Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Zero-hours contracts are a disincentive to work


Unemployed people in the UK have more monthly disposable income than part-time and zero-hour workers according to a new report out today.

Scottish Friendly’s ‘Disposable Income Index’, which tracks the amount of money people have left over each month after bills and essentials have been paid for, has revealed that while, on average, the country’s unemployed have just 9.3 per cent of their income left over each month, this is compared to only 7.9 per cent for part-time workers and 7.8 per cent for zero hour workers.

Indeed, according to the report, the nation’s unemployed have on average £174 left over as spending money each month, compared to just £130 for those who work zero-hour roles.

Across the UK, disposable incomes have risen by 2.3 per cent in the last three months, though the pattern is uneven and for many on low incomes the situation is grim.

The survey shows people now have an average of 10.5 per cent of their salary left over each month after bills and essentials have been paid for, up from 5 per cent at the start of the year. This equates to an average disposable income of £278.

However, the income gap between the best and least well off continues to rise, making averages deceptive on their own, analysts point out.

Calum Bennie, spokesperson for Scottish Friendly, commented: "While the country as a whole has higher disposable income than they did a year ago, there is a broader concern that those who work part-time or that have zero-hour roles are likely to have less cash in their back pocket than someone who is unemployed.

"The findings should serve as a stark warning of the problems facing so many workers in the UK. It’s bad enough that people don’t know what is going to be in their wage packet at the end of the month, but the index shows that for certain workers, there now appears to almost be a disincentive to work."

Read more...

Remembrance Day for DWP/Atos deaths


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[Image: National Remembrance for the DWP/Atos Dead Facebook group – 
https://www.facebook.com/groups/420430254683362/ ]

Vox Political‘s friend Jim Moore is asking for people across the UK to stop and observe two minutes’ silence at 11am today (December 3), as a mark of respect for the people who have died as a result of the welfare ‘reforms’ administered by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), Atos and any other organisation involved in what he described as “this set of senseless deaths”.

Citizens of the UK have been paying their respects to the long-term sick and disabled people who have lost their lives while going through the DWP/Atos benefits process since 2012, when it was first revealed that 10,600 had lost their lives between January and November 2011.

Since then, the DWP has refused to provide any information on subsequent deaths, in spite of several high-profile Freedom of Information requests.

Please take the time to show your own respect – not only for the known deceased, but also for (it is feared) the many thousands whose deaths are, as yet, unknown to the public.


Make sure your festive charity giving doesn’t support workfare


Salvation Army band
When donating to charity this festive season, many people will wish to avoid charities such as Salvation Army which put people at risk of destitution by using workfare.

Today’s the launch of #GivingTuesday in the UK when charities encourage people to share their festive cheer with donations. This month is one of the most important of the year for charity fundraising. Boycott Workfare encourages people to think twice before giving to organisations that use workfare.

To view a list of those charities you may wish to avoid donating to, click here. Sadly the list of those still willing to put poor people at risk of destitution through benefit sanctions still includes big names such as Salvation Army, YMCA, RSPCA and others, as well as many local charities and hospice shops.

If you’d like to know which charities are committed to avoiding workfare and to Keeping Volunteering Voluntary, see the list of nearly 500 voluntary organisations that have signed the pledge here.

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Autumn Statement: ‘Halt The Erosion Of Family Benefits’, Urges Charity


A leading charity has urged Chancellor George Osborne to ‘halt the erosion of family benefits’, ahead of tomorrows Autumn Statement.

Analysis of Autumn Statements this Parliament by the Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) reveals the extent to which low-income families have lost out.
  • The value of child benefit and child tax credit have fallen by 13% and 8.5% respectively simply as a result of uprating decisions over this Parliament (see figures below); any further erosion would turn the screw on many working and non-working parents.
  • Child Benefit has lost 13% of its value over the course of this parliament because of uprating decisions.  This is equivalent to a loss of £543 of support over the five years for a one child family, £900 for a two-child.
  • The children’s element of Child Tax Credit has lost 8.5% of its value compared to what it would be worth if the government had uprated it by CPI and over-indexed as promised in the 2010 budget. This is equivalent to a loss of £1,140 over the course of the parliament for a one-child family, and £2104 for a two child family.

Key Vote Allows For Full Mitigation Of ‘Bedroom Tax’ In Scotland


A key vote in the Scottish Parliament has removed the last hurdle to lifting the cap on Discretionary Housing Payments and will allow for the full mitigation of the Bedroom Tax.

The Scottish Parliament’s Welfare Reform Committee today passed the subordinate legislation necessary to allow the Scottish Government to do more to support victims of Westminster’s Bedroom Tax.

