Sep 012025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

The words "We want an Independent PIP Review" in bold and black text, with Independent highlighted in red. On the left there is a tear-out effect of a greyscale photo of a disability protest, and a red-tinted photo of Stephen Timms, the disability minister.

This is an open letter from DPAC Cymru, produced with feedback from six Disabled People’s Organisations.

Disclaimer: DPAC Cymru didn’t have time to reach 100% agreed wording with DPAC UK, as we would have liked to. Even within DPAC Cymru, the letter wording is somewhat of a compromise. However, for important tactical reasons in Wales, we felt it was important to publish without delay. DPAC have therefore agreed to share the letter with this disclaimer.

Click here for the Easy Read version.

To:

The Welsh Government,

The Scottish Government,

The Northern Ireland Executive,

The UK Government,

1st September 2025

After a major, if partial, defeat in parliament over disability cuts, the disability minister Stephen Timms promised MPs that the PIP benefit review would be co-produced by disabled people and their organisations.

There is widespread skepticism if this will genuinely be the case. Promises to “engage widely over the summer” have not been met, and there has been no transparency over Timms’ plans for “ten people” to have “a lot of sway”. His comments reveal that he does not understand what co-production means. Timms has also repeatedly declined to acknowledge the many serious failures of the Pathways to Work green paper consultation process, particularly felt in Wales.

We counterpose this to the Disability Rights Taskforce, initiated in partnership with the Welsh Government, which brought together 350 stakeholders and 200 policy experts, as a model of what co-production can look like. However, many Taskforce participants were frustrated that much of their work was ultimately missing from the Welsh Government draft plan. This is a lesson that even co-produced policy will fall flat without accountability. Disabled people’s organisations must be given the necessary resources and powers to carry out the implementation and monitoring of decisions.

[Some of us] cautiously welcome[d] the announcement of the Government’s new Independent Disability Advisory Panel. This panel is separate to, but will feed into, the Timms review of PIP. However, trust remains very low, and the terms – of “up to 10” people – have already been set for us. [See update, below]

We the undersigned demand that:

• The new Independent Disability Advisory Panel must be genuinely independent, representative, transparent, and have real powers of oversight.

• The UK government must acknowledge its failures in delivering the Pathways to Work consultation and legislative process, as a precondition to rebuilding trust and ensuring those mistakes are not repeated.

• The PIP review must be independently led by disabled people and our organisations, inviting the views of carers, volunteers, and workers in health, social care, housing, transport, and welfare.

• Any review of welfare reform must also, in a process led by disabled people, involve trade unions as democratic organisations representing 1.4 million disabled workers as well as representing the workers responsible for the day-to-day delivery of services that disabled people rely on.

• The scope of the PIP review must be widened to all aspects of welfare and employment for disabled people, guided by the principle: from each according to their ability, to each according to their need.

• Dedicated funding must be provided to Disabled Peoples Organisations to support outreach, accessible engagement, and the collection of views from disabled people, including those without internet access or digital skills.

• The devolved governments of Wales, Scotland, and Northern Ireland, and councils, should recognise and support this independent review even if the UK government refuses to.

• The UK government must immediately halt all cuts to disability and incapacity benefits for the duration of the review, and urgently fix Access to Work.

• Parliament must be given time to properly scrutinise any new legislation.

• The UC bill should be repealed. It is flawed, and was rushed through in an abnormal and undemocratic way.

 

[Update 4th September] Statement from DPAC Cymru regarding the “Independent Disability Advisory Panel”:

“The recently published terms for the so-called Independent Disability Advisory Panel, including the requirement to sign a non-disclosure agreement, are completely unacceptable. We are going to go back to a full consultation with all of our members and allies and take time for discussion to correct the weakness in our compromise wording of ‘cautiously welcome’ and come back united, realigned on the strongest possible response. We hope you will continue to support the demand for an independent PIP review, led by disabled people, and support this letter with your signature.”

 

For a full list of signatures and footnotes, see here.

To add your support to the letter, add your signature here

Here are short URLs for sharing the letter:

Non-Easy Read: Bit.Ly/independent-pip-review

Easy Read: Bit.Ly/easy-read-independent-pip-review

Jul 032025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

A poster about a protest. On a marble blue background with black bold text. It says: Disabled People Against Cuts Cymru. Disability Protest. Swansea - Cardiff. Below that is an image of three women protestors. One is in a wheelchair. They have a red flag, a red sheet, and a purple placard. They are dressed in red and purple. To the right is a red megaphone graphic. To the left is the DPAC logo. It is a red, pink, blue, green wheel being held by four hands of different skin tones. In the center is an upside down black triangle bearing the letters D P A C. Below, the text says: Cardiff - Monday 7th July. Meet 4pm outside Cardiff Central Library Hub. Swansea - Tuesday 8th July. Meet 4pm at Castle Square, Swansea. Organiser: 07410 303 652.

Disabled people in Wales will be protesting in Cardiff on Monday 7th, and in Swansea on Tuesday 8th.

We will be meeting at 4pm.

In Cardiff, meet outside Cardiff Central Library Hub.

In Swansea, meet at Castle Square.

All support is welcome! Bring friends and banners etc.

This is ahead of the vote on the bill on Wednesday 9th.

We want to defeat the Labour disability cuts bill entirely.

