Liz Kendall has offered three concessions to Labour rebels unhappy about the Green Paper cuts.  But will they be enough to sway a significant number of dismayed MPs?

The concessions

The Guardian reports that Kendall has offered the following to Labour rebels:

13 weeks payment of PIP for claimants who lose their award because of the 4-point rule.

The “right to work” scheme for those on health and disability benefits will be introduced at the same time as the bill.

“Non-negotiable” protections for the most vulnerable benefits recipients will be on the face of the new bill.

13 week payment

Usually, claimants who lose their award because of rule changes by the DWP might expect to receive payments for 4 weeks, after being found to be no longer eligible. 

13 weeks is more “generous” but of little practical use, as few claimants will be able to apply for other benefits or secure employment in that time.  As a concession, it seems ineffective.

Right to work scheme

The right to work scheme appears to be a reference to the idea outlined at para 126 of the Pathways to Work Green Paper that claimants can try work without worrying about losing benefits:

“. . . we will introduce legislation that guarantees that trying work will not be considered a relevant change of circumstance that will trigger a PIP award review or WCA reassessment. We will make these changes as soon as possible, so that they apply in the current system and as well as in the reformed system.”

It appears that this will be introduced in separate legislation to the bill imposing the 4-point PIP rule, but at the same time. 

This is a move that is likely to be welcomed by most MPs. But as the government had already said they would make this change “as soon as possible” it is, at best, a very minor concession.

Protections for the most vulnerable

According to the Guardian, Kendall has said there will be “non-negotiable” protections for the most vulnerable benefits recipients on the face of the welfare reform bill, when it is published next week.

Para 42 of the Green Paper explains that:

“. . . for those receiving the new reduced UC health element after April 2026, we are proposing that those with the most severe, life-long health conditions, who have no prospect of improvement and will never be able to work, will see their incomes protected through an additional premium.[  We will also guarantee that for both new and existing claims, those in this group will not need to be reassessed in future”

(Note: the additional premium will not be payable to current claimants as they will not have their LCWRA element reduced in the same way as new claimants from April 2026).  This very probably – though not definitely - means that the DWP severe conditions criteria are to be put into law. 

These are guidelines already used by the DWP to reduce the need for reassessment of universal credit claimants who have been found to have limited capability for work related activity (LCWRA) and whose condition will not improve.

How the severe conditions criteria work

A clamant has to meet one of the LCWRA criteria.  You can find a list of the criteria here.

In addition, all of the following criteria need to be met:

The level of function would always meet LCWRA.  So, conditions that vary in severity may not meet this requirement.

It must be a lifelong condition, once diagnosed.   So, conditions which might be cured by transplant/ surgery/treatments or conditions which might resolve will not meet this requirement. This should be based on currently available treatment on the NHS.

No realistic prospect of recovery of function.  So, for example, a person within the first 12 months following a significant stroke may recover function during rehabilitation, and would thus probably not be eligible.

Unambiguous condition. A recognised medical diagnosis must have been made.

If a claimant meets all these criteria they will be classed as having a severe, lifelong health condition and will not be subject to reassessment.

You can find further details of the severe conditions criteria in the WCA Handbook.

However, this provision was already set out in the Green Paper and due to be introduced by April 2026, in any case.  So it seems to be less of a concession and more of an earlier inclusion in the legislation than had been planned.

Money Bill

Putting this concession “on the face of the bill” may have one important effect, however. Elsewhere, we have discussed the possibility that Labour will seek to make its bill a money bill, meaning it cannot be altered by the House of Lords.

However, if the clearly non-financial severe conditions criteria are put in the bill, this would seem to make it less likely that this would be an option for Labour.

Will these concessions be enough?

None of these concessions affect the main issue that Labour rebels are unhappy about, the removal of the standard rate of the daily living component of PIP from hundreds of thousands of claimants.

So, it seems unlikely that many will be swayed by what are fairly token offers, especially as two of them were to be introduced anyway.

However, Kendall appears to have confirmed that the controversial bill will be published next week and so the first vote is likely to take place at the beginning of July, come what may.  (There’s more on how the bill will progress here).