After extensive campaigning, the Westminster Government earlier this year finally agreed to lift the cap on Discretionary Housing Payments (DHPs) that had put a limit on the support that local authorities could provide and today’s vote is the final step in enabling increased DHPs.

The Scottish Government has previously provided funds for Scotland’s local authorities to make Discretionary Housing Payments at the maximum legal limit and set additional money aside that would enable the full impact of the Bedroom Tax to be mitigated if the cap on DHPs was lifted.

Commenting, SNP MSP Kevin Stewart said:

“Today is a significant day for everyone who has been affected by the Bedroom Tax in Scotland and a victory for all of us who have campaigned against it.

“For far too long the Westminster Government stood in the way of our efforts to help people affected by the Bedroom Tax in Scotland. Today’s vote removes the final hurdle to lifting the cap on Discretionary Housing Payments.

“Where the Scottish Government has previously been restricted in the amount of support it can provide to victims of the Bedroom Tax, those limits have now been removed. It means that support can now be provided for households hit by Westminster’s hated Bedroom Tax.

“The Bedroom Tax was imposed on Scotland despite a majority of Scottish MPs opposing it – a situation that only underlines why Scotland needs to be able to make our own choices when it comes to welfare.”

Source: www.snp.org

Study: Poverty And Stress Reduces Chances Of Getting A Job

Far from encouraging people on benefits to move into work, draconian Coalition welfare cuts push many of them further from employment, a study finds.


The Coalition’s “indiscriminate” welfare cuts have created a climate of fear among benefit recipients, reducing rather than improving their chances of moving into work, a study has found.

The latest instalment of a two-year qualitative research programme finds that rather than providing an incentive for unemployed individuals to find a job, the squeeze on benefits is more likely force them to retreat into day-to-day “survival mode”, unable to seize opportunities to find employment.

Even those who were in work felt trapped in poverty as a result of low wages, zero hours contracts and cuts to housing benefit and tax credits. Many felt that they did not feel financially better off as a result of having a job.

The study concludes:

Our research found that the changes brought about by welfare reform did not have a considerable impact on respondent’s attitudes to work, or indeed the likelihood of them finding work.

It adds:

Work did not seem to enable people to escape the negative impacts of welfare reform or poverty.

It warns that many families are “living on a cliff edge” financially and are affected by increased anxiety and stress. The study argues that current welfare reforms will lead to increased costs to the state as it picks up the bill for poverty-related ill-health and homelessness...

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Charge David Cameron and Iain Duncan Smith for crimes against Humanity


TO: The Houses of Parliament, United Nations, Royal Courts of Justice, International Courts of Human Rights

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we the undersigned human wo/men charge the named individuals (DAVID CAMERON & IAIN DUNCAN SMITH) of crimes against humanity causing gross harm and distress to many vulnerable citizens breaking the common law.

we are of good character and sound mind and lawful removal of these criminals from office is our democratic and lawful duty and rights.

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International Court of Human Rights / Royal Courts of Justice:

Charge David Cameron and Iain Duncan Smith for crimes against Humanity and remove them from office.

#DavidCameron and #IainDuncanSmith have caused gross harm and distress a crime under the #commonlaw of the #UnitedKingdom, tens of thousands of people have been harmed, if not stopped millions of people mainly children will be in poverty by 2020.

Please really share this one 100,000 signatures are required to present this to #parliament and we intend to do so, we will not be ignored.

Tens of thousands of people have died to date as well as 15,000 children in care and counting, the vulnerable people are having their life lines cut whilst millions are wasted on #UniversalCredit, money that could have been used to build up solar infrastructure to aid the vulnerable and contribute excess power back to the grid

Many honest and hard working people are using food banks and having to claim housing benefits, enough is enough.

The Government blame each other and everyone but them selves, it is up to us to take responsibility and force them to listen to our concerns.

This #government is killing people, stealing children and all whilst paying itself 11% pay rises and polluting our water supplies, time for us to take this to the next level and start to #petition this government out of office and present this information to the courts.

GO HERE TO SIGN THE PETITION


The work Programme That doesn't work

The failure of the Work Programme to support more disabled people into employment has other serious consequences, says Ruth Patrick.

In his first party conference speech as work and pensions secretary, Iain Duncan Smith set out his ‘contract’ with the British people. Ushering in wide ranging and ambitious social security reforms, Duncan Smith promised his government would be the one to finally restore ‘fairness’ to the benefits system.

