Last week Nigel Farage announced that Lee Anderson MP would be Reform UK’s “new spokesman on welfare”. Though we prefer to give as little publicity as possible to Reform, we consider it is important that readers are reminded of some of Anderson’s previous comments on benefits, especially as we receive emails and posts from claimants on a daily basis telling us they will vote Reform at the next election.

 Nigel’s nonsense

Farage announced Anderson’s appointment by explaining:

“There are too many young people being put on disability benefits, being literally cast out of the system, classed as victims, left there. It isn’t good for the economy, it isn’t good for them as human beings. From today, Lee Anderson is going to be our new spokesman on welfare.

“He’s going to work with others and craft policy. And the thing about Lee is that he worked in a Citizens Advice Bureau. You know, he knows there are those that genuinely deserve help, but there are many frankly that don’t.

“And the current system is that [when] you go to your GP, your GP is almost pressurised to put you on the disability register. All of that has to change.”

As the Disability News Service pointed out, the claim that there is such a thing as a “disability register” to decide who gets benefits has been debunked even by the House of Commons library.

Anderson’s attitudes

Below are a small selection of quotes which clearly set out Anderson’s attitude to benefits claimants.  Readers are welcome to add their own (linked) examples in the comments section.

“It’s become fashionable now to have mental health problems” 
“It’s become fashionable now to have mental health problems, to have your own counsellor, to go for therapy, to have anxiety attacks, to get down to the local benefit centre and sign on for PIP or ESA.

“It’s just fashionable. People complain about anxiety problems, and now I’m sure that back in the day in the village I grew up in where all the men worked down the pit and the women worked the factory, and they had nowt at the end of the week, I’m sure they were stressed, I’m sure they were anxious, I’m sure they had their problems.”

“We didn’t whinge or complain… we just cracked on and got on with it because for us in that village that was normal."
The Sun  4/9/25

“families with 4 or 5 children all with ADHD who were just thrown a load of money each month”
“I saw first hand how people were trapped on benefits.  We're some taking advantage of the system? 100% yes. Were many trapped in a system who wanted to work but they were as well off on benefits? 100% yes.

“Did I see families with 4 or 5 children all with ADHD who were just thrown a load of money each month and forgot about? 100% yes.

“Did I see hardworking folk who were working all hours and were no better off than their neighbours who'd never worked in their lives? 100% yes.”
X 7/9/25  

“If you don't go to work . . . then we will stop your money”
[Anderson] said that while genuine sick and disabled people deserve support, there are "far too many people in this country swinging their load".

"If you don't go to work, if you don't contribute towards society and be a good citizen, then we will stop your money. Simple as that," Lee declared.

He emphasised that support should be maintained for "genuine sick people, disabled people".
GB News 26/11/24

“reward our workers, not the shirkers”
“Benefits should be a safety net, not a career option. Work should always pay more than benefits, which is why Reform UK will overhaul our benefits system and reward our workers, not the shirkers.”
Telegraph 6/9/25

“They can’t cook a meal from scratch”
“And what we do at the food bank, we teach them how to cook cheap and nutritious meals on a budget. We can make a meal for about 30p a day, which is cooking from scratch.”

“I think you’ll see first-hand that there’s not this massive use for food banks in this country. You’ve got generation after generation who cannot cook properly. They can’t cook a meal from scratch. They cannot budget.”
11/5/22  Guardian

“We should be teaching a man to fish”
“Yes, there is a need for food banks for some people who fall on hard times all of a sudden. But there’s a whole industry now. In my opinion this is a scandal,” he says. “We should be teaching a man to fish. If we get back to the basics, get people to help themselves, give them a hand up rather than a hand out, this country would be even better.” 
Telegraph  22/1/23

“I’d see people coming in on two sticks” and then “on the dance floor at the disco”
He takes aim at “those people that quite frankly don’t want to go to work. People who are feigning illness. I used to see them on a daily basis in my time at Citizens Advice Bureau. 

“I’d see people coming in on two sticks, or could hardly walk, and then Friday I’d see them downtown on the dance floor at the disco. We know that happens. 