 

Why we are still protesting

⚫ The victory on changes to PIP is temporary. It’s a bad bill that will mean MPs voting to approve the results of a review in advance, before it happens.

⚫ We do not trust Stephen Timms to lead the PIP review. He has not acknowledged our concerns about the failures of the original consultation process.

⚫ Under 22s still face loosing Universal Credit health component – an injury to one is an injury to all and we won’t leave anyone behind!

⚫ The bill still contains cuts to Universal Credit for new claimants.

⚫ It’s very uncertain what the bill will mean for people on ESA.

⚫ It is a rushed bill and the government is acting undemocratically.

⚫ The government must stop and listen to disabled people and carers, and consider our consultation responses.

⚫ The bill must be withdrawn and time taken to get it right!

⚫ We have gone beyond “co-production”. This government is incapable of doing it. Disabled people must lead the process of welfare reform, involving carers and the workers delivering the welfare system. Not clueless ministers seeking short-term cost savings.

 

Swansea and Cardiff protest graphics for social media

A graphic of the DPAC Cymru logo. There is the main DPAC logo to the left, which is a red, pink, blue, and green circle being held by four hands of different skin tones, with the words "disabled people against cuts" surrounding it, and an upside-down black traingle in the middle bearing the letters D P A C. On the right is the word Cymru (pronounced cum ree) (C Y M R U) in large letters, and the background of the letters are cutouts of the Welsh flag. Above Cymru (pronounced cum ree) is written the words Disabled People Against Cuts. Below Cymru (pronounced cum ree) are the words Rights, not charity, and the equivilant phrase translated into the Welsh language.
Stop the Cuts This is our last chance! Date: Tuesday 8th July 2025 Time: 4:00pm Meeting point: Castle Square, Swansea, SA1 3PP what3words: ///bunny.extend.error MPs final vote for the Bill is 9th July so this is our last chance to take action against it. Labour want to cut disability benefits that people rely on to survive – we say stop the cuts! Listen to disabled people! Join us to tell Labour to kill the cuts, not disabled people. @DPAC_CYMRU #WelfareNotWarfare
Stop the Cuts This is our last chance! Date: Monday 7th July 2025 Time: 4:00pm Meeting point: Cardiff Central Library Hub, The Hayes, Cardiff, CF10 1FL what3words: ///rounds.unions.salsa MPs final vote for the Bill is 9th July so this is our last chance to take action against it. Labour want to cut disability benefits that people rely on to survive – we say stop the cuts! Listen to disabled people! Join us to tell Labour to kill the cuts, not disabled people. @DPAC_CYMRU #WelfareNotWarfare

A poster about a protest. On a marble blue background with black bold text. It says: Disabled People Against Cuts Cymru. Disability Protest. Swansea - Cardiff. Below that is an image of three women protestors. One is in a wheelchair. They have a red flag, a red sheet, and a purple placard. They are dressed in red and purple. To the right is a red megaphone graphic. To the left is the DPAC logo. It is a red, pink, blue, green wheel being held by four hands of different skin tones. In the center is an upside down black triangle bearing the letters D P A C. Below, the text says: Cardiff - Monday 7th July. Meet 4pm outside Cardiff Central Library Hub. Swansea - Tuesday 8th July. Meet 4pm at Castle Square, Swansea. Organiser: 07410 303 652.

A poster about a protest. On a marble blue background with black bold text. It says: Disabled People Against Cuts Cymru. Disability Protest. Swansea - Cardiff. Below that is an image of three women protestors. One is in a wheelchair. They have a red flag, a red sheet, and a purple placard. They are dressed in red and purple. To the right is a red megaphone graphic. To the left is the DPAC logo. It is a red, pink, blue, green wheel being held by four hands of different skin tones. In the center is an upside down black triangle bearing the letters D P A C. Below, the text says: Cardiff - Monday 7th July. Meet 4pm outside Cardiff Central Library Hub. Swansea - Tuesday 8th July. Meet 4pm at Castle Square, Swansea. Organiser: 07410 303 652.

Jun 272025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net
Coventry TUC is organising a protest on Tuesday, 1st July, at 5 PM in Broadgate, Coventry, coinciding with the discussion of the welfare cuts bill in Parliament.
They have also contacted the three Coventry MPs to voice their opposition.
If anyone would like to speak at the demo, they would be most welcome.
A poster with a white background and red text and graphics. It says, in very big letters: stop. Disability benefit cuts. Tuesday, 1st July, 5 PM. Broadgate, Coventry (to oppose Labour's Welfare Cuts Bill due to be voted on at 7pm). Hashtag Welfare not Warfare. There is then a poster of protestors holding placards. Several placards say Welfare Not Warfare. One says no genocide, no cuts, no war. One says They Say Cut Back We Say Fight Back. Underneath, in black, says: Organised by Coventry TUC and local campaigning organisations - further info 07970 294 237.
Jun 122025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

Save the date. Protest the disability cuts.

The government is expected to introduce the disability cuts bill on the 18th of June, and vote on it as soon as July 1st.

They are not even waiting for the sham “consultation” to end on 30th of June.

Disabled People Against Cuts and allies are organising a mass Protest of Parliament on June 30th and a national day of action on July 1st when the second reading of the bill will occur.

More details to follow but it is essential that as many people as possible attend these events.

