Mel Stride, the secretary of state for work and pensions set out his vision for the future of claimants in a speech to the Conservative Party conference today.  It was a speech which some will regard as filled with optimism and others will hear as laden with threats. 

When combined with Chancellor’s Jeremy Hunt’s reference to claimants placed in the LCWRA group as “100,000 people [who] are leaving the labour market every year for a life on benefits”, the threat seems loud and clear.

Update 04.10.23 :  prime minister Rishi Sunak has also now launched an attack on claimants in the LCWRA group, see below.

Stride spoke of making far more demands on claimants at risk of long-term unemployment, with more frequent work-focused requirements and firm sanctions.

He praised the ‘heroes’ who work in Jobcentres but said they need private sector style incentives to get more people into work.

He talked about the pain it causes him personally to think of sick and disabled people being denied the opportunity to work.

He explained that there is to be reform of sickness and disability benefits assessments and a revolution in the support provided to move more disabled claimants into work.

Finally, he spoke of human beings freed to be the best they can be by being supported back into work.

Firm sanctions and private sector style bonuses

Stride told the conference that government faces new challenges:

Just as the world of work is rapidly changing, so the ways in which we help people into work must change too.

 So we are trialling a far more demanding approach with claimants at particular risk of becoming long-term unemployed.

 This includes far more frequent work-focused requirements, with firm sanctions for those who fail to fulfil their commitments, and more support for those who need it.

 And we’ve been testing new incentive schemes for our best performing Job Centre teams. Recognising and rewarding those heroes who go above and beyond to improve the lives of others.

 The sort of approach that is common practice in successful parts of the private sector. And if its good enough for the private sector then it should be good enough for the public sector too.

Assessment reform and revolutionary support

He went on to talk about “the number of people who are inactive due to ill health or disability” and underlined the government’s intention to reform sickness and disability benefits assessments:

Having a job isn’t just good for your finances – it’s good for your mental and physical wellbeing too.

 And it pains me to think there are so many people being left on benefits who want to work and who could be thriving in work. It’s a waste of human potential . . .

So we are reforming our sickness and disability benefit assessments for the first time in over a decade, to take account of the modern workplace.

 That is going hand-in-hand with a revolution in the employment support we’re providing for people with health problems and disabilities.

 That’s why at the last Budget we unveiled £2 billion of investment, including a game-changing new programme, Universal Support, which will place people into work, with a personal adviser providing wraparound support for up to a year while they find their feet.

 We know it’s an approach that works because we have already been delivering it, including a trailblazing scheme in the West Midlands, Thrive Into Work, led by their excellent Conservative Mayor, Andy Street.

 I have seen first-hand how they are integrating healthcare and employment support.

 And as we roll out Universal Support, we will be changing lives right across the country, so whatever your situation, if you can work you will be supported to do so.

 And if you are on benefits and able to work, you will be expected to do so.

Human beings made free by work

Stride concluded with what he clearly considered to be a rousing vision of a future in which many more sick and disabled claimants will be given the gift of work:

Low unemployment. Improving economic activity. Rising employment.

 These achievements don’t happen by accident. They result from the endeavours of millions of people right up and down our country and from the tireless work of those at DWP day in day out, who make the gift of work a reality for thousands of men and women.

 And that, Conference, is what we will continue to do.

 For every person supported back into work, there’s a human being who is better off.

 A human being freed to be the best that they can be.

 A society made alive and whole.

 That is truly something to inspire.

 Conference, we are getting Britain working.

 Life on benefits

Earlier in the day, Chancellor Jeremy Hunt was much more blunt in his disapproval of claimants who, rather than working, choose “a life on benefits” by being assessed by the DWP as too ill or disabled to be able to manage even work-related activities.

He told the conference:

I’m proud to live in a country where, as Churchill said, there’s a ladder everyone can climb but also a safety net below which no one falls.

 That safety net is paid from tax. And that social contract depends on fairness to those in work alongside compassion to those who are not.

 That means work must pay… and we’re making sure it does. From last year, for the first time ever, you can earn £1,000 a month without paying a penny of tax or national insurance.

 But despite that even when companies are struggling to find of workers, around 100,000 people are leaving the labour market every year for a life on benefits.

 Mel Stride gets this 100% which is why he’s replacing the Work Capability Assessment.

 And we’re going to look at the way the sanctions regime works. It isn’t fair that someone who refuses to look seriously for a job gets the same as someone trying their best.

Are people three times sicker today?