So, we won’t have long to wait before we find out.

In the meantime, it might be worth letting your MP know whether these concessions will make a significant difference to your own circumstances, because it is now all about the battle for the support of potentially rebellious MPs.

As Guardian columnist Francis Ryan pointed out: “If you see briefings like this in the coming days and maybe think “I’ve heard this before”, remember that Kendall is not trying to inform the worried public - she’s trying to woo rebellious backbencher. That’s what the next few weeks are about for ministers.”

And for claimants and campaigners too.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    We'll see a cranking up of reports on this in the Guardian - possibly from Sunday. 
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    · 1 days ago
    Just got a feeling that this vote isn't going to go through. 
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    · 1 days ago
    In response to the comments below about the green paper and the new pip 4 point and new uc health element lcwra we would be expected to attend work focused interviews with a work coach sounds easy but they are a real pain I’m having them now on uc lcw the work coach doesn’t listen have a clue and just talks over me spouting out ridiculous ideas followed by threats 
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      · 1 days ago
      @James h Thanks
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Cecelia @Cecelia you are threatened with a long list of sanctions even on lcw now if you refuse to do anything the work
      coach asks you to do such as voluntary work cv part time job search courses it’s totally different to the esa work activity group that was more in the middle with little hassle every few months only way out of it is to get lcwra 
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      · 1 days ago
      @James h Are you threatened with sanctions if your work search  is not upto scratch.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @James h
      We don't yet know if the change to LCWRA criteria will apply to existing claimants who get LCWRA under the current criteria. If they do then there will be a huge number of people applying to get the new UC premium for those who can't work. Bear in mind that there will be a lot of peope who will have evidence from consultant-level specialists stating that their condition is not expected to improve, so however the government tries to stitch it up, there is a very decent chance that the new premium effectively becomes the ESA Support Group under another name. 

      It's very reminiscent of what happened when the WCA was first introduced: it later emerged that Atos' contract stipulated that only a very small proportion of claimants should be placed in the Support Group - about 11% if I remember rightly. But that didn't last, because people had medical evidence showing that they met the Support Group criteria. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @James h As my reply was cut off by auto editing.
      I was going on to say that for those able to attend and cope with them if they are like those that were and possibly still required for those receiving carer's allowance. Once every 3 years with no obligation to take up any of the help offered or advice given. Then I found them pointless but harmless. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    And mean while back in Mauritius, they have wiped out their national debt, and also the natives there do not have to pay taxes ( I think its for a year).  

    Which is all down to Starmer & Co, and their luncacy ideology, of giving away our sovereignty, our money (50 billion quid, that's for renting back our own island over xamounts of years). Insane right !!!

    And all labour is concerned about is stitching up not only the British taxpayer, but more importantly the disabled people in our society.

    Labour keep banging on about this 20 billion blackhole the Tories left them with.

    But if you do the maths, labour has out done the Tories by a mile.  And labours tenure is only 10 months in. (4 + years to go) 

    Cutting the welfare state ie PIP is a political choice not a necessity at all.






    .




  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    We may need too polish up our Cvs
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Cecelia I wouldn't say that quite yet, Bert. I like to remain optimistic that we can beat these reforms. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    My Perspective on Liz Kendall & Her Welfare Agenda

    1. Tactical over transformative
    Kendall’s recent concessions—13 weeks of extra PIP, a reiteration of the “right to work” protections and promised safeguards for the severely disabled—appear less as meaningful reform and more as tactical manoeuvres. These moves are aimed at preventing a Labour rebellion by appeasing backbenchers, rather than delivering genuine improvements for disabled people.

    2. Cost-cutting under the guise of compassion
    While she frames the reforms as “decisive action” aligned with Labour values, the core aim remains stripping £5 billion in disability-related support by tightening PIP eligibility and Universal Credit health elements.

    3. Political theatre, not policy
    Analysts caution that these concessions were already signalled in earlier Green Paper proposals, making them little more than reframed whispers of old promises. The goal isn’t to change outcomes; it’s to manage dissent.