Some funding is available for travel and other essential costs. Email [email protected]

If you are able to arrange a local protest on July 1st please send us details of your event.

A drawing of the politician Rachel Reeves in a robber's outfit and a sack that says Disability Benefits

Welfare Not Warfare

End Labour’s War on Disabled People

Tax the Rich, Not Crips.

The Government are lying about cuts.

  • Total planned disability benefit cuts are at least £9 billion and not the £4.8 billion being reported.

  • Number of households to be plunged into poverty by the PIP cuts alone is at least 350,000 – 4000,000 including 50,000 children.

  • 1.5 million Deaf and Disabled people will be badly impacted by the changes to PIP, not just the 800,000 being reported.

  • MPs will be forced to vote on the cuts without having all the information and based on the misleading figures that have been reported.

 

Image of a person at the top of a cliff pushing someone out of a wheelchair. The Labour party logo. The Department for Work and Pensions logo.

What can I do as a disabled person?

  • If you’re not already a member – join DPAC!

  • Set up a DPAC group in your area if one doesn’t exist!

  • Participate in DPAC Actions to Scrap the Benefit Cuts

  • Organise locally with other Disabled People to mobilise support for our campaign

  • Contact unions, trades councils, Labour party branches, and build a broad based movement to reverse these austerity cuts.

For more details of local groups and actions, keep checking this page!

 

 

Apr 182025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

Purple text over clouds. Text reads: Welfare not warfare: lobby your MP. Warfare is in white grungy text over a black background. In the background there is a falling bomb. In the top-left corner are three silhouettes of workers wearing medical face masks.

Ask your MP to back Diane Abbott’s call for Welfare Not Warfare

It only takes 30 seconds – lobby your MP here and spread the word today!

As Diane Abbott has argued here, “The government seems to be in denial about its own actions. It is clearly implementing austerity and doing at a time when they are very significantly increasing military spending. It is a cliché that to govern is to choose, but it should be clear with these policies that the government is making all the wrong choices.”

For this reason, there is an easy online tool where you can ask your MP to back a Parliamentary motion tabled by Diane, Jeremy Corbyn, Richard Burgon & others for welfare not warfare.

 

Apr 182025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

A digital graphic by Disabled People Against Cuts promoting a protest. The bold text reads ‘Protest Outside Disability Cuts Consultation - Cardiff’ followed by smaller text that reads ‘Labour's public consultation on disability benefit cuts is unfair and misleading. The most controversial proposals are not even up for discussion - tell the UK government this is unacceptable. Meet outside the front of Cardiff Central train station, bring friends and placards, 12:00pm noon to 4pm, June 3rd 2025’. There is a graphic of a megaphone in the bottom right, and the DPAC logo in the bottom left. A Link to the DPAC Swansea Linktree is at the bottom of the page with following URL: https://linktr.ee/swanseaDPAC

DPAC Swansea are calling for a protest outside the disability cuts consultation in Cardiff.

Meet outside the front of Cardiff Central train station (The government has not yet announced the exact location).

Assemble 12:00pm on Tuesday 3rd June 2025.

Labour’s public consultation on disability benefit cuts is unfair and misleading. We have almost zero faith in a consultation process that starts, on day one, by outlining all the areas it will not be consulting on. The most controversial proposals are not even up for discussion. There is one, and only one, in-person consultation event for the whole of Wales. Our MPs are ignoring our letters.

Facebook event: https://www.facebook.com/events/662898879779901/ Please bring friends and placards.

Important: Some people will still want to engage with the consultation protest and we want to respect that. We are considering how best to manage our intervention.

Can you help organise the protest in Cardiff?

We want your help – get in touch with Swansea Disabled People Against Cuts: https://linktr.ee/swanseaDPAC

 

Apr 162025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

Norwich March and rally

Saturday 17th May
Norwich, Norfolk

Stop PIP and benefit cuts – End Labour’s war on disabled people.

End austerity cuts to mental health and social care.

17th May 2025 – 12 noon
Assemble at Norwich City Hall, NR2 1NH

Bring friends, family and placards

Facebook: DPACNorfolk.net
www.norfolksuffolkmentalhealthcrisis.org.uk

Disabled People Against Cuts
Campaign to Save Mental Health Services in Norfolk & Suffolk

Poster advertising a protest. Text is all-caps bold red or black.

Stop PIP and benefit cuts.

End Labour's war on disabled people.

Image of a megaphone.

End austerity cuts to mental health and social care.

March and rally
Saturday 17th May
Norwich, Norfolk

Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) logo - a circle, pink, blue, red, green, with four hands of different skin colours, around a black triangle with the letters DPAC.

Campaign to Save Mental Health Services in Norfolk & Suffolk. A logo with blue text and a white hand and a blue hand shaking each other in solidarity greetings.

17th May 2025 - 12 noon

Assemble at Norwich City Hall, NR2 1NH

Bring friends, family and placards

Facebook: DPACNorfolk.net
www.norfolksuffolkmentalhealthcrisis.org.uk

Vote Out Austerity

On 1st of May
Do not vote for Labour, Reform UK Conservatives.
They are all for austerity.
End cuts to disabled people’s benefits and services.

DPAC.UK.NET

Poster in striking white text on a black background, except for the center, which has three political party logos in colour.