“It’s not fair on the decent hard-working taxpayer in this country who puts a shift in, works seven days a week, and never sees the kids because they are working all the hours God sends.” 
Telegraph  22/1/23

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  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 16 days ago
    30 pence a meal! Maybe Lee Anderson should of organised last nights state banquet, that would of saved a few million off the countless millions its costing entertaining Donald Trump for the next few days! 
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      · 10 days ago
      @CJA I Agree with this! 
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      · 10 days ago
      @CJA I thought it read cook from scratch 30p a day! 
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      · 16 days ago
      @CJA I'm surprised Anderson didn't mention the 30 pieces of silver....I do think he does have a point about the ability to cook from scratch but not 30p a meal unless he thinks we are still in the 1970's (well, Labour are in power....)

      I live in Exeter, and number of deliveroo bikes whizzing along the pavements is amazing.  Takeaways are not a cheap option! 
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    · 17 days ago
    As a former Citizens' Advice benefits worker, and money adviser, I cannot believe that he was accepted to work/volunteer in the service, which is impartial and independent. I feel sorry for the clients that he "advised," his lack of knowledge and empathy must have come across in his interactions, I dread to think how his words must have affected people, and the impact he had on them. 
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      · 17 days ago
      @Pixie Pomeroy Thank you for your post. Amongst all the "benefit bashing" that goes on, it's heartening to hear from someone who truly understands and has compassion for those of us who are disabled and not financially well off. Sadly that is something that is severely lacking in a lot of politicians.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 17 days ago
      @Pixie Pomeroy To be honest, him saying he has experience working in Citizens' Advice rings very much like the "I can't be racist, I have black friends!" mantra.

      He can't possibly be ableist or otherwise have a discriminatory view of the disabled because he's worked with an organisation that helps them with benefit applications and lends a sympathetic ear.

      But I do agree. Citizens' Advice have certainly made a fundamental error in taking this kind of individual on. Let's hope they improve their vetting process in future because he's now using them to further his and Reform's agenda against benefit claimants. Which is all we need right now.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 17 days ago
    i don't know how people believe in reform uk farage led the brexit party they promised us all the benefits of leaving the eu up to today none of these benefits  have become true he is more interested spending time with trump do we really want to become little america ?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 10 days ago
      @jo So you want more of the same?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    He's absolutely saying what the British public what to hear. This is evident by how people are quick to say that the idea of tackling tax evasion and taxing the wealthy is not feasible nor an alternative to rising taxes for ordinary people but that welfare cuts absolutely need to happen simply because we're the easier target. And because they know for a fact that their neighbour's best friend's sister is a benefit cheat and getting more money than the benefit cap allows "because she has the newest iPhone model". 🙄

    It's truly hard to have any sympathy for people who have an endless array of excuses for tax evaders and billionaires not paying their way vs. somebody having to survive on disability benefits. People who can't even own a bloody phone without being accused of benefit fraud but woe betide anybody who suggests bona fide rich people who can apparently just skip the country on a whim should pay the tax that they can actually afford. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 18 days ago
    Thank you for all the kind replies regarding migrating to UC! I feel a bit better about now😊
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    · 18 days ago
    B&W should do more articles like this.

    There are somehow (god knows how!) people who are on this site seeking help and advice for their disability assessments touting how Reform will be better for them if they voted for them in the future.

    You cannot educate pork, as my grandfather says, meaning you can't teach stupid, sometimes stupid stays stupid, but what you can do at least is highlight what has been said, document it, explain it, and hope that said stupid folk let it sink in.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 18 days ago
      @Chris H I wouldn't exactly put it that way. But please b&w  more pointing out misinformation and giving actual facts, as chancers like Anderson can't stand straight, his misinformation or lies at best need pointing out, where people can make there own decisions.  Farage a few years ago was saying he had loads of young voters who want and believe in Reform, my sons college was approached he was making either a documentary or for media, what he had done was pay the pub Bill for all the students (Beer). I often wondered how they got people to support him when not paying the pub Bill the teenagers had no interest in him now when I see him on tv with kids asking for his autograph, makes me wonder what's on offer not very honest but when millionaires/billionaires are made up of Reform no wonder they fund PR this way. But giving correct facts is essential and the only way the disabled can vote who,s good for there head and heart. Hopefully the correct information is a starting point rather than disinformation.
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    · 18 days ago
    How anyone is capable of falling for chancers like Anderson is beyond me. If you’re in receipt of sickness benefits and think Reform UK are on your side go ahead and vote for them. I’ll guarantee you 100% buyers remorse… but then it’ll be too late. Farage et al are nothing less than dangerous to your future health and finances

