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How to fight for disability rights in 2025: advocacy, access, and action

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The struggles of people with disabilities are still sidelined, especially by an uncaring Labour government – but there are ways to push back and push forward.

It’s 2025, and the fight for disability rights continues—quietly for some, loudly for others, but urgently for all.

Despite decades of activism and legislation, people with disabilities still face systemic discrimination, inaccessibility, and underrepresentation in nearly every sector of society.

From navigating inaccessible websites to fighting for healthcare coverage, the barriers are many—and often invisible to those not directly affected.

This is not just a social issue.

It’s a human rights issue.

But change is happening.

Let’s look at how you can help lead that change.

Whether you’re disabled yourself, an ally, a policymaker, or someone just learning about disability justice, this is for you.


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Understanding the current landscape

Disability rights in the UK are under sustained pressure.

In 2025, cuts to local authority budgets, NHS backlogs, and the continued erosion of the welfare state have left many disabled people fighting just to survive—let alone thrive.

Despite the promises of the Equality Act 2010 and decades of activism, disabled people still face:

  • Inaccessible infrastructure in housing, transport, and public spaces

  • Systemic discrimination in employment

  • Punitive treatment by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP)

  • And a persistent lack of representation in political and media spaces

The government’s rhetoric may be about “levelling up” or “fairness”, but the lived reality is often one of barriers, bureaucracy, and neglect.

Disability rights are not a fringe issue.

They are core human rights.

And they are being chipped away—not in loud, headline-grabbing ways, but through slow attrition and administrative cruelty.

That’s why proactive advocacy is more important than ever.

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Mobilizing Your Voice

Advocacy doesn’t always look like a protest. Sometimes, it starts with a tweet; a conversation; a story.

Your voice—especially when informed by lived experience—is a powerful tool for change.

Here’s how to use it effectively.

Harness the power of social media

Platforms like Twitter/X, Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube have become essential for spreading awareness.

Hashtags like #DisabilityJustice, #WeAreDisabled, #StopAndScrap (especially re: benefits assessments), and #CripTheVoteUK are helping to amplify disabled voices and challenge institutional silence.

Short-form video platforms are particularly effective for showcasing personal stories, breaking down complex issues, and reaching non-disabled audiences in relatable ways.

Want to start a campaign?

Tools like Change.org, Action Network, and even Instagram stories can be used to gather support and apply pressure.

Tell Your Story

Storytelling humanizes the statistics.

When you talk about your own challenges—whether it’s navigating inaccessible schools, dealing with healthcare systems, or struggling in the workplace—you make the issue real for others.

Use your voice to disrupt the stereotypes that frame disability as either tragic or heroic.

Show the full complexity of your life—your routines, your dreams, your frustrations, your victories.

Join or support disability organizations

Collective action is more powerful than isolated efforts. Organizations like:

  • Disability Rights UK
    https://www.disabilityrightsuk.org
    One of the UK’s leading national organisations run by and for disabled people. Offers policy advocacy, benefits advice, and campaigns on education, work, and accessibility.

  • Inclusion London
    https://www.inclusionlondon.org.uk
    Supports Deaf and Disabled People’s Organisations (DDPOs) in London and does broader policy work on independent living, hate crime, and equality.

  • Scope
    https://www.scope.org.uk
    A major UK charity campaigning for equality for disabled people. Provides information, services, and works on public perception and employment.

  • The Alliance for Inclusive Education (ALLFIE)
    https://www.allfie.org.uk
    Advocates for the rights of disabled learners to inclusive education in mainstream settings.

  • Transport for All
    https://www.transportforall.org.uk
    Campaigns for fully accessible and inclusive transport in the UK, especially London.

  • Stay Up Late
    https://stayuplate.org
    Focuses on people with learning disabilities leading active social lives—grassroots and rights-focused.

  • Changing Faces
    https://www.changingfaces.org.uk
    Focused on visible differences and disability rights, especially around representation and discrimination.