    4. Flawed narrative of work incentives

    Kendall insists the reforms are necessary so public funds support those most in need and to promote work for others. However, experts argue that slashing benefits won’t drive employment; it will deepen destitution and mental health crises.

    5. Leadership questions
    Though portrayed as decisive, Kendall is steering a policy steeped in austerity-style cuts, not transformative welfare reform. Her leadership is defined by backbench appeasement and cost-saving rather than bold, principled advocacy for social justice.

    In Summary

    Liz Kendall is presenting a series of surface-level concessions to stave off internal resistance. But behind this veneer lies a substantial rollback of disability support. This is not shaping a fairer welfare state—it is shoring up party discipline while sacrificing the vulnerable.

    If she were a true advocate for disabled people, she would have seized this moment to protect, not penalise, those who rely on welfare. Instead, the signal is: cost-saving first, compassion second.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Disy
      Compassion second?

      No compassion at all more like!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Found this some where it's from 4days ago. 

    over 100 Labour MPs have said they are not prepared to back the government’s benefits cuts—the number of unhappy MPs could be as high as 170. This could be the biggest rebellion yet and a possible defeat for the government. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 hours ago
      @MrFibro The rebellion has grown too large for threatening to withdraw the whip to be a viable option for the whips. It can work if the number of rebels is small, but when it's 150 or more it's just not practical to threaten that many MPs with the withdrawal of the whip. It's totally impractical and if they did follow through the government would look ridiculous and create a huge amount of festering resentment on the backbenches.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Lill 100 OR 170,

      They wont want to resign or to lose the whip, many will take the cowards out when they vote, and that will be to ABSTAIN.

      If your totally against these cuts, then the MP's against should grow a pair and prove to the public that they have a moral compass.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    Rare BBC reporting on this, looking less favourable for the grim reaper Labour Leadership:

    When asked what he made of the protections Kendall had added to the bill, Duncan-Jordan said: "Poverty delayed is still poverty."
    Another discontented Labour MP, Ian Byrne, said: "After 14 weeks do the disabled and sick affected miraculously end the need for the vital assistance being taken away? An absolute nonsense."
    And Labour MP Rachael Maskell said Kendall had "just restated the proposals in Pathways to Work with a three-month transition before people lose their support".
    She added: "It will therefore not change the material facts nor my intention to vote against."
    Another Labour MP said the added protections will not stop dozens of his colleagues from opposing the bill.
    "The whips are pushing very hard with MPs but it's not working," the Labour MP said.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c80k8v4043vo



    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 hours ago
      @tintack Argh, I meant Ballinger! Though it obviously applies to 4% Liz as well.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 21 hours ago
      @Slb A comparison to a non-sentient substance was the most charitable thing I could think of. After all, a non-sentient substance has no feelings, and apparently nor does Kendall.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Gingin You mark my words she’s after promtion . Saw this happening time and time again getting in the way of any customer service or decent fair leadership of staff. In the old days people had it cushty working in civil service. Then they went the total opposite way to beating staff mentally with a huge stick. But this woman has a mission on her mind. It’s to make us comply. Now we know that is not possible for most of us forced into something that will damage us. No matter how far they get we keep fighting because even if they get stuff through it doesn’t mean they are going to be able to use it or it won’t be subject to change. Expect anything including u turns down the line when the pressures off and they don’t look like it’s a climb down. Hopefully not too many of us have perished by then. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @tintack That's rather insulting to mince!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Gingin Alex Ballinger, who described the cuts as being for those who "just need a bit of encouragement", welcomes Kendall's "concessions". Of course he does. He's either a psychopath or as thick as mince.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 days ago
    I think my post didn't get posted.  Here's a bbc article in which several potential rebels say the tweaks and concessions won't alter their opinions

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    · 2 days ago
    This just gets even more and more crazy 🤪 by the day.
    So delay ,Destitution, abject poverty,eviction and even suicide for 13 weeks.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    So people will have time to plan their own funerals?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Aw @Aw, the labour cabinet would have time to plan the end of their careers, if they had the wit to plan anything.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    How about if on LCWRA due to severe urinal incontinence 
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      · 1 days ago
      @Jo PIP is useless for this. I dread to think what will happen to us.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    Letter sent today to my Local MP

    Dear Bobby Dean MP,

    I am writing again as a constituent of Wallington North and someone deeply concerned about the Government’s proposed changes to Personal Independence Payment (PIP), which threaten to inflict real harm on some of the most vulnerable people in our society.

