The Socialist

The Socialist 18 January 2012

Stand Up to Tory Bullies

The Socialist issue 701

Stand up to Tory bullies

Pensions attacks can still be defeated

Labour leadership approves the Con-Dem cuts

Cameron's attack on Scottish independence referendum backfires

Welfare Reform Bill:- Lords compromise is no victory

Ofsted: "requires improvement"

John Lewis economy: another fantasy from Corporal Clegg

Them & Us


Keep private vultures out of our NHS!


End the slave labour culture of workfare


Electricians' national meeting plans next steps in battle against pay cut

Unilever workers say hands off our pensions

South Yorkshire Stagecoach bus drivers take eighth day of strike action

Jobs massacre at La Senza

Doctors support call for action


Rob Windsor: socialist fighter and Coventry Socialist Party councillor 1964-2012


1972 Derry - "this was murder"


EDL intimidation fails in Barking

Save community schools - no to academies

Protect women's rights - oppose the abstinence bill


Greece: Non-payment movement against new housing tax

Irish 'poll tax' battle has begun

Nigeria: Fuel strike suspended

 
 

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Welfare Reform Bill: Lords compromise is no victory

A disabled activist

On 11 January, the House of Lords rejected the Con-Dem coalition government's proposal in its misnamed welfare reform bill to limit the Employment and Support Allowance (ESA) that is contribution-based for disabled and sick claimants to one year.

But instead of moving a motion to try to remove this proposal altogether from the welfare reform bill, Lord Patel put forward an amendment that extends this time limit to a minimum of two years.

ESA replaced incapacity benefit and income support for new claimants in 2008 as part of New Labour's welfare reform policy to drive a million people off incapacity benefits. The brutal Work Capability Assessment was also introduced at the same time.

The Lords 'victory' may now mean tens of thousands of disabled people will have the privilege of an extra year to think about how they will cope when moved onto Jobseekers Allowance, equivalent to a 30% cut in their income.

About 60% who will lose contribution-based ESA will be able to claim income-related ESA, but this is means-tested. Anyone who has a partner in full-time work will receive little or no ESA.

The Lords also voted against a time limit on contribution-based ESA for cancer patients and the removal of it from severely disabled young people, some of who would lose up to £100 if they were means-tested on income-related ESA.

Labour shadow work and pensions secretary Liam Byrne sanctimoniously declared: "The government has been defeated because quite simply they tried to cross the basic line of British decency." No doubt Byrne as a minister did not feel this line was crossed when Labour's Welfare Reform Act, which has led to so much misery for disabled claimants, was passed in 2007.

The fact that The Hardest Hit campaign welcomed these votes as significant victories demonstrates the limited ambitions of a campaign strategy based on amending the Welfare Reform Bill in the Lords, rather than building a mass campaign to oppose this bill and all welfare reform outright.

The continuation of ESA in any form will mean claimants will, unless they have very complex conditions, have to show they are actively preparing for work or face sanctions and the possible loss of benefits.

Tory employment minister, Chris Grayling, has made it clear the government will press ahead with its Welfare Reform Bill despite the defeats last week in the Lords or any others it may face when changes to Disability Living Allowance are discussed this week.


In this issue


Anti-cuts campaign

Stand up to Tory bullies

Pensions attacks can still be defeated

Labour leadership approves the Con-Dem cuts

Cameron's attack on Scottish independence referendum backfires

Welfare Reform Bill:- Lords compromise is no victory

Ofsted: "requires improvement"

John Lewis economy: another fantasy from Corporal Clegg

Them & Us


Socialist Party NHS campaign

Keep private vultures out of our NHS!


Youth fight for jobs

End the slave labour culture of workfare


Socialist Party workplace news

Electricians' national meeting plans next steps in battle against pay cut

Unilever workers say hands off our pensions

South Yorkshire Stagecoach bus drivers take eighth day of strike action

Jobs massacre at La Senza

Doctors support call for action


Obituary

Rob Windsor: socialist fighter and Coventry Socialist Party councillor 1964-2012


Socialist Party feature

1972 Derry - "this was murder"


Socialist Party campaigns

EDL intimidation fails in Barking

Save community schools - no to academies

Protect women's rights - oppose the abstinence bill


International socialist news and analysis

Greece: Non-payment movement against new housing tax

Irish 'poll tax' battle has begun

Nigeria: Fuel strike suspended


 

Home   |   The Socialist 18 January 2012   |   Join the Socialist Party

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Related links:

ESA:

triangleWelfare Reform Bill: Lords confusion exposes limits of campaigners' strategy

triangleCuts wreck people's lives

triangleAusterity measures take away the basics

Welfare:

triangleLeicester Socialist Party: Fight the Con-Dems' welfare reform

triangleLeeds Tenants Federation opposes Welfare Reform Bill

triangleScrap the Welfare Reform Bill

triangleExploiting the unemployed to line the pockets of big business

Disabled:

triangleDisabled people's organisations condemn views of Tory minister IDS

triangleDuncan Smith throws insults at Remploy workers

triangleClaps and cheers greet Remploy marchers in Sheffield

Claimants:

triangleA4e - The inside story

triangleInterview with a jobcentre worker

triangleOne in a million...fighting back!

Benefits:

triangleBack to work? How the system fails the unemployed

triangleOur Demands

triangleClegg's text message plans make us LOL!

Incapacity:

triangleIncapacity benefit: New Labour hits the poor and vulnerable