On 1st of May

Vote Out Austerity

Do not vote for:

(In red, with a rose icon) Labour

(In a blue circle with an arrow)
Reform UK

(With a blue tree)
Conservatives

All for austerity.

End cuts to disabled people's benefits and services.

Disabled people against cuts circle logo in white on black, with four hands holding the circle and a white triangle in the middle that bears the letters DPAC.

DPAC.UK.NET
Apr 152025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

Upcoming Glasgow Action – Anas Sarwar MSP, Friday,   April 18th

Friday, 18th April at Anas Sarwar’s Office at Brunswick House, 51 Wilson Street, Glasgow, G1 1UZ.  We will be gathering at 12 noon.

Sarwar has made it explicitly clear that he is in support of the proposed Labour cuts to welfare and disability benefits – offering no viable alternative to disabled people in Scotland if Westminster’s cuts are successful.  Successive Scottish and UK Governments have failed us.

We will be highlighting the real impact that his party’s cuts will have on people in Scotland, and the rest of the UK, of which he seems painfully unaware.

Please share widely, if you would like to speak or propose someone to speak, please let me know.

DPAC West of Scotland  [email protected]

 

Swansea event, date to be confirmed

Labour MPs: no more insults – disabled people demand a debate!

Tired of being ignored, Swansea DPAC will soon be hosting a public debate, with or without our MPs.

We have zero faith in a so-called consultation process that starts out, on day one, outlining all the areas that it won’t be consulting on. There is one, and only one, public consultation process for the whole of Wales. Our MPs are not responding to our repeated attempts to contact them as constituents or as disabled people’s organisations.

We are particularly keen to publicly debate the Swansea West MP Torsten Bell, who has defended the cuts on Newsnight as a DWP minister, and who has been quite rude. From his keyboard, he has called disabled people “keyboard warriors” and a “burden”. We demand a “right of reply” – in person!

We thank our trade union friends for all of their support so far. At our last meeting, we were honoured to accept an invitation from Swansea Trades Council to speak at their May Day rally (see https://www.facebook.com/SwanseaTradesCouncil).

Disabled people know that we are not the only ones targeted by the government, as Reeves and Starmer take the hatchet to jobs, pay, and services everywhere.

Swansea Disabled People Against Cuts   [email protected]

 

Swansea May Day rally – Swansea DPAC to speak

DPAC Swansea raises high the trade union motto “an injury to one is an injury to all”

DPAC Swansea thanks our friends at Swansea Trades Council for the invitation. We know that we are not the only ones targeted by the government, as Reeves and Starmer take the hatchet to jobs, pay, and services everywhere.

We hope everyone will join us on 3rd May in Swansea.

Trades Union Councils: Swansea

  • Fight for a public sector Pay Rise!
  • Welfare not warfare!
  • Jobs, homes and services, not racism!

Join Swansea Trades Council for our annual May Day rally

Saturday 3rd May, 12 Noon Castle Square – Swansea

Hear speakers from across the movement

  • Trade Unionists
    Anti-Racism Organisers
    Disability Rights Activists
    Community Campaigners

Bring members, family, friends, and your banners and placards.

BFAWU – CWU – Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC) – Swansea – GMB – Unite – PCS – Unison – NASUWT

https://www.facebook.com/SwanseaTradesCouncil

Trades Union Councils: Swansea

The logo has different colour hands around it in a circle.

Fight for a public sector Pay Rise!
Welfare not warfare!
Jobs, homes and services, not racism!

Join Swansea Trades Council for our annual May Day rally

Saturday 3rd May, 12 Noon Castle Square - Swansae

Hear speakers from across the movement:

Trade Unionists
Anti-Racism Organisers
Disability Rights Activists
Community Campaigners

Bring members, family, friends, and your banners and placards.

Logo for the Bakers Food and Allied workers Union (BFAWU), which has a stylised icon of grain.

Logo for CWU The Communications Union, which is a circle and two waves.

Logo for Disabled People Against Cuts Swansea - Abertawe, which is a circle being held by four hands, with a black triangle in the middle bearing the letters DPAC.

Logo for GMB Union, which is a square.

Logo for Unite the union, which looks like it has a flame or a flag rising from it.

Logo for PCS, the Public and Commercial Services Union, which has the letters PCS appear large, bold, and in lowercase.

Logo for Unison, the public service union, which looks like it has a ribbon running through it.

Logo for NASUWT, the teachers' union.

 

Apr 092025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

#WelfareNotWarfare

Call protests now over the parliamentary recess 8-22 April.

While lavishing money on the military the Labour government is continuing to pursue its attack on support for Deaf and disabled people announced in Rachel Reeves’ Spring statement.

We are calling for DPAC groups and supporters to call local protests across the country to demand the damaging cuts to social security for Deaf and Disabled people are stopped.

We want MPs to commit now to vote against these cuts which will drive people into poverty.

Local protests are a chance to reach Deaf and Disabled people who are worried about the cuts and isolated – we need to turn fear into anger and action.

We can raise awareness of the true scale and impact of these vicious cuts and build the solidarity in our communities needed to defeat them.