…are leading change across policy, education, and employment.

If you can’t join, support them by sharing their work, donating, or volunteering.

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Demanding access and inclusion

Access is about more than ramps and lifts.

It’s about being able to live, learn, work, and contribute—without constantly fighting a system that treats your needs as optional.

Right now, access is under threat in multiple ways:

  • Public transport: Rail services remain patchy for wheelchair users. Step-free access is inconsistent. Booking “special assistance” is unreliable—and demeaning.

  • Digital access: Government websites and services (including the NHS and DWP) still fail to meet Web Accessibility Standards. This locks people out of vital information.

  • Housing: The UK has a severe shortage of accessible housing. Adaptations take months—or years. Many disabled people are trapped in unsuitable or unsafe homes.

  • Employment: Disabled people are still more than twice as likely to be unemployed as able people. Reasonable adjustments are often refused or delayed.

  • Health and social care: NHS backlogs, the collapse of social care, and inaccessible GP and mental health services are worsening health outcomes.

These aren’t “unintended consequences.” They are the result of political choices.

So what can be done?

Start small, act locally.

Challenge inaccessible buildings.

Request alternatives when websites or services fail to accommodate.

Call out ableist behaviour.

And back it all with the law: the Equality Act 2010 places a legal duty on employers, service providers and public bodies to make “reasonable adjustments.”

Use that law.

Cite it.

Challenge those who ignore it.

Healthcare and Mental Health

For many disabled people in the UK, healthcare is not just a right — it’s a lifeline.

But in 2025, the NHS is stretched beyond recognition.

Years of underfunding, backlogs from the Covid-19 era, and a growing crisis in recruitment have left services patchy, inconsistent, and frequently inaccessible.

The challenges are serious and mounting:

  • Long waits for GP appointments, specialist referrals, and surgeries

  • Barriers to physical access in clinics and hospitals (lack of ramps, hoists, adjustable examination tables)

  • Communication issues for deaf, blind, neuro-divergent and learning disabled patients — with few providers offering proper accommodations

  • “Diagnostic overshadowing”, where physical or mental health symptoms are dismissed or blamed on an existing condition

  • Inaccessible mental health services, with long waiting lists and no tailored support for disabled people

  • Cuts to local authority social care, which have left many people without the personal support they need to live independently

This isn’t just an inconvenience — it’s dangerous. It’s discriminatory.

And it’s happening across the country, disproportionately to disabled and chronically ill people, especially those who are also working class, black or brown, or LGBTQ+.

The Care Act 2014 and the Equality Act 2010 both legally require health and care services to be accessible, inclusive, and non-discriminatory. But the law is often ignored — or unknown.

What can you do?

  • Complain: NHS complaints processes are slow, but important. Document inaccessible or discriminatory experiences and demand a response.

  • Involve advocacy organisations: Groups like VoiceAbility, Disability Rights UK, and Inclusion London can help you frame and escalate complaints.

  • Request reasonable adjustments: This is your legal right under the Equality Act. If you’re being refused accommodations, that’s unlawful.

  • Push your Integrated Care Board (ICB): These are the new NHS commissioning bodies in England. They have a duty to consult with local patients — use it.

  • Tell your story: Whether through local media, social media, or petitions, visibility drives pressure. Politicians ignore what they don’t hear about.

Mental health, in particular, is still treated as a “luxury” by many in power — despite its central role in overall health and dignity.

The truth is simple: disabled people deserve health services that treat us as full human beings — not second-class citizens.

The NHS belongs to all of us, and it must be held accountable to that promise.

Engaging with policymakers

In the UK, political advocacy can feel like screaming into the void—but it does make a difference.

Every MP has a responsibility to represent their constituents. So make yourself impossible to ignore.

  • Write to your MP: Use real-life examples. Ask direct questions. Demand clear answers.

  • Attend local council meetings: Speak up about accessibility, care funding, or transport.

  • Submit evidence to parliamentary committees or consultations (often invited via DPOs).