Finally, in his own speech to conference on Wednesday, Rishi Sunak cast doubt on whether claimants in the LCWRA group really are unable to work:

We must end the national scandal… 

…where our benefits system declares that more than two million people of working age are incapable of actually doing any. 

That’s not Conservative, that’s not compassionate—that must change.  

In 2011, one in five of those doing a work capability assessment were deemed unfit to work. 

But the latest figure now stands at 65 per cent. 

Are people three times sicker today than they were a decade ago? 

No, of course not. 

It’s not good for our economy… 

…it is not fair on taxpayers who have to pick up the bill… 

…and it’s a tragedy for those two million people being written off. 

I refuse to accept this and that is why we are going to change the rules so that those who can work, do work. 

It's not too late to respond

For anyone who doubted that the Conservatives were serious about slashing the work capability assessment to make it much harder to be found to have LCWRA, these speeches should provide absolute certainty.

And, until 30 October, it’s not too late to tell them what you think of their plans by taking part in the consultation.

You can also visit our WCA Changes Latest News page for updates on what's happening to the WCA.

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Don 67 · 7 months ago
    It is so typical of the Tories attacking the most vulnerable in society and using them as a scapegoat for their extremely inept and incompetent governance! Look at the over 20 billion pounds of government fraud under Sunaks chancellorship, that gets conveniently swept under the table.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Kat Rehman · 7 months ago
    At nearly 60 my body is wearing out after years of back breaking cleaning work. I'm currently struggling to work 10 hours a week cleaning, and have the jobcentre harassing me. I was advised nearly 4 years ago by my GP to stop cleaning. To do what? I won't make it to 67 working, what do they want me to do?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Kat Rehman · 7 months ago
      @Scarlett Scarlett thank you!! I have sciatica and an unrelated problem with 3 discs in my neck and also have horrible shoulder pain. By not fading away quietly, I'll live to needle them some more. I hope you feel better, soon 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Scarlett · 7 months ago
      @Kat Rehman Kat, basically they want us to fade away quietly and as quickly as possible so we wont be a burden on their ruddy statistics! I to have worked as a carer and then trained as a nurse, I have worked for 48 years of my life, now have arthritis, fibromyalgia and a very bad neck, shoulders and back, so people like you and me don't fade away, we hold on and make ourselves heard!! 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Fiona · 7 months ago
    The number of people suufering from Long Covid alone is 1.8 million. Yet no investment has been announced into reserach for a cure for this dibilitating condition. The total number of clinically extremely vulnerable (CEV) people in England is 3.7 million. Mnay of the extremly clinically vulnerable are working age but have conditions like bLood cancer and many more do not get protection from vaccines and yet the Government has withdrwan any protectiosn which would allow people to safely work with others. Mental Health treatment has always been the Cinderella of the NHS and still does not have the same maximum weight times as physical illness. The countrys mental health has never been pooere with the affects of the pandemic and now the cost of living crisis. Yet no equality of wait times between mental and physical illness and no investment in research.  This is pure dog whistle politics and Labour are not any better. I feel everyone should write and lobby their M.P.'s., we all have a vote and if there are so many of us manybe they should take note of our voting power. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Jodie · 7 months ago
    Perhaps, and this is a very BIG PERHAPS, if the current government INVESTED in the healthcare system to make it fit for purpose, there would be a proportion of us who are long-term sick and disabled better supported so we are in a better position to consider work.

    But then, when many of us find ourselves in a position where we are able to consider returning to work, the next hurdle is finding a suitable job and a genuinely supportive employer... 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Sheila · 7 months ago
    I was medically retired from the benefits agency . Sacked through I’ll health then had to fight to get the medical retirement. Problem is my hands  ( among other things ,I’m speaking thus  into my phone )was fine until UC took over . Wouldn’t recognise their own medical retirement certificate and forced me back to work . Find a job where you don’t use your hands they said !!! And they took my very small I’ll health pension off my UC . A life on benefits ( there you have it , they don’t want the I’ll or the elderly were a burden to them ) what utter rot Jeremy Twunt !
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Sarah · 7 months ago
      @Sheila Totally agree they are treating us like the nazis did during the war by targeting the sick
      And vulnerable… and nothing is being done to speak up for the sick and disabled amongst us
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Andrew · 7 months ago
    The last person to screw up the benefits system was IDS (Ian Duncan Smith), who was instrumental in seeing people being kicked out or starving because of the UC mess up. 

