Welfare benefits: ‘The Lords regret…’

freudIf the Palace of Westminster ever had a rat infestation it must be personified in the body of David Freud.

This deadly pest, who is likely to cause disease and infirmity among many of the lower-earning members of society, began his political career when he was appointed by the Labour Party to review the welfare to work system – and he led Labour well off-track in doing so.

His recommendations called for more private sector involvement in the welfare system – which already had considerable interference from Unum and Atos, as readers of this and other blogs will be aware. He wanted to force most people receiving benefits to take part in some form of employment – or prepare for it – as a condition of receiving support.

This is, of course – counter-intuitive. If they could find employment, they wouldn’t be claiming benefits – so what kind of work would they be required to do? It turns out we discovered the answer during his tenure with the government: Illegally-coerced work. Slave labour.

Having done as much damage as he could with Labour, Freud jumped ship to the Conservative Party, like the rat that he is. It is as the Conservative Under-Secretary of State for Work and Pensions in the House of Lords that he has done the most damage.

It is well-known that the Tories have adopted his disastrous ideas wholesale, and the involvement of Atos, with its work capability assessment pushing the Unum-inspired biopsychosocial model of “it’s all in your mind” healthcare on the seriously-ill, has grossly inflated the death – and suicide – rate among Employment and Support Allowance claimants.

These deaths are on Freud’s conscience, just as much as they are on Iain Duncan Smith’s, Chris Grayling’s, Maria Miller’s, and Mark Hoban’s, to name just a few.

I mention the above because this loathsome creature is even now lurching towards the House of Lords to inflict even more damaging changes to the social security system in the form of a series of statutory instruments. For those who are unfamiliar with the Parliamentary process, these set out the rules that form the nitty-gritty, the details of legislation that are underpinned by Acts of Parliament. Crucially, they do not require an affirmative vote to pass into law.

Today he is bringing the following:

Universal Credit Regulations 2013 – seting out entitlement to, and calculation of, an award of Universal Credit, the new single payment for people who are out of work or working on a low income.

Because no vote is necessary, it is impossible to block this instrument. However, Baroness Sherlock is to move an addition to the motion: “this House regrets that the Regulations will not achieve their aim of making work pay for all and in fact will provide lower work incentives for 2.1 million households; will have the effect of penalising savers; will result in a cut in childcare support for working families; will result in cuts to the income of some of the poorest and most vulnerable in the country and will have a disproportionate impact on women and lone parent families; do not meet the needs of disabled people; do not provide adequate treatment of small businesses and the self-employed; and risk pushing many families into arrears and homelessness.”

In other words, they will do the exact opposite of whatever Lord Freud and his Tory paymasters are saying.

A similar amendment has been proposed to the Social Security (Personal Independence Payment) Regulations 2013, expressing concern about the impact of replacing Disability Living Allowance with the Personal Independence Payment (PIP), under the rules for entitlement and calculation they lay down.

Lord McKenzie of Luton will move: “this House is concerned about the impact of the replacement of Disability Living Allowance with Personal Independence Payment; is concerned about the lack of a full impact assessment on carers; regrets the lack of a cumulative impact assessment of all the changes hitting disabled people; regrets the fact that vital safeguards have not been introduced to ensure that additional pressure is not put on carers, that people do not lose their freedom to work and that they are not driven to already-stretched NHS or social care services; believes that while Disability Living Allowance needed reform it should have been started with the needs of disabled people and not with a budget cut; notes that some 600,000 fewer people will be in receipt of Personal Independence Payment by May 2018 compared to those who would have been entitled under Disability Living Allowance; and further notes that some 25,000 disabled people could be forced to give up their jobs because they can no longer afford the extra costs of getting to work.”

Don’t be under any illusions – the government will vote down these amendments. It will be up to us – those who are directly affected by these changes – to monitor what happens and reveal the truth of these statements.

There are other statutory instruments due to go through today. The Jobseeker’s Allowance Regulations 2013 and Employment and Support Allowance Regulations 2013 limit both benefits so they will only be payable based on a person’s National Insurance contribution record; those who do not qualify on that basis will instead claim Universal Credit.