  • The scale of cuts is over £9bn – a majority of people are against the cuts based on the earlier figures which underestimated this by almost half.
  • Changes to PIP (Personal Independence Payments) alone will hit 1.5million Deaf and disabled people.
  • The attempt to rush these cuts through means that the Labour government is expecting MPs to vote the attacks through without being fully informed as to the impact.
  • Despite all the lies about how these cuts will get people into work there has been no assessment of employment outcomes from the proposed cuts – the first vote is expected Summer but these figures from the OBR (Office for Budgetary Responsibility) are not due to be published until October 2025.
  • Employment impacts will be negligible. A lack of suitable employment will prevent people moving into work while many will be forced out of jobs by the impact of the cuts both personally and on the wider economy.
  • The cuts will cause destitution, add huge additional pressures to local authorities, our NHS and mental health support services. They will take a significant amount out of the economy as disabled people’s spending power is reduced.
  • There has been no assessment of impacts of the abolition of the WCA (Work Capability Assessment) combined with the PIP cuts as government failed to provide enough detail to the OBR before the Spring Statement.
  • No costings have been made for the increased number of appeals predicted by the OBR – this is awaiting assessment by the Ministry of Justice.

 

What we are calling for:

Local protests over parliamentary recess 8-22 April 2025.

Where possible target MPs strategically. See our list here: https://dpac.uk.net/2025/04/mps-who-support-disability-benefit-cuts/

Many MPs no longer operate public offices or surgeries – where this is the case could you protest at local Constituency Labour Party meetings, Town Halls or local events where MPs will be attending. Even if the MP isn’t in attendance it makes the point but please do be aware that we want Labour Party members onside so we are protesting the position their MP has taken and not protesting against them.

As always, we encourage the use of creativity to make protests inclusive and attention grabbing.

Make sure there are options for people to take part and be involved even if they can’t attend in person. National DPAC is about to produce this online engagement toolkit but local groups should look to produce your own options for members.

If you are protesting outside an MP’s office please follow these guidelines: https://dpac.uk.net/2025/04/guidelines-for-protesting-specific-mps/We want to make our point but do not prevent people who need to see their MP for help with benefits appeals, asylum applications or other urgent needs from doing so.

Where May Day rallies, Stop the War and We Demand Change events are being organised in your area reach out now to organisers to request someone from your DPAC group can speak to raise the fight against benefit cuts – an attack on the whole working class.

If you have an MP who has come out against the cuts do something to positively acknowledge this – letters to the local press on why they are right to reject the cuts can help our message reach a wider audience. You can find a list here: https://labourlist.org/2025/04/spring-statement-welfare-reforms-liz-kendall-rachel-reeves-labour-rebels/

And keep up the letter writing and most importantly every DPAC member should try to arrange a face to face meeting with your MP. These do make a difference even if the MP doesn’t appear to be listening and/or just trots out the party line. Make them give up their time for you. Make them see how many people this matters to and how it will impact their majorities if they follow Starmer, Reeves and Kendall in their performative cruelty.

Resources

Norfolk DPAC has created a resource deposit with template materials that local groups can share and use. Link coming soon!

 

 

 

 

Mar 262025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

What do we know about the planned Spring Statement cuts so far

  • The Government has not published the equality impact assessment for the Green Paper proposals. These are expected to be available after the Chancellor has given the Spring Statement. Until then we can only speculate how many hundreds of thousands of Disabled people will be affected and how badly.
  • It is estimated that through the Government’s proposed Personal Independence (PIP) cuts, between 800,000 and 1.2 million Disabled people will lose between £4200 and £6300 a year by 2029 to 2030 (Resolution Foundation, 2025).
  • Claimants and their families who lose eligibility for PIP will also lose eligibility for Carer’s Allowance and other passported entitlements.
  • According to the proposals, from 2028-29, getting PIP will be the factor that determines whether you get the health element of UC – meaning there will be no support specifically for Disabled people unable to work. Those who would otherwise qualify for the health element of UC – but not PIP (currently 600,000 people) – will therefore not get the element and be worse off by £2,400 per year (today’s prices; assuming they are new claimants who would otherwise have got the reduced health element
  • If the cuts to PIP are taken together with the Government’s proposals to scrap the Work Capability Assessment and replace current out of work disability benefits with a new “health” component of Universal Credit with eligibility tied to PIP, some claimants risk losing £9600 per year.
  • The current PIP fraud figures are 0% according to the DWP’s Fraud and Error in the Benefits System Annual Report of 2024, so the government’s crackdown on benefit fraud and its impact is inconsistent with the figures and very low rates of PIP fraud.
  • According to the Purple Pound, whose report into the true cost in accessing retail services for Disabled people, in 2024, UK retail sales reached £517 billion, £274 billion of this was spent by Disabled people and their families, so over 50% of the total retail sales in the UK.

DISABILITY AND SOCIAL SECURITY – THE REAL PICTURE

Welfare spending is not out of control

 

  • What is true is that disability benefits as a share of overall welfare spending has risen. This is due to many factors, one being the increase in State pension age, but also NHS and mental health support waiting lists, the effects of Long Covid, and escalating mental distress among young people: see research by academic Ben Geiger These are all very real issues which we need the government to address.

 

  • Nearly £23 billion worth of social security and social tariffs currently goes unclaimed due to lack of awareness, stigma and the complexity of the UK social security system. See Missing out 2024: £23 billion of support is unclaimed each year | Policy in Practice. Unclaimed social security includes universal credit, pension credit, child benefit, carers allowance and housing benefit for pensioners. Social tariffs include council tax support (a rebate, not a payment/benefit), free school meals, free TV licence and various energy/broadband support schemes.

