#Brexit? No thanks – ‘Remain and Reform’ is the way forward for disabled people

Last Updated: June 22, 2016By
'Personal assistants from other EU countries – mainly Poland, Bulgaria and Hungary – are always polite and conscientious.’ [Image: Gary John Norman/Getty Images/Cultura RF].

‘Personal assistants from other EU countries – mainly Poland, Bulgaria and Hungary – are always polite and conscientious.’ [Image: Gary John Norman/Getty Images/Cultura RF].

This is important information for people with disabilities who are preparing to vote in the EU referendum:

The positives of being an EU member often go unsung. These include collaboration in many medical research programmes; free health cover abroad through the European Health Insurance Card; and EU workers filling staffing gaps in the overstretched NHS (made worse by the ending of training bursaries for UK health workers and ongoing cuts within the service).

As disabled academics have recently pointed out, the sharing of initiatives around independent living is supported in back rooms at the EU, including the European Network on Independent Living. From the 90s onwards, Britain has developed a leading role in developing EU disability policy away from charity and welfare and towards equality and human rights. Moreover, the Disability Discrimination Act and EU employment directives have made it harder for employers to discriminate against disabled people, and care workers.

There’s much debate over freedom of movement within the EU. But this is something disabled people have only just been able to experience, and it’s the EU that has ensured disabled passengers will get the assistance they need from transport operators. Remaining an EU member will help to counter calls to leave the European convention on human rights – and mean we still have the EU’s ratification of the UN disability convention, which directs the EU to “harness all its financial, legislative and other tools to benefit disabled people”.

There’s a glaring lack of any considered comments within the mainstream leave campaign on how it will ensure that the rights and services of disabled people continue – other than generalised pronouncements that less EU immigration is a panacea for all our ills.

Source: Why ‘remain and reform’ works for disabled people | Penny Pepper | Opinion | The Guardian

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3 Comments

  1. philipburdekin June 22, 2016 at 1:32 pm - Reply

    I can’t even begin to think what the TORIES would attemp to do with us sick and disabled being first in the firing line, the TORIES are wannabe despots.

  2. Ed June 22, 2016 at 1:48 pm - Reply

    Many Tory haters will want to leave knowing that it will spell the end of Cameron’s time? but if you vote OUT we will lose far more like our human and working rights by leaving the EU we will be worse off trust me… so don’t vote out because of this government failed legacy but make the right choice and remain IN!!!

  3. jaybedtaxhumanrights June 23, 2016 at 12:43 pm - Reply

    Remainers hope vote helps in our human rights case mind

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