He said: “We will break down the barriers to work and ensure work pays. But in return, we have the right to insist that when work is available, you take that work and work hard to keep that job. For those who want to choose not to work, under this government, this will no longer be an option. We will work with you but you must work with us. That is our contract with the unemployed.”

In this way, Duncan Smith connected the responsibility to enter employment with the right to expect help to make the transition into employment, deploying a contractualist rhetoric to frame and present his argument.

Since then, this contractual premise has been repeatedly emphasised with Duncan Smith’s contract increasingly applying to all those disabled people who are now expected to take part in work-related activity or risk benefit sanctions. This includes all those disabled people in the work-related activity group (WRAG) of employment and support allowance (ESA) as well as the many thousands of people who identify as disabled but who the ESA system instead says are fit for work and therefore only entitled to jobseeker’s allowance.

But while disabled people are continually expected to keep their side of the ‘welfare contract’, a growing body of evidence suggests that the government is failing to do the same. Given the power differentials stacked in the government’s favour, disabled people reliant on benefits for all or most of their income have little choice but to continue to meet the work-related demands made of them, regardless of whether these are actually beneficial, suitable or appropriate.

Reports suggest that the Work Programme is simply not fit for purpose for disabled people with providers failing to follow through on the promise of innovative and personalised forms of support for people with high support needs and who face the greatest barriers to securing work...

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Panorama Britain's Homeless Families Documentary 2014




The number of people made homeless by private landlords has tripled in the last five years. It's now the single biggest cause of homelessness in England. Rep...

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Children’s Commissioner warns that UK is now in breach of the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child


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In February last year, I wrote an article about Conservative attitudes towards poverty that entail a victim-blame narrative. It was written at a time that the government were developing “better measures of child poverty” to provide a “more accurate reflection of the reality of child poverty.”

According to the Tory-led Coalition, poverty isn’t caused through a lack of income. Iain Duncan Smith is responsible for this outrageous nugget of calculated, preemptive denial. Because the government knew in advance what the consequences of the austerity cuts would be: a massive increase in inequality and poverty. 

I concluded in the article that the grossly discriminatory austerity cuts breached the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.
And they do.

As Chancellor George Osborne,prepares to release his mid-term (Autumn) budget statement, the government’s Children’s Commissioner for England has published a report criticizing the Coalition’s austerity policies, which have reduced the incomes of the poorest families by up to 10 percent since 2010.

The commissioner added that the increasing inequality which has resulted from the cuts, in particular, the welfare reforms, means that Britain is now in breach of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child, which protects children from the adverse effects of government economic measures.

Austerity cuts are disproportionately targeted at the poorest.

Dr Maggie Atkinson, the Commissioner, said: “Nobody is saying that there isn’t a deficit to close.  Our issue is that at the moment, it is the poorest in society who have least to fall back on that are paying the greatest price for trying to close that deficit. It is patently unfair. It is patently against the rights of the child.”

Atkinson says that this means that the UK has broken the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child, under which each country is obliged to protect children from the detrimental consequences of economic policies. The Commissioner condemned the government for placing undue financial pressures on poorer parents, despite being one of the most developed countries in the world.

“The basic fact is that there are families living in the fifth-biggest economy in the Western world who are making choices about whether they can afford to heat their house or feed their children,” she said.

“We need as a nation to decide whether we are in the business of making the poorest pay the highest penalty when there is a gap between what the country has in its coffers and what its expenses are.”

The Commissioner’s report found that the government cuts have led to the UK infringing upon Articles 3, 6, 18, 23, 24, 26, 27 and 31 of the Convention. These Articles guarantee children the right to life, development, health, social security and leisure...

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Snouts In The Trough: Tell The Vile Welfare-To-Work Sector What You Think At #ERSA14


Originally posted on the void:

snouts

Today is the annual conference of the Employment Related Services Association (ERSA), the trade body established to lie on behalf of the vile welfare-to-work sector.  They will be tweeting on the hastag #ERSA14 so join in and let them know what you think of their shoddy workfare schemes and brutal benefit sanctions.

Delegates are meeting at a luxury London hotel with tickets for the event costing up toa whopping $450 and a slap up meal promised this evening.  Companies like A4e and G4S will be joined by Employment Minister Esther McVey and her Labour counterpart Stephen Timms to discuss how to fleece even more money from the tax payer by pretending that unemployment is caused by unemployed people.