 

 

Actual benefit fraud requires a court of law to establish that a claimant knowingly or dishonestly claimed benefit. Only 820 people were convicted on this basis in 2023.  The DWP statistical definition of fraud is much less rigorous – it is an assessment by the DWP of those who were not entitled to benefit but could ‘reasonably be expected to know.’ DWP estimate that rates for this type of overpayment were 2.8% (£7.4 bn) in 2024.  Rates of overpayment for claimant error were put at 0.6% (£1.6bn) and DWP official error at 0.3% (£0.8bn).  See Fraud and error in the benefit system, Financial Year Ending (FYE) 2024 – GOV.UK.

 

Tests for eligibility for disability benefits are not too easy

  • Deaf and Disabled people who need disability benefits are too often found ineligible by assessments that are arduous, harrowing, frequently inadequate and result in arbitrary decisions. These are the same assessments that Labour criticised when in opposition and which were the subject of a number of highly critical Work and Pensions Committee reports: Health assessments for benefits – Committees – UK Parliament

 

  • The rate of assessment decisions over-turned at appeal is at an all-time high. Currently around two-thirds of PIP appeals are overturned in favour of the claimant compared to around half of universal credit and ESA appeals: Tribunals statistics quarterly: October to December 2024 – GOV.UK.However, many give up either before or after Mandatory Reconsideration stage because they cannot face the battle and due to lack of welfare advice and support to challenge unfair decisions.

 

  • Recent research demonstrates that people claiming benefits for reasons of mental health are living with high levels of mental distress: Mental distress among people receiving benefits: new evidence. This is in contrast to deliberate misrepresentations contained within political rhetoric and media reporting of people supposedly found eligible for benefits who have low levels of anxiety or depression.

 

  • This picture is further supported by OBR’s calculations that of the 163,000 benefit claimants with mental distress impacted by the proposals to change the WCA, only 3% would be able to find and undertake paid work.

 

  • Recent media headlines about 200,000 claimants found unfit for work who are ready and willing to work now were deeply misleading. The survey question to which these claimants responded was whether they could work now with the “right job” and the “right support”. There was no follow up question about the likely availability of either. The 200,000 figure was extrapolated from a much smaller claimant sample. People who have learning disabilities and/or are autistic were twice as likely to respond yes to this question. 49% of respondents felt they would never be able to work or work again. 62% of these customers were over the age of 50, and 66% felt their health was likely to get worse in the future: Work aspirations and support needs of health and disability customers: Interim findings – Department for Work and Pensions

 

Disability benefits do not act as a disincentive to work

  • Disability benefits keep Deaf and Disabled people out of absolute poverty.

 

  • In 2022/23, 16 million people in the UK living in families in poverty. Of these there were 8.7 million people in poverty who are Disabled themselves, or who live with a Disabled person, up from 6.9 million in 2019/20. 33% of people living in the lowest income decile are Disabled compared to just 9% in the top.

 

  • Even if you receive both out of work disability benefits and the higher rates of both the mobility and care components of PIP – currently on 2024/25 £783.16 pm ESA support group and £1400.50 pm UC LCWRA)- this is just 33% or 60% respectively % of the Minimum Income Standard (£28k pa) for a single adult.

 

  • The rate that Universal Credit standard allowance is paid at is deliberately set to be too low to survive on for anything but a very short, temporary amount of time. For those unable to earn a living through paid work, an out of work disability benefit component is essential in addition to the standard allowance.

 

  • Personal Independence Payment is a non-means tested extra costs benefit intended to contribute to the additional unavoidable expenditure that Deaf and Disabled people face. Scope estimates that Disabled people face on average extra costs of £1067 per month compared to non-Disabled people: Disability Price Tag 2024 | Disability charity Scope UK

 

  • Claimants in receipt of out of work disability benefits have the highest levels of support need. These include people with terminal illness and neurodegenerative conditions and people with profound and complex needs. Many claimants in this category spend a considerable amount of time in too much pain or distress or fatigue to function. Time during the week is taken up with medical and therapeutic appointments, accessing drugs and treatment and with assessments and monitoring linked to the services and support we rely on.

 

  • Many PIP claimants will not be able to continue in work if they lose access to this benefit. This is because engaging in paid work places extra demands on us that can exacerbate our conditions which in turn increases our unavoidable disability related expenditure. It also gives us less time on top of managing our impairments and illnesses to be able to function in other necessary areas of our lives such as domestic tasks. The OBR states that one sixth of PIP claimants are in work: Trends in working-age disability benefit onflows – Office for Budget Responsibility

 

 

  • Cutting disability benefits will push more households into poverty. Reports we are hearing say the cuts to be announced will impact a million Disabled people. The charities fear that 700,000 additional households containing a Disabled person will be pushed into poverty as a result of these cuts.

 

  • Disability-related poverty had increased dramatically even before the cost of living crisis:

 

  • 54% of all poverty in the country is now disability related.
  • The proportion of people in families with at least one Disabled child and one Disabled adult who were living in poverty rose by 7% from 2019–21 up to 46% in 2021-22. This is compared to a consistent figure of 17% for individuals in families with no Disabled members across these two years. [LINK]

 

 

Cuts to disability benefits will cost the economy more in the long-term

 

  • Cuts will cause substantial additional pressures on the NHS, mental health services, and social care services and will lead to an increase in survival crime. They are entirely inconsistent with the government’s pledge to reduce shoplifting! Disabled people impacted by cuts may be forced to find paid work in unsuitable jobs such as sex work.

