In a desperate effort to distract attention from the growing anger over the proposed personal independence (PIP) cuts, Liz Kendall announced that work has begun on designing a new assessment which will combine the doomed work capability assessment (WCA) with the PIP assessment.

In the Pathways To Work Green paper, Labour announced that the WCA would be scrapped in 2028 and eligibility for the additional UC health element would be based on receiving any rate of the daily living component of PIP.

In order to do this the DWP plan to change the PIP assessment rules, which they claim need “modernising.  In particular, the Green Paper notes that:   

“People reporting mental health or neurodiverse conditions as their primary condition have increased more rapidly than those reporting other conditions, and increases in disability have been more marked among younger adults than older people, although older working-age people are still more likely to be disabled.”

It seems that Labour have in mind a tightening of the PIP eligibility criteria around mental health and neurodiversity and possibly around the “condition” of being young.

In addition, the Green Paper warns that the aim of the new assessment is to “shape a system of active support that helps people manage and adapt to their long-term condition and disability in ways that expand their functioning and improve their independence.”

It is entirely unclear what this might mean, except it sounds like some claimants may be given something other than cash.

Liz Kendall told MPs “I know how anxious many people are when there’s talk about reform, but this government wants to ensure PIP is fair for people who need it now and into the future. In our green paper we promised to review the PIP assessment, working with disabled people, the organisations that represent them, and other experts. And I can tell the house we are starting the first phase of that review today.”

The review is being led by Stephen Timms, the DWP disability minister who has been criticised by many for what they see as a marked change of stance from his opposition days, when he was a fierce critic of the DWP and seen as an ally of disabled claimants.

The fact that a new PIP assessment is due to be introduced in 2028 adds a new layer of fear an uncertainty for PIP claimants.

From November 2026, Labour plans to implement new rules which will remove PIP daily living from any current claimant who does not score at least 4 points for one activity when their award is reviewed.

But now, claimants have the added fear that the PIP assessment may change radically in 2028 and there may be other ways in which their award can be taken away from them. 

In addition, the DWP have still not made it clear whether existing claimants who get the limited capability for work-related activity element in their universal credit, will be protected if they do not receive – or lose – their PIP daily living component from 2028.

Kendall claims the DWP review team will be working with disabled people and the organisations that represent them.

But many claimants must be wondering about the wisdom of organisations lending their name to a process which may result in an even more complex and even less generous assessment system.

And many Labour MPs may be wondering about the electoral wisdom of launching yet another attack on both PIP and UC claimants a matter of possibly only months before an election in 2029.

It is likely that hundreds of thousands of disabled claimants voted for Labour at the last election in order to put paid to the Tory’s hated PIP voucher suggestion.

If Liz Kendall had been asked to make absolutely, cast-iron certain that those same voters would never, ever vote Labour again, she could hardly have come up with a better plan.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 hours ago
    Mental health support is a joke in this country.  I once scored the maximum score on a depression checklist and was put on a 6 month waiting list to receive therapy.  Lucky me, I got to skip the queue when I was rushed to hospital after a suicide attempt.  Staff at the hospital don’t care about you or they’re just too busy and understaffed to care.  They just make you feel worse.

    Therapy, when you do manage to get it is a joke for someone like me.  I have multiple different mental health disorders and autism.  I’ve had therapy for 20 years, most of which I had to fund privately out of desperation.  None of it has helped despite persistent trying.  Apparently I’m too complicated a case due to my multiple disorders.

    NHS psychologists and psychiatrists generally know absolutely nothing about autism.  I was told by one psychiatrist… oh, we can ignore the autism because all it means is you’re good at maths.  Autism is my main problem and I’m not even good at maths.

    The mental health professionals have all given up on me so benefits was the only support left to me.  Now that is going to be taken away.  But that’s ok because changing the assessment so there is no way I can pass it will apparently magically support me to be able to cope with life and work.  Hooray!

    Will they still allow me to have free prescriptions or will they be taken away too?  The one thing keeping you alive… your medication… you’ll have to pay for it yourself now that we’ve taken away your income.  Probably the next logical step with this government.