    I have already contacted all three Chancellors for ######## regarding this matter.
    The Government’s proposed reforms are not simply ill-advised—they are, I believe, both morally indefensible and politically reckless. While Liz Kendall has attempted to soften the backlash by announcing a series of so-called concessions, these changes are, in truth, hollow and unconvincing.

    Please allow me to share the following reflection, which I hope outlines the full extent of my concerns:

    A Few Concessions, A Great Deal of Deception

    Liz Kendall’s recent offer of “concessions” to worried Labour MPs over the proposed disability welfare reforms are nothing more than smoke and mirrors. The heart of the matter remains unchanged—hundreds of thousands of disabled people still face losing their standard daily living component of PIP. These shallow tweaks aren’t about justice, or compassion, or even practicality. They’re about party management and controlling the optics.

    Let’s look at the concessions:

    13 weeks of PIP after disqualification under the 4-point rule
    This is supposed to be “generous”? In reality, it’s a pittance. Most people won’t find work or transition to other support schemes in that time, especially if they’re managing complex health conditions. It merely delays the hardship.

    A “Right to Work” scheme
    where trying work won’t trigger reassessment
    Sounds helpful? It was already in the Green Paper and due to be implemented anyway. It’s not a concession—it’s reheated policy dressed up as a gift.

    “Non-negotiable” protections for the most severely disabled
    This is perhaps the most cynical of all. These protections—based on the “severe conditions criteria”—were also already due to be introduced by April 2026. Now they’re just being announced again but sooner and will only apply to new claimants. Existing claimants? Tough luck. You don’t qualify.

    None of these concessions touch the real injustice—the removal of support from those who still have serious, disabling conditions but don’t meet the new, draconian thresholds.

    We’re talking about people with cancer, Parkinson’s, heart failure, fibromyalgia, MS, or complex mental health conditions. Many won’t meet the new “4-point” threshold. Many are in work because of PIP. Take it away and you don’t just ruin lives—you drive people out of work and into destitution.
    And that’s what makes this such a betrayal.

    Kendall isn’t speaking to the public. She’s not addressing the fears of disabled people or their families. She’s courting backbenchers, hoping that with just enough of a sweetener, they’ll hold their noses and vote this cruel bill through.

    There’s also a strategic game being played here. By placing the severe conditions criteria on the face of the bill, Labour might be trying to avoid having it classed as a “money bill”, which would restrict scrutiny in the Lords. But even this looks like cynical tokenism. They’re shifting the furniture around the edges while the house burns.

    It’s all political theatre. The kind that insults our intelligence and shames a party that once stood for the working class, the vulnerable and the voiceless.

    What makes it even more shameful is the utter lack of quality in political leadership today. We are governed by careerists, not statesmen. Political pygmies playing games with people’s lives. Although not without his faults, Aneurin Bevan, the architect of the NHS and one of the moral pillars upon which post-war Britain was built, would be turning in his grave at what this repugnant bunch of ne’er-do-wells are doing and the cheap tricks they’re using to disguise it. They inherit the institutions Bevan helped build but none of the courage, or principle, or vision that defined his generation.

    These plans will fail. Why?

    Because they are morally bankrupt, operationally flawed and politically self-destructive. They will flood appeal tribunals. They will create chaos in the DWP. They will backfire on a party that is already losing trust among those who need it most.

    Mark my words—this bill, if passed, won’t just hurt the disabled. It will haunt the Labour Party for years to come.

    Let your colleagues know that these “concessions” change nothing. Because what’s being proposed isn’t reform—it’s abandonment.