 

 

What we need from government

  • Research and improved data collection to build an evidence-base for the amount needed to support Deaf and Disabled people to have a decent standard of living.
  • Investment in public services to improve health and well-being, bringing Deaf and Disabled people closer to employment.
  • Investment instead of the planned cuts to Access to Work to fix the problems and reduce the backlog. As of the end of 2024 there were a reported 55,500 unresolved cases: Written questions and answers – Written questions, answers and statements – UK Parliament
  • Work with employers to increase the availability of suitable jobs with decent pay and working conditions and with ultimate flexibility for employees with unpredictable and fluctuating conditions.
  • Work with DDPOs to identify bureaucratic issues with the social security system and engagement with DWP that push claimants further from employment.

 

 

 

Mar 262025
 
DPAC Logo with text underneath "Disabled People Against Cuts" and then web address dpac.uk.net

Disabled People Against Cuts: Press Release #WelfareNotWarfare Protest

On Wednesday 26th March Disabled People Against Cuts, Deaf and Disabled benefit claimants from across the country will descend on London as part of National Action to demand “Welfare Not Warfare” in protest against the Spring Statement and proposed £5bn cut to welfare spending outlined by the Department for Work and Pensions in their Green Paper ‘Pathways to Work: Reforming Benefits and Support to get Britain Working’ Green Paper’.

Linda Burnip, Co-Founder of Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC), said “Labour should be ashamed of their proposed cuts which will push Disabled people into even greater poverty and destitution and cause many more to kill themselves. Disabled people will not allow themselves to be made scapegoats for Robber Reeves cuts while millionaires remain untouched by cuts.”

The London protest, titled “Balls to the Spring Statement” is being organised by Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC), Inclusion London and Stop the War Coalition and supported by many other campaign groups and trade unions will meet outside Downing Street in Whitehall at 11 am before marching towards Parliament to join up with a protest organised by Homes for All.

Actors Cherylee Houston (Izzy Armstrong in Coronation Street) and Lisa Hammond (Vera and previously in Eastenders) will address the protest along with campaigners, trade unionists and politicians. There will also be music from John Kelly who sang at the Paralympic Games opening ceremony in London in 2012.

The London protest is part of national action led by Deaf and Disabled people and allies that includes protests in Edinburgh, Cardiff, Derry, Norwich, Manchester, Exeter, Leeds, Bristol and many other locations across the country. There will also be online protest activities for those unable to leave their homes.

Published on Tuesday 18th March 2025, the “reforms” proposed in Green Paper will cut essential income from millions of the poorest Deaf and Disabled people and our families.

The Rt Hon John McDonnell who is the Independent MP for Hayes and Harlington and a long time supporter of DPAC who will be speaking at the protest said, “Disabled people are facing the biggest cuts to their benefits in a decade, causing immense harm. Full support to DPAC which is standing up against this attack.

The Secretary of State Liz Kendall has justified the cuts by saying they will incentivise more people into employment. However, the majority of the savings attached to the cuts will affect Personal Independence Payment (PIP) which is a non-mean-tested benefit. Disabled people in work say cuts to PIP will force them to stop work.

Actor Cherylee Houston said: “There are over 16 million Disabled people in the UK. Just over three million of those currently receive PIP. These are those who are most in need from my community. PIP is used by many of us to stay in work and cover the extra costs that disability causes. My community is terrified that the Government is taking away the most basic support that those most in need rely on. The majority of unpaid carers are also Disabled and they rely on Carer’s Allowance which is linked to PIP to survive and this saves the Government a huge amount. It makes no sense to take away the basic supports that enable Disabled people to contribute to society. These cuts will trap more people in poverty. I am already hearing from friends that they fear they will no longer be able to work if these cuts go ahead.”

Other savings attached to the proposals will be achieved through cuts to out of work disability benefits for those officially found unfit for work.

Proposals to change the Work Capability Assessment proposed by the previous government, quashed through a successful legal challenge against a consultation ruled by the high court to have been “rushed”, “misleading” and “unfair”, would have hit 457,000 Disabled people by 2028/9, pushing another 100,000 Disabled households into absolute poverty while moving only 3% of those affected into employment.

Kirsty Blackman, MP for Aberdeen North, “The UK Government should be listening to the lived experience and voices of Disabled people. They know best the hardship they are facing and the devastating impact these cuts will have. As the cost-of-living sky rockets, cutting money from Disabled people is the worst decision the Government can take. They must think again and we will use every method we can to ensure they do so.”

Clive Lewis Labour MP for Norwich South, who has been vocally against the reforms said immediately after Kendall’s speech in Parliament announcing the cuts: “When she made the decision to go down this route did they understand the pain and difficulty this will cause for millions of people who are using food banks and social supermarkets, people who are on the brink. These 5 billion cuts will impact them more than I think her department is giving credit for… As things stand my constituents, my family, my friends are very angry about this.” 