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      · 10 days ago
      @David With a constant feeding from the media that everyone on benefits is a shirker ,malingerer and fraudster As it is so easy to claim disability With the almost daily if you have this disability/illness you can get these benefits Claim It is like printing money With the help of the politicians portraying those on disability benefits as work shy scrounger Is it any wonder people believe it Seeing people in a wheelchair or with a guide dog is one thing But many disabilities/illnesses are not obvious So the people are seen as they are portrayed by both media or politician alike 
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    · 19 days ago
    You would think that with stuck farmer and his cronies tanking in the polls, and surely now only one more crisis away from dismissal, the Lib Dems would be pushing their agenda and their intentions of how they intend to govern. (If the chance does come their way.) sadly, they seem happy to remain in the political wilderness.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 19 days ago
    I read on an article, I think it was a disability news service article, that there are disabled people posting racist, fascist and ableist comments on social media.

    It also said that 29% of disabled people have said they intend to vote Reform.  I know lies, damned lies and statistics.  Maybe it is not true or a tiny number asked, maybe they asked people who claimed they are disabled and aren't, who knows.

    It is rather shocking and scary that disabled people would post that sort of thing and that 29% are saying they are voting for Reform, with the plans Reform have and the statements from both Farage and Lee Anderson about welfare and disabled people.

    Do these disabled people not realise they are turkeys voting for Christmas?
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 19 days ago
      @Mick Sadly I've seen divide and conquer working with some disabled people on X. Some physically disabled are willing to remove benefits for mental illness so voting reform doesnt seem a crazy option. Plus many disabled people think that are benefits are in trouble because of migration. 
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      · 19 days ago
      @Mick I'd be interested to know where, geographically, this survey was conducted.y guess in some very deprived areas of the north of England, or somewhere similar.
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    · 19 days ago
    I am afraid Lee is not very well informed regarding the entire benefit system, perhaps he needs to do some detailed research about how it works, what Labours plans are, what the Tories plans are and what the Reform party would propose, the system is complex and difficult to navigate, but just making assumptions is wrong, every case is different and assessments need handling with care, and if you wish to provide assistance with getting a job, well yes it that does needs to be tailored as well, but will it I doubt it, so what is your offer Reform because at the moment I don't know.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 19 days ago
      @Elizabeth Vidler
      "I am afraid Lee is not very well informed regarding the entire benefit system, perhaps he needs to do some detailed research about how it works"