    They have had my PIP form for months now and still haven't made a decision despite my issues getting worse not better. I don't get the mobility because apparently I'm not disabled enough according to the "medical specialists", that in itself is a joke. Unless these people suffer the same issues they have no idea how it affects a person. 

    I also have mental health issues which can be challenging enough...I have cyclothymia...the local authority have re-named it personality disorders with emotional traits, something to do with not being labelled and yet that sounds somewhat worse than cyclothymia. 

    I was a counsellor and psychotherapist for 4 years and I know which I would prefer to say I've got. Anyway, delayed decision, at least I am still getting my PIP some people are still waiting or have been turned down for it. 

    The idea that they want to push disabled people into work with the temporary promise of PIP for a little while afterwards and then taken away, leaving them no parachute in case they have problems. There are still plenty of people who were laid off during covid who are perfectly able to work. Yet, again just like the ULEZ we, the ones at the bottom of the financial status, suffer first before anyone else.

    To add salt to the wounds, I've just been told my insurance is going up £200 despite having 25 yrs of driving on a full licence and 17 yrs of no claims...apparently, its gone up 40% across the board, another hit at those on low income or like I am. Its all a big plan to get us out of our cars whether we need them or not! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Lynne Davison · 7 months ago
      @Andrew Its always a fight - you have to appeal and its best to have support from agencies out there who know the system. I appealed decision and won and now have standard daily living and standard mobility PIP

      It is always worth appealing as many times the DWP decision is overturned on appeal
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Embarrassed · 7 months ago
    I've posted before. My life's great!
     I live with constant pain and my mobility is deteriorating even more now. The meds I'm on, counted them up once, 18 individual pills a day, don't really seem to help the pain all that much although sometimes they knock me out.        I don't leave the house because of it all. My limits my front door apart from the odd occasion I'm taken out. And then I'm so damned scared of falling out the wheelchair again. I feel safe at home. I probably have got some sort of anxiety starting
    I wish the government could wear my shoes for a week. I've not always been like this, I've had good, responsible jobs in the past. I'd love to know what job they think I can do now. I'd love to be still able to do the work I used to .
    The good news is that I've not wet myself so far today. Plenty of time yet.  Incontinence pads leak, even the big ones. And I don't know I'm doing it till it's too late
    As I said, my life's great

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Adolf · 7 months ago
      @Embarrassed Sorry to hear your many issues.
       Perhaps Sunak could find you a job in his cabinet. I'm sure you couldn't do any worse than his current chums
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Jayne · 7 months ago
    Where's the consultation for us to take part in. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Catherine Stewart · 7 months ago
    Sorry if I seem ignorant of the facts. Does the total being discussed include Carers? Has he taken them out of the equation or do they have to go to work as well as caring 24/7?

    Thank you
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    D Blake · 7 months ago
    Every time I read the latest Con-servative 'idea' to force sick and disabled people into (often unsuitable) work I am reminded of the motto of a certain far-Right political party of the 1930s & '40s - the National Socialist (Nazi) Party - which proclaimed "Arbeit macht frei", loosely translated as "Work will set you free". We are lurching further to the Right with every passing day, under this inhuman Con-servative government!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Eileen Wain · 7 months ago
    Try working with bipolar or schizophrenia or certain personality disorders it could become dangerous in the workplace 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Sarah · 7 months ago
      @Mrs Hurtyback Exactly 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Jodie · 7 months ago
      @Eileen Wain Absolutley this. I was made redundant from my job due to the complications my personality disorder caused!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Mrs Hurtyback · 7 months ago
      @Eileen Wain Indeed. I believe that the potential employers are the place to start, not claimants. It's no use assessing people as 'fit' when employers are, understandably, reluctant to take risks on people they see (rightly or wrongly) as potentially 'problematical'.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Jan the man · 7 months ago
      @Eileen Wain So true. I have a friend with schizophrenia. He's great! Lovely, lovely man. You wouldn't want to meet a nicer, kinder guy. 
      But because of where his head's at he can't work.
      He didn't ask to be disabled
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    john l · 7 months ago
    They say that; "In 2011, one in five of those doing a work capability assessment were deemed unfit to work.
    But the latest figure now stands at 65 per cent."

    That is correct, after all the assessments these people have been judged by the DWP's own "medical professionals" as to ill to work, so the government are now saying that these "professionals" their own "professionals" do not know what they are on about??
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Adolf · 7 months ago
      @Scarlett
      Not sure there will be anywhere near enough employers, to make any kind of meaningful dent in the jobless figures. However the harsher regime will be popular with hardened Tory voters, so the rhetoric is very useful with an approaching election. Plus sadism is quite popular with the hard right!