Campaigners believe that the £5bn per year in savings targeted by the government through the cuts will be difficult to achieve and may well end up costing more in the long run, leading to heavy additional pressures on the NHS and on mental health, homelessness and social care services.

Arun Veerappan, Interim Director of Research at the Disability Policy Centre said, “As it stands, the Government’s sums don’t add up and these reforms are unlikely to both help disabled people and save the taxpayer money… Tightening PIP eligibility, for example, has been tried before by previous Governments and proposals have either been ruled unlawful, proved too complex or abandoned as unworkable.”

Campaigners have also questioned whether the impact on the economy of such large-scale costs have been properly thought through.

Ellen Clifford, Co-Ordinator of the UK Deaf and Disabled People’s Organisations Monitoring Coalition said: “Everything given to Disabled people in benefits goes straight back into the economy because we spend everything we are given on essentials. The scale of these cuts are simply and terrifyingly enormous. The consequences for society will be immense and the human cost will be devastating. Labour is making an unimaginably big mistake and it’s the poorest and most disadvantaged of us who will be left paying for it generations to come.”

Campaigners are calling on the Government to scrap their plans and to work in co-production with benefit claimants and PCS union which represents frontline DWP workers tasked with implementing any changes to the social security system.

Sophia Kleanthous from the Deaf and Disabled People’s Organisation Inclusion London said: “Despite the Labour Party pledge for years to “work in co-production with Disabled people in developing policy” in Summer last year they dropped this from their manifesto. We are concerned from the released Pathways to Work Green Paper consultation that this has not been co-produced with Disabled people’s organisations and Disabled people.”

Martin Cavanagh, National President of PCS union said: “PCS are absolutely behind DPAC and other campaign groups in their fight to oppose these cruel cuts to disability benefits. The government should be investing in social security, not slashing the benefits bill for those most in need.”

The Welfare Not Warfare protest will be demanding no more attacks on Disabled people, no increase in military spending and social security and homes for all.

Morag Gillie, Chair of Homes for All (HfA) says: “The scale of the housing emergency and the failure to build council housing has created shameful hardship and substandard housing. We are shocked that a labour government is now attacking disabled people who are facing savage cuts to disability benefits. We believe that the fight for housing & disability rights are inextricably linked, and this united action on March 26 helps to build the urgent opposition that we need.”

Chris Nineham, from Stop the War Coalition said that, “This budget means a drive to war abroad and a war against the most disadvantaged by society at home. It has to be challenged openly, energetically and on all fronts.”

END

Contact details:
UK and England: Ellen Clifford 07505 144 371 [SMS/whatsapp]; [email protected]
UK and Scotland: John McArdle 07379 612 778 [SMS/whatsapp]
Wales: Joe Powell 07972 516 328
Northern Ireland: Michael Lorimer 07528 464 350

 

Notes for Editors

  • Scope estimates that Disabled people on average face additional unavoidable disability-related expenditure of £1067 per month. PIP is a non means-tested benefit designed to contribute towards these extra costs.
  • The Government has not published the equality impact assessment for the Green Paper proposals. These are expected to be available after the Chancellor has given the Spring Statement. Until then we can only speculated how many hundreds of thousands of Disabled people will be affected and how badly.
  • It is estimated that through the Government’s proposed Personal Independence (PIP) cuts, between 800,000 and 1.2 million Disabled people will lose between £4200 and £6300 a year by 2029 to 2030 (Resolution Foundation, 2025).
  • Claimants and their families who lose eligibility for PIP will also lose eligibility for Carer’s Allowance and other passported entitlements.
  • According to the proposals, from 2028-29, getting PIP will be the factor that determines whether you get the health element of UC – meaning there will be no support specifically for Disabled people unable to work. Those who would otherwise qualify for the health element of UC – but not PIP (currently 600,000 people) – will therefore not get the element and be worse off by £2,400 per year (today’s prices; assuming they are new claimants who would otherwise have got the reduced health element
  • If the cuts to PIP are taken together with the Government’s proposals to scrap the Work Capability Assessment and replace current out of work disability benefits with a new “health” component of Universal Credit with eligibility tied to PIP, some claimants risk losing £9600 per year.
  • The current PIP fraud figures are 0% according to the DWP’s Fraud and Error in the Benefits System Annual Report of 2024, so the government’s crackdown on benefit fraud and its impact is inconsistent with the figures and very low rates of PIP fraud.
  • According to the Purple Pound, whose report into the true cost in accessing retail services for Disabled people, in 2024, UK retail sales reached £517 billion, £274 billion of this was spent by Disabled people and their families, so over 50% of the total retail sales in the UK.
  • The full list of campaigns and trade unions supporting the Welfare Not Warfare national action include: Acorn, Black Triangle campaign, Disability Rights UK, Disabled People Against Cuts, DPAC Northern Ireland, Equity, Free Our People campaign, Fuel Poverty Action, HFL Tenants, Homes for All, Housing Inclusion Hackney, Inclusion London, Keep Our NHS Public, London Renters’ Union, Manchester RAPAR, National Education Union, National Union of Journalists, Not Dead Yet UK, PCS union, People’s Assembly, Shape, Social Housing Action Group, Stand up to Racism, Stop the War Coalition, TUC Disabled Workers’ Committee, UK Deaf and Disabled People’s Organisations (DDPO) Monitoring Coalition, We Demand Change, Winvisible