Wow! Petition renews the struggle against vicious welfare cuts

A community of the concerned – including people who are sick and disabled, carers, friends, families, and those who are perfectly healthyhas come together to launch a new resistance to the draconian Coalition welfare cuts that are killing, on average, 73 people every week.

The launch of the WOW (it stands for resistance to the ‘War On Welfare’) Petition comes only days after the Conservative Party started a ‘voodoo’ poll on its own website, intending to fool respondents into saying that the reforms already introduced by the Department for Work and Pensions – and soon to be reinforced with even more drastic measures – are fair.

The document on the government’s e-petitions website has been launched by actor and comedian Francesca Martinez. On the Ekklesia website she said we are living in a dark time for disabled people: “Already a third of disabled adults live in poverty. That’s disgraceful and with the new cuts, that figure can only rise.

“It breaks my heart that some of the most vulnerable people in society are being demonised and used as scapegoats. It’s something everybody needs to fight against.”

The petition calls for:

“A Cumulative Impact Assessment of all cuts and changes affecting sick & disabled people, their families and carers, and a free vote on repeal of the Welfare Reform Act.

“An immediate end to the Work Capability Assessment, as voted for by the British Medical Association.

“Consultation between the Departments of Health and Education to improve support into work for sick and disabled people, and an end to forced work under threat of sanctions for people on disability benefits.

“An Independent, Committee-Based Inquiry into Welfare Reform, covering but not limited to: (1) Care home admission rises, daycare centres, access to education for people with learning difficulties, universal mental health treatments, Remploy closures; (2) DWP media links, the ATOS contract, IT implementation of Universal Credit; (3) Human rights abuses against disabled people, excess claimant deaths & the disregard of medical evidence in decision making by ATOS, DWP & the Tribunal Service.”

That may seem a big demand, but the alternative is potentially fatal for hundreds of thousands of people. Esther McVey, the Minister for Disabled People, has announced that, when Disability Living Allowance (DLA) is replaced by Personal Independence Payments (PiPs), more than 300,000 people will have their benefits cut or removed altogether. That is not an achievement.

In addition, anybody who can walk more than 20 metres will not receive the mobility element of the new benefit.

The petition has already won a huge online response, and I strongly encourage you to help build on that. Go to the site and sign the petition. Visit wowpetition.com (the petition’s base website) and join the discussion on the forum. Above all, ask your friends, relatives, work colleagues, or anyone else you think might be interested, to sign the petition.

It’s time to turn the tide against the persecution of the vulnerable.

4 Comments

  1. jaynel62 December 19, 2012 at 11:55 am - Reply

    WOW Solidarity

  2. Andy Stuart (@Scrumsrus) December 19, 2012 at 1:52 pm - Reply

    These reforms are a national disgrace and must be repealed sooner rather than later.

  3. The Drug Sniffing Dog December 19, 2012 at 2:05 pm - Reply

    I am not disabled and I stand with the WOW petition. I’ve signed it and will encourage others to do so. This government is amoral.

  4. oojackapivvy December 19, 2012 at 2:34 pm - Reply

    Obviously it makes sense that anyone capable of walking 20 metres is in no need of assistance. My ability to walk 20 metres is, of course, of great help to me when it comes to walking into town, more than half a kilometre away. And clearly it is right at proper to remove benefits from people who theoretically can work, some of the time. My ability to work at random periods throughout the week, and to manage as much as 50% of my contracted hours over the course of a year not being sick time is absolutely something that employers can tolerate, of _course_ there are jobs out there for me.

    As it happens, I’m extremely lucky that my husband earns enough that we are able to scrape by without me working. Without him, I have no doubt I would by now be homeless and destitute – we’ve been within a whisker of it before, under the dying days of the last Tory government, when the job centre decided I was not looking for work with sufficient vigour, because I was unable to apply for any job that required me to stand for any period of time, or that involved any considerable amount of bending and twisting. The fact that I applied for everything I was physically able to do was apparently insufficient. It was my husband who rescued the situation then too, by finally managing to get a job 250 miles away (and by virtue of the kindness of the employer in paying our moving costs, which we otherwise could not have afforded, and due to loopholes were ineligible for any state assistance with).

    Thank you for the link. I’ll be signing, and encouraging all of my family and friends to do the same.

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