  • Vote—and register others to vote, too. Local elections matter. Police and Crime Commissioners matter. Metro Mayors matter.

  • Support and elevate disabled candidates and councillors. We need representation from people who live these realities.

And if you’re constantly being ignored – organise protest.

Public pressure still works. Whether it’s DPAC occupying government buildings or campaigners chaining themselves to railings outside DWP offices—it gets noticed.

The goal is long-term: build relationships, build momentum, and demand accountability.


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Building a More Inclusive Future

The future isn’t just about legal protections—it’s about cultural change.

We need a UK where disabled people are not seen as burdens, tragedies, or “superhumans,” but as full and equal citizens with agency, creativity, and value.

That means:

  • Including disability history and awareness in schools

  • Making disability representation visible in the arts, TV, journalism, and politics

  • Funding disabled artists, writers, academics, and entrepreneurs

  • Shifting the media narrative from “inspiration porn” to systemic critique and real storytelling

We also need to celebrate resistance and resilience—without romanticising suffering.

Disabled joy, humour, and creativity are revolutionary forces.

Share your stories.

Support disabled creators.

Challenge erasure wherever you see it.

Our moment is now

Disability rights are not secure.

They are being hollowed out—quietly, steadily—by cuts, ignorance, and political neglect.

But disabled people are not passive victims. Disabled people are voters, thinkers, workers, carers, artists, agitators.

And when disabled people speak, organise, and act together—rights are won. Power is built. Society is changed.

So wherever you are, however you identify:

Use your voice.

Use your rights.

Use your rage.

The fight for disability justice isn’t over—and you are disabled, you’re not alone in it.

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Keir Starmer’s two-tier disability system is unacceptable | AAV

This is worth reading, from Another Angry Voice:

The professional media hacks are reporting Keir Starmer’s backtrack on his party’s proposed disability cuts as another U-turn, but it’s not actually a change of direction, it’s just a strategic retreat to a new position of imposing destitution and harsh new restrictions on people who become sick or disabled in the future.

Starmer and the appalling people he’s surrounded himself with have retreated from their original position of driving both currently disabled people and people who will become disabled in the future into destitution, to just targeting their cruel economic sanctions at those who are not yet disabled.

Keir Starmer, Rachel Reeves, and Liz Kendall are now intent on creating a two-tier disability benefits system under which people who are currently disabled and in receipt of PIP and the disability element of Universal Credit get will get to keep their subsistence benefits, while those who become disabled in the future will have to jump though much higher hoops to qualify for significantly lower levels of support.

Keir Starmer’s so-called “U-turn” on proposed cuts to disability benefits isn’t a change of heart—it’s a tactical repositioning.

The plan still creates a two-tier system that preserves existing support for current claimants, while making it much harder—and financially punishing—for future disabled people to qualify.

This isn’t just technocratic reform; it’s a conscious political choice to target some of the most vulnerable, including older workers developing age-related conditions like arthritis, chronic pain, and cardiovascular illness.

Many of the very people who will be affected have worked all their lives, only to be punished for becoming ill.

The justification? Not fraud (which is negligible in PIP), not helping people into work (PIP isn’t even a work-related benefit), and certainly not cost—because even modest reforms to tax breaks for the wealthy would save far more than the £3.5 billion they’re trying to cut here.

And the most cynical part? Labour is trying to rush these reforms through without an economic impact assessment, echoing the same tactics used during Tory welfare cuts in the 2010s.

That’s not “pragmatism”—it’s evasion.

Angry Voice lays it all out with justified fury.

I’ll only add: if Labour MPs don’t stop this now, they won’t just be betraying disabled people—they’ll be handing the Tories the script for the next general election.

Source: Keir Starmer’s two-tier disability system is unacceptable

Thank you, Vox Political readers – you literally kept the lights on

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Last night, three people made donations to Vox Political. Between them, they sent £50 — and I want to say a very clear, very personal thank-you.