    I sincerely hope that you, Sir, will stand with your constituents in opposing these deeply harmful changes and in time prove yourself to be a parliamentarian of genuine integrity, committed to protecting those with the least power, not enabling policies that punish them further.

    Yours sincerely,
    ########
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      · 1 days ago
      @Disy Thank you for this beautifully put!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    If you listen to Reeves, Kendal and Steimer they are not interested in us disabled people, when I listen to them on Prime Minister Question Time every Wednesday it's all about the "Working People",  they do not mentioned the disabled at all.  Have they forgotten that us disabled have been or are the Working People.  They just want us to disappear from Society and this is why they are pushing for these cuts to rhe vulnerable. 
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    · 2 days ago
    I do not mean to upset anyone, But I can't stop thinking if the the Eutansia bill a part of the Green paper/Solution for PIP calimants?   
    The rerorms seam ridiculous.    3 months payment??   Who came up with this?   Pill in the post or something, afterwards?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Slb I think the Labour leadership view it as a happy coincidence.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Ala I don't think there is a link. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    Kendall is not going to compromise as she has put on a poker face and will keep pushing for the most extreme at disabled people. If she succeeds and many people end up dying and being left destitute no amount of I told you will make any difference. Only the threat of a real day of reckoning both at the ballot box and in the courts will end up making up for the damage that will be done. This is a very evil woman who has been plotting against the disabled and sick for a long time going back to 2010 when she showed that she was even worse than Iain Duncan Smith whom to give credit where is due was far more humane in his approach. Kendall thinks she is doing a wonderful thing but in fact she is delusional and one day will pay the price for that of this I am sure. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @James Take a look at all the cuts to disability benefits and support when Ian Duncan Smith was DWP Minister, and all the deaths linked to those. And marvel that somehow he has been successful in recasting himself as humane. His actions in office were in my opinion unforgettable, inexcusable and unforgivable. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    I honestly 

    https://www.disabilitynewsservice.com/insurance-industry-silent-over-whether-it-lobbied-dwp-to-cut-disability-benefits/

    Major insurance companies – including one that spent years lobbying the government to tighten eligibility for out-of-work disability benefits – have refused to say if they pushed the government to introduce controversial cuts to one of those benefits.

    It is likely that at least some insurance companies will have pushed Labour and previous governments to introduce these reforms, something DWP failed to deny this week.

    But when DNS approached seven prominent insurance companies selling these policies in the UK, none of them would discuss the government’s reforms or say whether they had lobbied DWP ministers or civil servants to introduce such policies.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    Losing income from PIP and UC health is likely to have significant direct impacts on the health and wellbeing of people who are already disabled or living with a long-term illness.

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @Yorkie Bard Of course it will and those people will end up in needing help and will end up getting the higher pip component thus removing any so called savings. The government is getting ready to score it's own goal at the cost of many people suffering 
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    · 2 days ago
    I wonder if there will be an amendment so that current claimants are not affected by the new eligibility rules.  Financially, it would screw up Labour's plans, but would probably get the bill through.  Some MPs may feel that new claimants wouldn't feel the cuts as much because they won't miss what they haven't had.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Slb I don't care even if that turns out to be the case. A huge element of this campaign to utterly disenfranchise the chronically ill and disabled from society and economy is its chilling herald of a world that today and tomorrow's children will also have to live in. 

      We ought to be weeping for them too. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Slb Like with the cuts to the Universal Credit?   Only new calimants first, and now all of us!   It's all lies, to keep people quiet. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 days ago
      @Slb I've been wondering if that might happen as well. On the one hand it would get us off the hook, but on the other hand it would still be a betrayal because people who have to claim not too far into the future would still be screwed.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    Well. as I've been stuck at the bottom for over 4 hours awaiting moderation - I thought I'd repost!

    Ministers on ‘resignation watch list’ over benefit cuts, Harman reveals

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/benefit-cuts-reeves-kendall-harman-b2769358.html
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 days ago
      @Yorkie Bard We don't want resignations, we want votes against.

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