      He's not interested in the details of how the system works. He's just interested in punching down on another convenient scapegoat. It's exactly what you'd expect from a party full of Tory rejects. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 19 days ago
    Just got the dreaded UC migration letter, I’m gonna wait till a few days before deadline date to apply! can anyone tell me if this will be ok?..many thanks
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      · 10 days ago
      @Kaz I just got almost double UC than my ESA. 
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      · 18 days ago
      @Sean Thank you for your reply and glad it went well for you😊
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 18 days ago
      @Kaz To be quite honest, it's easy to do yourself online. I was worried but went ahead and did it within the first month. No challenges, assessments or contradictions. Had my first payment, set up a DD for my rent. All good.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 19 days ago
      @Kaz I wouldn't want to give you duff advice for you are people's circumstances are all different but what I did was work out where and when my bills needing paying , then I decided to apply on a date that was the day after a ESA payment IF you are on legacy ESA you should then get one more payment of your ESA before it closes the ESA and you wait for your first UC payment. Check this please , maybe ask the question on the forum make a post and it will be answered . Xx
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 19 days ago
      @Kaz Apply the day after you get your current benefit, then you'll have the least amount of time to manage with no payments. Mine went through with no issues and I had a phone appointment because I can't attend in person. When you apply you get access to your journal and you can list any access requirements as a message to the work coach.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 19 days ago
    A vote for Reform is another vote for billionaires who don’t want any welfare or NHS or employment rights basic rights . There’s not a whole lot of choice to be honest with Labour out stingy the Tories. But Reform and Nigel Farrage is a bit like the big bad wolf in the fairy tale!. All the better to eat you with !! 
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    · 20 days ago
    Austerity is the midwife of fascism which is slowly becoming a threat in this country once again.
    I say that as someone who studied the struggle against fascism for 5 years during my PhD studies. Anderson is able to come out with all of this hate filled nonsense due to the climate of intolerance which has been created by the media and both Labour and Tory politicians. The TUC conference passed 2 motions against cuts to benefits which also called on the trade union movement to wage a mass campaign against the cuts. Now more than ever the disabled community must link up with the unions in a joint campaign against further cuts. But we need to go much further than that and campaign for a humane welfare system which values all human life.
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    · 20 days ago
    Sometimes I read the comments on this site with deep concern, complaining about how Labour have done, and how they are failing the disabled. It’s quite true, and most of it correct, they’ve been a huge disappointment thus far. The thing is the dynamics of the political system in the uk, means that if you split the left vote, all you end up with is, in the past the tories or now this even worse bunch, who could decimate the welfare state, and quite literally leave the disabled without help at all.
    Of course everyone should vote with their heart, but just bear in mind if you don’t vote with your head too, or talk to others about doing so, goodness knows the result.  If one day you wake up to lee Anderson in charge, you’ll think this lot were pussy cats!
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      · 10 days ago
      @tintack Absolutely. We are just witnessing the relentless slide to the very right of the Overton window. God help us all if Reform get in. You can kiss goodbye to what's left of the welfare state and the NHS.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 19 days ago
      @Thinkaboutit
      The evidence of the last few decades is unequivocal: if we keep voting for the "least worst" option then the relentless march to the right will continue even further. We now have a "Labour" government trying to inflict Osborne-like cuts on sick and disabled people, and the difference between Labour, the Tories and Reform is growing narrower and narrower, so if now is not the right time to vote for parties offering something better, then when would be the right time? In "a generation or so" the Overton window will have moved even further right and we'll no doubt then be told that it's "not the right time" to consider other parties. On that trajectory it will never be the right time.

      We also have a Labour leadership determined to kick out anyone even vaguely on the left, so don't expect many MPs who rebel over benefit cuts in this parliament to be candidates next time round.  Any party that inflicts savage benefit cuts and then gets back into power will take that as an endorsement of those cuts and there is then no chance of anything changing for the better.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 19 days ago
      @tintack Well your suggestion may work in a generation or so, but I’m concerned about the people on this site in 2029. Taking away a resource then may have a life threatening effect on them. Playing for a long term goal is admirable, but what happened in the summer with the welfare cuts, shows Labour has limits, by the values of many of their mps . What limits does Lee Anderson have?
      Ps I’m not happy  with Labour one little bit. But frying pan and fire come to mind.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 20 days ago
      @Thinkaboutit
      The problem with voting for the "least worst" option is that this has been happening for decades and we can now see the result - the Overton window has been moved relentlessly to the right to such an extent that anything to the left of Vlad the Impaler is instantly decried as tantamount to Communism. At this point it's really questionable if Labour can be considered as part of the left vote, since they have moved so far to the right and are still hurtling ever further in that direction in a futile attempt to chase the votes of Reform voters, who will never vote for them anyway, while alienating their own base in the process. 