The Universal Credit, Personal Independence Payment, Jobseeker’s Allowance and Employment and Support Allowance (Decisions and Appeals) Regulations 2013 address the administration of all these benefits, revising the appeals process so that claimants must first apply for a disputed decision to be reconsidered by a decision maker (i.e. an internal review) before they can make an appeal to an external tribunal. This is the much-lamented rule that, it has been claimed, will dump appellants onto Jobseekers’ Allowance – even though they cannot possibly find work – until their reassessment has taken place.

The Social Security (Payments on Account of Benefit) Regulations 2013 introduce two new types of payment to replace Social Fund payments, either for an advance payment of benefit or as a loan to buy a household item. They outline the criteria which the Secretary of State must use when determining whether or not to make them.

And the Social Security (Loss of Benefit) (Amendment) Regulations 2013 support changes introduced by the Welfare Reform Act 2012, including sanctions of up to 3 years’ loss of benefit that may be imposed following conviction for a benefit fraud offence.

It is clear that this is a toxic mixture of changes, designed to bring as much misery as possible down on an already-downtrodden sector of society.

Oh, and if this was not bad enough, it will be followed by a debate on the Building Regulations &c. (Amendment) Regulations 2012, which includes another Motion to Regret: “This House regrets Her Majesty’s Government’s decision… to change the provisions on electrical safety in the home, which will be detrimental to public safety.”

Detrimental to public safety. We have a government that sets out to do more harm than good.

Any peers taking part in these debates should be ashamed to be part of such a debased administration.

What they are doing is criminal – we discovered yesterday that this is exactly true, when Cait Reilly won her case against the illegal Workfare scheme that has been forced on thousands of jobseekers, and would have been forced on thousands more if it had not been challenged.

Unfortunately, this out-of-control government’s reaction was to change the law to suit itself.

This is what happens when villains are allowed to make up the rules.

Postscript: As I type this, I’m listening to Prime Minister’s Questions. He just mentioned the Conservative candidate in the Eastleigh by-election, using the now-boring “Ronseal” comparison as someone who “does exactly what it says on the tin”. Look at the amendments to the regulation before the Lords today; it is clear that the Tories do exactly the opposite of what it says on the tin.

Perhaps a better word than “Ronseal” would be “unhinged“.

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18 Comments

  1. Peachy February 13, 2013 at 12:31 pm - Reply

    Um, not a lot to lose? How about two special school places that took years to get? A tenancy willing to accept us as a family? MY HUSBAND’S FLEDGLING BUSINESS? (sorry for caps, this man makes me so annoyed!)

  2. Chris Tandy February 13, 2013 at 12:41 pm - Reply

    A rat infestation? So why is Ed Milliband not turning up regularly driving the Rentokil van?
    ‘Skinner’, the Derbyshire terrier who could always be relied upon to sink his fangs into the body of a tory-rat is sadly getting a little old for this….

    • vomsters February 13, 2013 at 1:25 pm - Reply

      Labour have no guts & are actually in favour of pretty much everything that is being done. They don’t want to fight too hard. They want the Tories hated as much as they were in the 90s by 2015, but they also want as many of these policies implemented and bedded in by then so that they can shake their heads in mock-dismay and murmur how expensive it would be to change and how we can’t possibly fund any changes & how contracts have been signed for this, that and the other etc etc etc. Lying Weaseling Scum, the lot of them.

      • R33 February 14, 2013 at 6:18 pm - Reply

        So very true. Well said.

        • Geoff newton February 14, 2013 at 7:24 pm - Reply

          Watched his speech today, for me he only mentioned a 10% mansion tax, and that’s only to get into the knickers of the libdems, in case there is a hung parliament, my God the founders of the party will be turning in their graves knowing what it has become, their strategy to get the Tories is commendable but
          Not to change things is unforgivable .

      • Trev Garfield February 15, 2013 at 11:42 am - Reply

        Sad but true. In the absence of anyone to fight their corner, what do those of us at the low income end of society do? They feel increasingly powerless and marginailised and become disinterested in voting. Exactly what these vermin want. It’s time for Labour to man and woman up, and if the LibDems had any decency they’d go over to the oppostion and bring this shabby, unelected bunch of twisters down at the foirst opportunity. But power’s so nice, isn’t it? Even if it’s so minimal as to be insignificant and you weren’t handed it by the electorate. Especially if it’s clearly the last and only taste you’re going to have of it.

