Labour are rushing to get the first vote on personal independence payment (PIP) and universal credit (UC) cuts over and done, with the second reading scheduled to happen on Tuesday 1 July.   The earliest the vote on the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill could have happened is the day before.

The government may be hoping the tight schedule will reduce the chances of organised opposition both within and outside Parliament.  There are also reports in the Independent that Labour are trying to crush opposition from backbench MPs by threatening that they will be ruled out of government jobs and could lose the Labour whip if they vote against the cuts.

But the resignation of former shadow disability minister Vicky Foxcroft from her position in the whips office last night in protest at the bill will have come as a blow to ministers, who will be hoping there will be no more high profile resignations in the next few days.

Meanwhile Disabled People Against Cuts had already announced a protest rally in Parliament Square on Monday 30 June, starting at 4.30pm and it’s likely that other protests will take place around the country.

Campaigners will now have just a week to try to persuade sympathetic Labour MPs to follow their consciences, rather than allowing tribal loyalties or fear of consequences to dictate how they vote.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    So ministers can get sacked for opposing the bill? How is that democratic!!
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      · 5 days ago
      @Del Yes in my eyes thats not a vote it's bullying sumbody do what they do not want to
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    Keir Starmer places Labour MPs on 'resignation watch list' as PM faces benefits cuts civil war.
    Sir Keir Starmer has been left bracing for more frontbench resignations over his plans to cut Britain’s ballooning benefits bill.
    Following Foxcroft’s resignation last night, a Labour rebel told Politico: “[It’s] almost impossible to believe it’ll be the last.”

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    Lisa Nandy, culture secretary, said in bbc interview, that she "had not seen signs of a major rebellion brewing" and "a handful of backbenchers had expressed concern about the detail" of the proposals.
    Makes you wonder where she's been during the last few weeks.

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @SLB
      "I fear that she's right. Only 15 MPs would go before the cameras this week for a group photo of those voting against the cuts. I hope she's wrong, but we'll have to wait and see."

      We'll have to see how the vote goes, but if the rebellion had collapsed to the extent implied it seems highly unlikely the government would need to issue threats or ask popular Labour MPs to try to win over rebels, as one article stated. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @maggie Nandy is dim and dishonest in equal measure.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @maggie I fear that she's right.  Only 15 MPs would go before the cameras this week for a group photo of those voting against the cuts.  I hope she's wrong, but we'll have to wait and see. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    Disabilityrightsuk have done a great blog on what it means to you and the consequences to you. Sorry don’t know how to import link, so have copied and paste below, “In defending the Green Paper proposals, Liz Kendall told the Guardian “When we set out our reforms we promised to protect those most in need, particularly those who can never work” and “That is why we are putting additional protections on the face of the bill to support the most vulnerable and help people affected by the changes. These protections will be written into law – a clear sign they are non-negotiable.”

    Now that the new Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill has been published, it is clear that these protections will not actually cover a very substantial proportion of those people Liz Kendall had in mind.

    The key protection in the bill is that those with lifelong conditions would automatically get a higher rate of universal credit (equivalent to the current limited capability for work-related activity (LCWRA) element). It reflects the current criteria for the LCWRA element, in that you need to meet one of a set of stringent descriptors (set out in Section 7 of the Universal Credit regulations), but with the added provision that this must ‘constantly (apply) to the claimant and will do so for the rest of the claimant’s life’. The insertion of the word ‘constantly’ will make it extremely difficult for claimants with variable conditions, such as MS, Parkinsons Disease, Rheumatoid arthritis and schizophrenia, to meet the new criteria. In these cases, it will be rare for one of the criteria to be met constantly; ie all the time. The new criteria will therefore not protect many of the very groups of people that it would be reasonable to assume would need such protection – in fact, they are deliberately excluded.