    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Scarlett · 7 months ago
      @john l These professionals will be turned into work coaches, and be the same moody interrogators, if you don't take the job, you won't be paid. You will be made to take a job, and if you do, it's another statistic to boast about...dreading it is going too far, especially where mental health is concerned...tut! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Sarah · 7 months ago
      @john l Exactly everything this government does undermines previous things they have said or done 
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      Joy66 · 7 months ago
      @john l All the incorrect decisions turned over on appeal. It's a joke. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Porridge · 7 months ago
    So the new motto of the Tory party going forwards appears to be “Arbeit macht frei”. I wonder where I have seen that before?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Carol K · 7 months ago
    We are governed by a mob of millionaires and billionaires who do not care about the UK or the disabled, whose sole focus is tax cuts AT ANY COST. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Sarah · 7 months ago
      @Carol K  It they want to be voted in again next year so let’s hope people remember what they are doing
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Jobbie Weechler · 7 months ago
      @Carol K They're out of touch. They don't know how we survive day to day. It's certainly not on the minimum wage. There are people, even on the highest PIP, who struggle due to their mental and physical health. They can't get as far as their local shop so are left at home, living  in squalor. 
       The most vulnerable are being penalised and sanctioned by overly enthusiastic 'work coaches'.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Claire · 7 months ago
    This is dystopian and an all out attack on those of us who are the weakest by sickness and disability.To see Sunak pouring scorn on the Support group figures,when we have been through the horror and indignity of assessments.Still they can’t believe we are ill.Have they not thought that the reason people are presenting as more sick is because nobody can see a doctor in a reasonable timeframe,or be referred on for treatment.Disgusting treatment ,have mine or any of our illnesses or disabilities for a week Sunak,Stride or Hunt then come back and beg for your fit and well life back.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Sarah · 7 months ago
      @Claire Here here
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Jodie · 7 months ago
      @Claire That sad irony is, they made these announcements on World Mental Health Day... Yes, dear leaders, please do come live in a pair of our boots for a week and see if you can still walk at the end or, even breathe!
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      The dogmother · 7 months ago
      @Claire I'd love them to see how bad it is for us. They go by text book conditions and that's no way to gage anything. We aren't 'textbook' we are individuals with complicated medical conditions, then we face every cold,flu and covid under the sun, as we are vunerable to all. So aswell as our daily struggles we face insurmountable pressure  anxiety and panic due to our own governments deliberate lack of understanding and utter disregard for us, the people who are powerless ,unwell ,debilitated and plain worn down by the rhetoric and rug being dragged from under us .
      I hope and pray they fail to bring us even lower by changing the rules around our very existence.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    The dogmother · 7 months ago
    https://www.dailyrecord.co.uk/lifestyle/money/new-calls-lower-state-pension-31121245?utm_source=whatsapp&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=sharebar
    Please delete if not appropriate. 
    I've signed this,for what it's worth. 
    The barrage of hatred towards a petition is unreal. I've had to fend off the nastiest comments in regards to something others are trying with all hope, to set in place to help the helpless. I can only put it down to misguided jealousy, for something that hasn't and most likely will not become law. For the rest of us, it might be hope. Please sign if you are able to. Thanks.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Carol · 7 months ago
      @The dogmother Just watch the suicide rate rise now 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      The dogmother · 7 months ago
      @m shirker The entire ethos is to bully. 
      This is poor, sick people's lives.
      We have so much to contend with, yet 'they' seem to think we aren't punished enough.
      When pip was forced on us and all it entails ,I thought good lord,surely things can't sink any lower. But then I guess when you don't have a diabolical mind, you could never dream up what's in front of us (if they get their way).
      If I hear one more threat  when it comes to the disabled I think I will combust. It really is 'them' and 'us'. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      m shirker · 7 months ago
      @The dogmother i have just read that article on that newpaper its all just silly noscense even one of the doctors on their described it as a horrible bully system
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Suusi M-B · 7 months ago
      @T There are disabled trans people too I know coz I am one.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      The dogmother · 7 months ago
      @T Of course I hope labour save us. Who knows what's up their sleeve. 
      They must rem we are their voters too. But judging by past Labour governments there's a bitvof a sting there still. They were less than favourable towards us 
      I've noticed too the distinct lack of any TV coverage on the entire disability saga that means the difference beween us living or dying.. literally. 
      Shows we hold no importance to them,they'd rather ignore than report on the fact we are being ever marginalised day on day,degraded, and treated as "less than".We aren't stupid people, we aren't subhuman,  we are ordinary human beings  trying to get through and live our lives as close to normal, whatever that is, as we can. We need peace and we aren't getting it.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    blandie · 7 months ago
    Listening to Rishi Sunak's wife Akshata give her speech at the Tory party conference yesterday was quite dificult. She said how much he cares about this country, communities and the people etc. Very hypocritical considering what his plans for the sick and disabled are. I think they are going back to being the nasty party again.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      D Blake · 7 months ago
      @blandie Did they ever stop being 'the Nasty Party'?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      MrFibro · 7 months ago
      @blandie Blandie,