    It’s already bad enough living with something that you can’t see, that is literally all in your head, but which devastates your life.  You already feel like you should be able to just get over it and do better in life.  You already feel like a failure.  Now I have the government reaffirming those thoughts and specifically targeting me.  However just trying harder never seems to work for me.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 22 minutes ago
      @Anon
      My thoughts are with you Anon.  Please do not let the government get the satisfaction of just adding your name to a list of suicides.  They won't care.  Just another number.
      People love you and will miss you if you decide to die by suicide.
      I lost a daughter to suicide in 2000.  She was not living at home, but in a hostel after making herself intentionally homeless. Her benefits were stopped for some reason despite my writing to the DWP and speaking to the hostel.  I never stop thinking about her. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 hours ago
    Thanks for the update. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 hours ago
    As someone who is disabled and retired, still on PIP because DWP keeps those over 65 on PIP how is it going to work for me?
    I'm 72 in four weeks. My disabilities 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 hours ago
    Thank you Benefits and Work for this update yet again it looks like a knee jerk reaction by the government to counter threats from Nigel farage and his merry band of disability denyers!  I agree we need to concentrate on protesting against the June vote and not get distracted.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 hours ago
      @CaroA The irony is that Professor John Curtice (elections expert for many decades) has pointed out that the biggest danger for Labour is losing its core vote to parties to the left of it such as the Greens, Lib-Dems, SNP and Independents. It is losing a much smaller portion of its voting base to Reform.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 4 hours ago
    On today’s news and the pain behind the silence.....

    I don't know the motive behind the fires outside Keir Starmer’s former property, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it turns out to be linked to the growing despair around the disability benefit system. I say that not to excuse anything—violence is never the answer—but because I’ve seen, up close, just how broken and brutal this system is.

    A close friend once spoke to me about taking drastic action in response to their treatment under DWP policies. I couldn’t tell if they were serious or not. I tried to reason with them, but in the end, the intensity of what they were expressing made it impossible to stay close, and I had to step back. That loss has haunted me.

    People are being pushed to the edge—not just financially but mentally and emotionally. When you are made to feel powerless, invisible, and gaslit by the very institutions meant to protect you, it’s no wonder some feel there’s no way to be heard.

    Alongside many others, I urge everyone in our community to stay with peaceful protest. There is power in our truth. We must keep finding ways to speak it—clearly, calmly, and persistently—because this is hopefully where we can be most effective in the longer term.

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 56 minutes ago
      @CaroA and the rest of my reply to @CaroA was

      You've got it just right, as always.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 hours ago
      @CaroA Good for you, CaroA, putting that so well. I started several comments referencing those fires and bottled out of posting because I didn't want to set the wrong tone and thought maybe I wouldn't get past the moderators anyway.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 hours ago
      @CaroA Absolutely agree CaroA with non violence and being clear and consistent. However, many MPs opposed to these cruel proposals were not calm in the Abbot debate, and I wasn’t calm in my APPG statement or in the video interview. I’m sure you’ll agree that a bit of controlled passion (oxymoron??) is what gives a bit of life to our fight. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 hours ago
    There is no ammount of "shaping the system" That will Help my son to manage his autism. I'm absolutely gobsmacked. It seems that every morning I wake up these cuts are on my mind and I'm sure I'm not the only one.
    My son has Aspergers, he couldn't cope in mainstream school so I had no choice but to homeschool. He has since gone to university and come away with A first class honours undergrad degree and Masters degree in Cybersecurity both with distinction. He has struggled every step of the way and had to have support staff and mentors with him constantly while at uni. This was 3 years ago, he's applied for hundreds upon hundreds of jobs since then and declared his disability but hasn't been successful. And now to hear that this disgrace of a government are cutting back on access to work etc and now seem to be redesigning the pip system to negatively target people with mental health conditions and autism is beyond me. My son is so desperate to have a purpose and find work but if he can't do it with the qualifications he has that what chance do others have. I have no words about how angry I feel.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @Pixelmum Pixelmum i have same condition it depends on if they target low level autism(asd) because if only high level can only qualify then that’s it won’t get it then back on to the work search universal credit group and the nightmare that will be 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 hours ago
      @Pixelmum I’m sorry Pixelmum, this is all so cruel. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 7 hours ago
    Our concerns are being raised - this morning I heard two mps voicing them on Radio 4's Yesterday in Parliament .

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    · 7 hours ago
    Just read all that and sat here wondering I will be 53 by then 2028 i have not worked for 31 years and only condition I could use would be autistic spectrum  disorder and that’s on the mild side and would I still get it if not then theirs hardly any options left after that 
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    · 8 hours ago
    If these things go through, then it's going to be absolute carnage.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 10 hours ago
    Another article grimly pointing out the associated dangers of proposed benefit cuts coinciding with assisted dying bill:

    https://www.google.co.uk/url?q=https://www.indcatholicnews.com/news/52356&sa=U&ved=2ahUKEwjR2IXdqZ-NAxX5WUEAHaM0E94Q0PADegQIDRAT&usg=AOvVaw0Xg0f7N7ze-ZlpIBkoz95Z
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 hours ago
      @keepingitreal They’re going to let people with anorexia have assisted dying?  What?!  Why?  Are they going to let depressed and anxious people have assisted dying too?  Think of the money they could save from benefits and mental hospitals.  Probably the next thing on their agenda.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 13 hours ago
    "Further and faster"