That money literally kept the lights on – I used part of it to top up the electricity meter (and without the ‘leccy, I would not be able to write and publish anything at all).

It also meant I could get through the night without worrying that something else was about to be cut off.

And it reminded me that, even when support seems to have dried up, there are still people out there who believe this work matters enough to help keep it going.


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But I won’t pretend everything is fixed.

I still have to scale back the amount of original content I’m producing — because right now, I just can’t afford to do otherwise.

That is far from ideal.

I want to be writing, filming, editing and publishing more.

There’s certainly no shortage of stories to cover.

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If every Vox Political reader donated just £1 a month — which Ko-fi makes easy to do — this site would be financially secure.

I could do the work without also having to worry about the next bill or the next meal.

But of course, I know that’s not likely to happen.

And that’s what makes the donations that do come in even more important: those supporters are carrying the weight for many others.

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It’s also why I’m in this bind.

I post donation links every day — with every article, every video, every call to action – just scan up (and down) this article and there they are.

Most go ignored.

Some attract snide comments from video viewers.

But without donations, I can’t keep this going.

And while I’m working hard to rebuild readership and viewership (which will hopefully boost advertising revenue too), the social media platforms aren’t making that easy — especially for content that challenges the status quo.

So yes, I had to say it was an emergency to get a response.

And it worked — a little.

But this is no way to run a newsroom.


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Why is the UK investigating protest songs — but not war crimes?

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A huge controversy over musicians at the Glastonbury Festival has revealed an even larger apparent hypocrisy in the UK’s law enforcement services.

Here’s Skwawkbox:

Israel lobby groups have reacted with pearl-clutching outrage to the performances of Kneecap and Bob Vylan at Glastonbury yesterday in which the musicians shouted ‘Free Palestine and ‘Death to the IDF’. The Metropolitan Police are ‘investigating’ the comments to decide whether to prosecute, while the Starmer government condemned it and the BBC described the bands’ language as ‘very strong and discriminatory’.


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Neither act called for death to Jews, or even Israelis generally. The so-called Israel Defence Force’ (IDF) is the military force of a rogue, genocidal state that has murdered around 400,000 civilians in Gaza, half of them children, and has made unprovoked attacks on its neighbours Lebanon and Syria, and on Iran and Yemen. The PM of Israel is wanted at the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity and senior Israeli army officers are the subject of ongoing applications for prosecution against them.

For Israel to speak of ‘glorifying violence’ is grotesque – and well over a hundred British people have gone to Israel either to fight in Israel’s military during the genocide or to steal land from Palestinians as part of the coloniser state’s ethnic cleansing programme.

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The article goes on to point out that no UK citizens have been prosecuted for taking part in the murder of Palestinians, yet the authorities are very publicly considering court action against two musicians who have not (to the best of our knowledge) killed anyone.

We need to remember that atrocities have been committed in Gaza – and there is an urgent and vital need for justice to be visited on those who have committed them. It is justice that must be principled, impartial, and based in law, not selectively enforced.

International law – not vengeance – is the only legitimate path to justice, accountability and, ultimately, peace.

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Artists like Bob Vylan and Kneecap have a right to speak, but in This Writer’s opinion, language that calls for death – even toward military forces – risks undermining justice rather than achieving it.

It is reprehensible because two wrongs do not make a right. Whatever crimes IDF personnel may have committed, they must be investigated and prosecuted through international courts – not by public calls for their death.


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That being said, investigating musicians for political speech, while ignoring far more serious allegations of war crimes, exposes a deeply troubling double standard. Justice cannot be credible if it is applied selectively.

We need to demand better from our law enforcers – and our government.

Source: Met ‘investigating’ Vylan, Kneecap for “death to IDF” – but not Britons who actually participated in genocide – SKWAWKBOX

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Support for Vox Political is down – so output must drop too

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Yesterday I asked readers to support Vox Political so the work could continue at its current pace.

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I’ll be reducing the volume of original material while I focus on other ways to make a living.

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