      Sunak & his missus, are both in denial of reality.  But regarding your they are going back to being the nasty party!!!! they always were, and always will be.

      And i don't see any political party taking sides with us at all.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Suusi M-B · 7 months ago
      @Meg It wasn't that long ago that Thatcher's Tories stole the National Fronts clothes. They are still wearing them…
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Meg · 7 months ago
      @blandie Back? When were they ever not?!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    Cheekyfeet · 7 months ago
    No one has mentioned those who pass the WCA severe conditions category which was introduced 2017 where those who pass don’t have to take WCA ever again, what happens to those claimants?

    I have filled out the consultation filled out three of the questions and have gone to town on them, most of it was repeating myself, as I don’t agree with any of it, the new options they have come up with have clearly been designed by someone who is able bodied who does not have a clue about living and working with a long term illness or disability, they are typically clueless and extremely dangerous. 

    I really dislike how these Tory MPs talk about the long term sick and disabled, like it’s a fashion accessory you put on and take off and how much of a wonderful life we lead on taxpayers money (pot calling the kettle black) They are just so out of touch and the nastiness is never far from the top of the Tory Party cauldron!  

    We are just the scapegoat for the financial mess Liz Truss left the country in, we are an easy target and probably the only thing left for the Tories to pick on, they will never take responsibility for all the huge mistakes that Boris, Liz, and no doubt Sunak have made, they play the blame game, and that target has been the long term sick and disabled for over 13 years, some of the most vulnerable in society! I don’t know how they sleep at night they should be ashamed of themselves

    Mel and Jeremy talk like you just ask for ESA or UC and you get it paid straight away, no questions asked, no mention of the 22 page ESA50/UC50 WCA interogation ooops I mean assessment form. 

    The other thing that annoys me is most of us at some point have had to have an assessment or many repeat assessments for ESA/UC which are designed by the DWP and applied to the claimant by a health care professional who are supposedly trained by the DWP using their legally bound criteria, if the claimant passes that criteria then they have only passed the law that was set by the current government, so it’s governments fault that so many claimants are in the Support Group, we don’t put ourselves in this group, may be government are really saying our assessors and DWP case managers are not really that good at their jobs as they pass too many people into the Support Group, even though they pass current government legally binding legislation. The way Mel and Jeremy talk it’s like this current legislation doesn’t exist, and we just waltz into the Support Group! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      The dogmother · 7 months ago
      @Cheekyfeet Makes no difference what category you are in,I'm in support group and was signed off as never having to look for work in 2013. I will if this load of Tripe goes through. To my detriment I might add. They don't care that you go through the mill with reassessment after reassessment inorder to get put in SG, or that you've so much medical evidence you back it up you could be regarded as a medical enigma. 
      We are just a thorn in their side. 
      They don't see the individual person or fact we suffer and suffer and then suffer some more because they chose to Constantly change the rules.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    micksville · 7 months ago
    when the consultation regarding this was launched last month B and W on their news page reporting this, stated
    "Any changes would require amendments to primary legislation, which would happen in 2024. There would also need to be changes to assessment providers’ IT systems, which means the actual introduction of a revised WCA would not happen until 2025."
    I am curious where the date of 2025 to get software up and running comes from? Are we quite sure on this? I ask because last year the DWP stated last minute they wanted to develop their own software for the proposed joint PIP/ESA medicals, rather than rely on the assessment companies' own software. They cited this as reaso for delaying the awarding of the ew assessmet cotracts. Again B and W reported on this in a newsletter. Is it possible the DWP have been planning these changes to WCA criteria all along are are already well on the way to having drawn up the software changes ( for assessment providers IT systems), thus casting doubt on the 2025 date for these changes to support grouo criteria. I'd be interested if Steve or any at B and W could clarify this.
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