    The bill will also provide 13-weeks of additional protection to existing claimants affected by the cuts to the personal independence payment daily living component. The DWP describe this transitional cover as ‘one of the most generous ever’. However, this cover compares poorly with the equivalent Scottish short-term assistance, which allows payments of Scottish disability benefits to continue at the rate of the earlier award while you are challenging a decision. In March 2025, Social Security appeals were taking 32 weeks to clear; prior to this mandatory reconsiderations are taking more than ten weeks to clear – 42 weeks in total. A 13-week protection will be of very little use with such delays.” 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @Boo Constantly for the rest of their life seems to me to just be that there will be no periods of their life when the LCWRA criteria do not apply. Which makes sense for a group that will not be reassessed. And is what Liz Kendall intended as she defines the most vulnerable as those most severely disabled for life who are never expected to be able to work.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    Is it even legal to sack someone for doing their job? What's the point in having a vote if you're being blackmailed to vote against what you actually want? This government knocks me sick. 
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      · 4 days ago
      @Ste Starmer and his cronies need to go. No democracy there 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @Ste thats why governments are bent. 

      all lesgislation should be voted for by the folk of the country, not the mp's,  then it is fair.


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    · 5 days ago
    Labour MP Brian Leishman told The Independent “these welfare reforms are wrong”.

    “The leadership would do well to remember the words of two past Labour PMs – in Harold Wilson, when he said the party is a moral crusade or it is nothing, and in Gordon Brown, when he said that leaders come and leaders go, but the mission of the party remains,” he added.

    https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/starmer-benefit-cuts-labour-mps-welfare-b2773217.html

    Around 50 Labour MPs are believed to be planning to vote against the government, with many more set to abstain on the plans. But the party’s whips have threatened serious consequences for those who rebel or abstain.

    Whips have even sought to recruit popular Labour MPs to convince their colleagues to back the measures in a bid to stave off the rebellion.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @Yorkie Bard They really are pathetic and desperate. It’s actually ridiculous and sickening.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @Yorkie Bard We need at least 80 to vote against.  Interestingly, it was 81 Tory rebels that propelled Cameron to announce his in/out EU referendum.
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    · 5 days ago
    I wrote to my mp jack Abbott four times regarding this, various campaign  emails, though writetothem.com doesn't like copy and paste at all, which really isn't good for us who have to write letters in other programmes and then paste them. I wrote a supportive email to vicky Foxcroft too. I have sent my mp info from this site too. I hope they get to read my concerns and the concerns of cab and others too.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @shadowpony I've also sent a thankyou email to Vicky foxcroft. She's not my MP but I think it's important for us to show how much her resignation means to us
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 5 days ago
    Yahoo News (couldn’t work out how to share the link from FB):

    A rebel said: “This would be unprecedented, deeply authoritarian action from a Labour government. Besides, it's not realistic – they can't withdraw the whip from all of us.
    “On being blacklisted for government jobs, I think I'll get over it.”

    HEROES!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @Bronc The rebels have spoken out loud and clear against the cuts, so of course they will vote against. They're heroes already. Now just to see about the 'waverers'. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @Gingin They will heroes if they actually vote against the cuts. 
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      · 5 days ago
      @Gingin Things are starting to simmer nicely Gingin.
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    · 5 days ago
    I am continuing to bombard my MP’s inbox with letters and articles. 

    I will continue to ‘fact check’ dubious social media posts. 

    Challenge everybody. 
    Misinformation is rife ✊🏻
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 4 days ago
      @Dee If you look back to earlier on in the B&W news stories I bet there’s one. I know B&w urged us to email MPs and I bet they gave a template
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @Gingin Is there a template for emailing MPs?  Looking something general to highlight why it's important they vote against the cuts.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 5 days ago
      @ANGELA Well done. Social media I find particularly hard, as the lies and propaganda just get me so wound up, but I have been pushing into the headwind and firing back at them this week. Sometimes it helps to copy and paste my comment if I'm answering similar nonsense. 

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