  3. Powell February 13, 2013 at 1:05 pm - Reply

    Keep working away good fellow. Illustrating the truth behind blatant prpoganda takes persistence. The reality is never exposed in one action but is as a result of a continuous chipping away of the blatant lies and distortions that are endlessly churned out. We all need to apply some thought about what’s happening and to do this objectively. It’s not easy but it’s necessary and it’s the only way things will change.

  4. Joan February 13, 2013 at 4:05 pm - Reply

    What on earth is the point of the House of Lords if all the few sensible things they say are simply ignored by the government?

  5. Phil Howard February 13, 2013 at 6:21 pm - Reply

    Taken from the committee papers.
    Mr Winnick: I go along with my hon. Friend’s condemnation of Lord Freud. There is no doubt that, politically, he is a nasty piece of work, to say the least, but he would not be able to get his way without a Tory-led Government who are only too keen and enthusiastic not only to take up his proposals, but to add to them.

    • vomsters February 15, 2013 at 11:23 am - Reply

      Well, except that Lord Fraud was Labour to start with and jumped ship when he figured it was the best way to keep hold of power. So not only a lying weaseling psychopath, but also a traitorous coward to boot.

      • Mike Sivier February 15, 2013 at 11:37 am - Reply

        In fairness, vomsters, your comment and Phil Howard’s aren’t contradictory. Yes, he was appointed by Labour, but that party did not enact all of his proposals. He did indeed jump ship to the Tories (as mentioned in the article), and it was there that he found the true home for his vicious and iniquitous ideas. I wholeheartedly endorse both of you in your comments about his character.
        If you are trying to tar Labour by association with Fraud (sorry, Freud), go right ahead. Labour policy on social security has been lamentable for many years now, and currently follows the Tory-led thinking that they should be victimised at every turn, rather than provided genuine help, tailored to their situation.

  6. Ash Martin February 13, 2013 at 6:47 pm - Reply

    Can I say “what a twat”?

    Oops,just did. Sorry.

  7. rainbowwarriorlizzie February 13, 2013 at 7:19 pm - Reply
  8. colin February 13, 2013 at 10:46 pm - Reply

    not a lot to loose A they are the ones who have everything to loose when enough poor people say fuck it and bring these murdering turds down then the question ….why ? …..would have already been answered and while im here i gotta say to all you polititions and lords alike its us THE PEOPLE who go out and win your wars so declearing war on your own people is boardering on insanity, its a war you wont win

  9. Sasson February 14, 2013 at 12:25 am - Reply

    Mike, disabled people who go into the ESA ‘reconsideration period’, will not be able to claim JSA as you have to be fit to work full time to do so.

    This has already happened to a friend of mine who lost his appeal; his benefits stopped and he was also refused JSA. Another friend had to wait 18 months for the DWP to reassess his case, he wasn’t able to claim anything mean time so he had no income for the whole period. Fortunately, both had pensioner mums who kept them, but what happens to people who have no one?

    People will be able to claim housing and council tax benefit though, but how they pay the bedroom tax and new council tax as well as food/utilities remains to be seen.

    One can only hope that M.P.s will raise hell once their constituents start to relate these experiences.

    As for the house of lords: what a farce! If the cons can just claim financial privilege when these matters are ‘pinged’ back to the ‘other place’, what is the point in them tabling amendments?

    What a perfect storm we are facing.

    • Mike Sivier February 14, 2013 at 12:28 am - Reply

      Thanks for sharing that information with us. The impression I got was not that people could claim JSA while they were waiting, but that they would be dumped into it, whether they liked it or not, by the DWP. This seems a very grey area and I await clarification…

  10. Thomas M February 14, 2013 at 3:54 am - Reply

    They seem utterly determined to ruin our lives.

  11. Geoff newton February 14, 2013 at 7:42 am - Reply

    I’m lost for words, they are acting like the dictators they are, unbelievable.

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