      Labour is supposed to be the left wing party, but if the supposedly left wing party moves to the right then you no longer have a choice between left and right, but between right and even further right. Hence the incessant rightwards shift of the Overton window. A Tory government like MacMillan's would be considered pretty left wing by today's standards, and certainly to the left of the current "Labour" government, which is insane. 

      if you don't challenge your opponent's fundamental tenets but try to imitate them instead, you just legitimise them and end up fighting battles on terrain of their choosing. Look at the immigration issue: Labour has bent over backwards to pander to Farage, and what good has it done them? None at all. They're still tanking in the polls. This has played out across Europe: nominally centre-left parties imitating the far right in order to stop their rise and then finding that it just causes the far right to rise further while their own support collapses. At some point you have to conclude that this is not sustainable and we need to vote for parties who are willing and able to make the counterarguments. The SNP have done it in Scotland, the Greens now seem to be doing it under Polanski, maybe the new Corbyn/Sultana party will as well. 

      No party can hope to win power without offering its own supporters good reasons to vote for it. This government has been actively telling people on the left that they're not wanted: Reeves telling anyone who wants higher taxes on the super-rich to vote for someon else, the "shaking off the fleas" reference to members leaving, Starmer himself saying "the door is open, if you don't like it you can leave". These people seem to think they can say "we despise your politics, you're not wanted in this party - oh, but by the way, we still expect you to vote for us". Screw that.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 20 days ago
    The problem here is that this vile individual is speaking the language of what some  people in this country what to hear. The recent rise in support of Reform is shocking and partly down to the incompetence of the Tories and Labour on how to run this country. But there must be a better alternative to this dangerous party.... 
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    · 20 days ago
    “We can make a meal for about 30p a day, which is cooking from scratch”

    I’d like to know what meal can he make for 30p a day? When was the last time he did a food shopping counting the pennies and removing the items from the basket? And what about the cost of electricity or gas needed to cook that meal? 

    What I can’t comprehend is how no one, not a single person would ask a simple question to challenge such statements? And seeing as these statements are made at various news outlets you would have thought the journalist would follow up with the right questions, that’s the minimum requirement for their job.

     Doesn’t anyone use their own brain to think anymore but just gets swept into the anti-disability hysteria! 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 16 days ago
      @Fedup and worried sick Came here to say ^^^^ THIS!!!

      30P..... what is he cooking? Tap water..... ( cold obviously as it'd probably cost more than 30p to boil the kettle!)

      Seriously.... 30p..... what planet is this man on!


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    · 20 days ago
    I find it difficult to understand how Anderson worked for the citizens advise bureau both voluntary and paid and yet compassionate he is not. But is able to give totally untrue information and disinformation to the voting public this is a man who jumps ship from party to party therefore changing his believe's as though he's changing his hat. He is a disruptor who would trust him with your Vote or to run the country.They should not be allowed to peddle lies as though true .
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 20 days ago
    Any person who believes that reform is for them are either millionaires or billionaires because they are the only people they will help while bleeding us all dry.

    Learn from the 1930s Germany what happens when you vote in hateful/ racists, disabled and mentally ill discriminators ignorant politicians. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 20 days ago
    What a disgusting man! He is to tarnish  every single disabled person in this country. Over his own diabolical views. Does this mean we can tarnish every single corrupt mp. As he seems fit to do so with the disabled, seems to very quickly  tarnish all disabled claimants with an apparent story he likes to tell when he worked for citizens advice. Being on benefits is absolutely not a career choice. The pittance they expect the disabled to live on is absolute pittance. 
    Has he ever gone through the process, you don’t just turn up at the jobcentre and sign up for esa or pop.  Vile man should be removed immediately for his disgusting comments. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 20 days ago
    Unspeakable!

    And also unspeakable are the NHS's own sickness absence policies. Varying from trust to trust, in my family's actual experience, these policies are harsher, to the point of unreasonableness, than those found in private industry.
     
    Mr Anderson should be made to learn by heart the Government's own statistics for PIP fraud compared to fraud on other benefits, as it's miniscule. 

    He should also be made to learn how different benefits work, as he is guilty of misleading the public on indisputable facts. You do NOT "go down to the benefits centre" [does he mean Jobcentre?] to "sign on for PIP or ESA" . You apply online or possibly by phone. No-one should consider voting for a
    party connected with such an ill-informed person, if I may be so bold.
    Denby
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 18 days ago
      @denby Oh Denby well said.
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