    So, exactly what they said then.  Further brutality towards the most vulnerable and impoverished people in the country and as fast as we can force it through to prevent it being stopped or held up in any way.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 14 hours ago
    After seeing all this news makes me really wonder if they get rid of standard daily rates and only keep high rate daily living of pip that high rates will get vouchers instead of cash and perhaps that’s why dwp not effecting motorablilty side of pip. Cause government earning money from motorablilty cars after all it’s the biggest car contract. Thanks for reading my opinion. All this reform not helping anyone’s health and mind 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 14 hours ago
    I'm going to be brutally honest - at this stage, I don't care what they do with the form, because most of us are going to lose Daily Living PIP anyway.  The changes to the PIP form itself is another fight way down the tracks that we can do absolutely nothing about at this stage, because they won't disclose their changes for a long time yet.  With regards to Daily Living, they can't make the situation much worse than it is going to be in 18 months time.  Yes, they probably will screw up mobility element for us too, but we can't do that fight while we're essentially blindfolded because we don't know what they plan.  I think there is a problem here in that we (and by that I mean claimants and charities etc) could get distracted from the main fight against what is coming in November 2026 by this new announcement.  And I'm pretty sure that this announcement today is to muddy the waters for MPs preparing to vote on PIP eligibility next month.  We mustn't get distracted. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 14 hours ago
    This doesn't sound like a combination of the WCA and the PIP assessment, it sounds like a tightening of the PIP criteria and the abolition of the WCA.

    "In addition, the DWP have still not made it clear whether existing claimants who get the limited capability for work-related activity element in their universal credit, will be protected if they do not receive – or lose – their PIP daily living component from 2028."

    I wonder if they'll say that the changes to LCWRA will only affect future claimants as a way of trying to stem the mounting opposition to the cuts. True, the changes to PIP have thus far been the main focus of opposition, but as opposition continues to grow there is likely to also be a focus on those who lose their PIP with regard to UC LCWRA and those who currently get UC LCWRA but don't get PIP. I could see them agreeing not to apply the LCWRA changes to existing claimants in the hope that the anger will die down. Not that I think it would work, but I wouldn't be surprised if they tried it.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 15 hours ago
    I suspect the first thing they'll do is scrap prompting so even if you do score 4 in one category that you won't make up 8 points unless you also have a severe physical disability. Then I expect nobody with MH will get a long award, they'll want to review more frequently meaning we'll be always being assessed or preparing for the next one. The only hope is that MIND or RETHINK can come forward to the press & make sure they know just how badly this will hit us. Otherwise we'll have to wait for the coroners to start issuing PFDs, but of course that'll take years, and many of us won't make it.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 15 hours ago
    "We promised to review the PIP assessment, working with disabled people..."

    If - and big if - these disabled people exist, you can bet it'll only be the kind they want to listen to. The kind who left those rancid comments on The Telegraph article talking about how people with physical disabilities are going to be affected by these reforms.

    You know, the kind that are saying that people with mental disabilities should be locked out of claiming benefits completely just so they can be spared. Or that PIP should be issued based on diagnosis and not how your disability affects you.

    But anyway, it didn't take long for things to escalate from "those who can work, should work" to "we want people who cannot eat and soil themselves to be put to work in call centres and supermarkets". Because that's the only way you're going to merge two completely different assessments for two completely different benefits.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 16 hours ago
    Don't tell me, they are going to redesign PIP so there isn't any score higher than 3? 
    If they want to reduce the impact of mental illness and neurodiversity those services need to be top of the list for NHS funding, not at the bottom, especially those for young people
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 hours ago
    How the transition is managed for existing claimants, especially with regard the passporting to the support group via pip eligibility, is going to be key.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 1 hours ago
      @L And it's going so well with migration from legacy benefits, isn't it....
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 hours ago
    I was die hard labour, and always thought they would prioritise disabled and vulnerable people. I never thought we’d be talking in these terms about them. However a lot can change in the years ahead with their top team, so it’s well worth fighting for, but as things stand I couldn’t vote for them.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 hours ago
    A relentless attack on the disabled from every single angle but the morally correct one!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @James At last! Success!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @James Attempt 3...

      Someone has misunderstood your comment, James. The rest of us get it.

      Let's help the downvoter out.

      A relentless attack on the disabled from every single angle except the morally correct one!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @James

      Let's help the downvoter out.

      A relentless attack on the disabled from every single angle except the morally correct one!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 hours ago
      @James Someone has misunderstood your comment, James. The rest of us get it.

      Let's help the downvoter out.

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