalated from Stage 3 to Stage 4 Sickness level and would have to meet with a panel of 4 Managers above Campus Manager and not known by me and explain Every Asence in a specific period. I walked out that meeting and said I'm going for Ill Health. At my Ill health meeting, the manager assigned asked me to stay! Turns out my Union Rep is best friends with the Campus Manager in charge of me. I was 50. In July 2017 I got a letter telling me I'd been awarded Tier 2 NHS Pension. Meaning I can never work again. Yet in 2021 that form wasn't good enough for DWP. It annoys me the Government departments won't accept information from each other. I'm so sorry you went through the same. I'd have sued my trust over the staffing but my colleague didn't fill my Incident form in properly. I hope you and all of us get through this and am hoping on a miracle it doesn't get through!!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    I have barely skimmed the info re the proposed "reforms" and their likely effects on people such as myself. (irESA & PIP - awaiting my daughter's help on pending migration to UC). My cognition and mental health are poor, with little support. It is overwhelming. When everything is already so difficult, I have nowhere to turn. If life is currently nothing but an endurance test, I'm questioning if I should even bother?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 days ago
    I am very concerned that a Government who was voted in by the people and elected to represent the people is pointedly refusing to acknowledge or listen to the information being put in front of them by the C.A.B, Martin Lewis, The APPG, etc. to name but a few.
    Instead they insist these cuts will go ahead no matter what. I see it as an open and deliberate act of aggression against the most vulnerable members of society. 
    I feel also that the public at large do not understand just how difficult and humiliating it is to try to claim benefit. I think they are under some misconception that you just simply fill out a short form and you are magically given large amounts of money in your bank. We know only too well that is not true.
    Media statements saying things like if you have these four conditions you can get hundreds of pounds a week do not help either. 
    The public should be made fully aware just what this whole process is like and the negative and detrimental effect claiming has on our already debilitating state of health. It should be made clear about the trick questions, the heavily loaded application and assessment process. And the ridiculous questions that decide if you qualify like can you put a pen in your top pocket or if you are well enough to sit in a certain chair you are judged a liar and a fraud and perfectly well enough to work.
    How exactly are they going to find jobs for us when it is impossible for us to do the only jobs available or we would be doing them!  What new jobs have been thought out and designed especially for us to do? None! 
    Labour have stooped so low in continuing with what amounts to open aggression and hostility against the most vulnerable members of society. 
    Instead of leading the way and making the U.K. a flagship country that fully supports and upholds the sick on every level the Government chooses not to.
    Their actions are a choice and they have made the wrong one.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 days ago
    I've migrated from ESA Tto UC at tge beginning if May. I received no payment and I'm in arrears with my rent now as they've underpaid me not only on UC but rent/housing. As I see it it will be months before it's sorted.  
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 days ago
    I have until the 28th June to migrate from ESA support group to UC. I was waiting until next Wednesday to apply, as this is a day after my last ESA payment.
    I have just received a text from DWP,now, stating they are going to ring me to find out why I haven't applied yet and to talk to me about the consequences of not doing so.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @Mikt27 We had a 100% discount and now 75% discount. We are worse off.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @PS Check your payments. I discovered my council tax had changed from 90%, discount to only 75%, discount but it's because I now receive a bit more on UC. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @ruud1boy I'm not saying it's a problem and I fully intend to put a claim in. I'm just puzzled as to why they are ringing me,  when I don't know anyone else who has been contacted.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @Cathedral city Why is that a problem? If you don't put a claim in your benefits will end. They're trying to avoid that happening. 

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 6 days ago
      @Cathedral city I recently migrated from irESA to UC. Was told I would not be worse off and that if I am I will get my payments matched as I migrated before the final date I was given. Now I have found out that I am not able to claim the full Council Tax Benefit as am now on UC. So, am already worse off by £28 a month! The Council won't budge on that. I contact UC to explain they had said I wouldn't be worse off only to be told 'Council Tax is nothing to do with us', even though I pointed out that by being forced onto UC this has put me in financial detriment. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 days ago
    Sent to Emily Thornberry. If anyone is her constituent could you send similar?

    Dear Emily,

    I heard you speak on BBC Politics Live on 16th June about welfare cuts. I am pleased you have concerns about the green paper, as hundreds of thousands of disabled people like my family will lose all financial support but their disabled family member will be still be unable to work. Sir Ed Davey raised my case in PMQs a few weeks ago.

    I just wanted to bring up a point you made about the unfairness of a person who receives PIP using their money to pay their rent. If a disabled person is unable to work, the standard rate of Universal Credit does not cover the costs of housing and bills. The government’s proposed uplift to UC is wholly insufficient.

    The financial support of PIP often enables people to work, but it’s wider purpose is to enable disabled people to live independently. If it is withdrawn (along with gateway benefits such as UC LCWRA and Carers Allowance) and they are still unable to work, the costs of their care will fall to Local Authorities and costs to the NHS and Housing will also increase. In the end, the State will spend far more than it will save. Not to mention the destitution that disabled people will suffer. Our own household will lose £12,000 per year and my husband, who has myotonic dystrophy, will remain unable to work. The ‘support’ being suggested in the proposals will not come until it is too late, as you rightly pointed out on the programme.

    I really hope MPs will look at the detail of this bill closely, as have so many organisations like CAB and Martin Lewis’ charity, as well as the Work and Pensions Committee, and see that the proposals do not make any sense for disabled individuals or the country as a whole.

    Yours sincerely,

    (G****)
    (Not your constituent, but I hope you are able to take note of my comments in any case)

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