Boycott Workfare have called an online action to hold these parasites to account for their role in the UK’s biggest and nastiest benefit fraud.  Hundreds of millions of pounds  are handed over…

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Monday, December 1, 2014

After forced-psychometric-test debacle, now Jobcentres offer online CBT


Originally posted on The SKWAWKBOX Blog:




Last year, the SKWAWKBOX triggered a severely-embarrassing chain of events for the government by revealing that the DWP’s Jobcentre Plus (JCP) centres, under instruction from David Cameron’s ‘Nudge Unit’ (read: psychological-manipulation), were forcing unemployed people, under threat of immediate loss of benefits, to take un-validated and dangerous ‘psychometric tests’ without ‘informed consent’ and, quite possibly, illegally in more ways than one. We also revealed a nudge-unit ‘front’ masquerading as a bona fide psychological institution.

It turned out that these tests were so poorly and cynically constructed that they gave the same ‘results’ to those completing them regardless of the answers entered – or even if the test was completed without entering any answers at all. The test had been taken – without permission – from a US psychologist linked to torture techniques such as waterboarding. (The author then objected to the unethical use of the test by the UK…

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Cameron promised a further £7.2 BILLION tax cuts to the rich at the expense of the poor



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I wrote an article last year – Follow the Money: Tory Ideology is all about handouts to the wealthy that are funded by the poor – which outlines Coalition policies that have widened inequalities and increased poverty by handing out public money to the wealthy that has been taken from the poorest. I pointed out that this Government have raided our tax-funded welfare provision and used it to provide handouts to the very wealthy – £107, 000 EACH PER YEAR in the form of a tax break for millionaires, amongst other things.

And what does our imperturbable chancellor promise if this disgrace of a government is re-elected? True to Tory form, more of the same: austerity for the poor and public services cuts, and tax breaks for the wealthiest.

But further cuts to lifeline benefits and public services is surely untenable. Absolute poverty has risen dramatically, this past four years…

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£1BILLION NHS sell-off scandal: Tory MP works for firm targeting huge health service deal




‘A leading doctor has demanded Stephen Dorrell quit as either an MP or an adviser to a private firm targeting a lucrative NHS contract.

The Tory is in a conflict of interest row after taking up a post with KPMG which is considering bidding for a £1billion deal to manage the medical records of all patients.

Mr Dorrell quit as chairman of the powerful House of Commons Health Select Committee in June.’

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Acts of war against the people – A Letter A Day to Number 10


A letter a day to number 10. No 932 by Keith Lindsay-Cameron

Monday 01 December 2014. Acts of war against the people.‪#‎CameronMustGo‬

Shares are encouraged and welcomed. If this letter speaks for you and you wish to send your own copy please feel free to copy and paste, and alter for your own needs the text for your own letter.

Website updated, letters and replies plus bonus material featuring Mr Suggs, Eeyore and Ribbit.

Also on the website, download the support compilation three album set from Atona.

http://www.keithordinaryguy.org.uk/

Dear Mr Cameron,

Food is a weapon of war, oppressing, controlling, starving and killing people by knowingly and deliberately removing from them the means of survival is an act of war and a crime against humanity. The use of sanctions by Iain Duncan Smith is an act of war.

Preventing people helping and feeding the homeless is a crime against humanity. It is an assault on the lives of those who are denied aid and it is an assault on the humanity and moral dignity of those offering aid.
The law only exists because we are moral creatures, yet now laws are passed and enforced by those who have lost or forsaken their moral compass. The law serves morality, morality does not serve the law.

I was arrested in August 2012 and in the interview was asked if I had refused an order from a Police Officer to leave the scene. I confirmed this was the case as I was there as a photographer witness and was then told that I had broken the law in refusing to leave. My response was that the law was therefore an ass denying me my moral authority and right to be there as a witness.

The Police and courts rely on witnesses as integral to the judicial system, in fact my niece was recently served with a witness summons by a Police Officer demanding her appearance in court which, under the circumstances of the case, she refused to do. She was told that if she did not appear, the court would issue a warrant for her arrest. You can’t have it both ways.

We are now living in a rogue state which daily commits acts of terrorism and war against its own people. There is no political or moral justification for these acts, they are without moral, ethical or humane justification and no law can make them right. Any society, even the most dictatorial, relies on the consent of the people in order to function. People may be coerced and act under duress, but that is not consent, at best it is an act of endurance but at some point the will of the people will find expression.

It is only a matter of time, Mr Cameron, you can seal yourselves in a bubble of self serving and selfish interest, but it cannot last. It is the inalienable moral right of every woman, man and child who can tell the difference between wrong and right to oppose you.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-28776102
http://www.mirror.co.uk/…/ids-government-under-fire-massagi…
http://www.mirror.co.uk/…/feeding-homeless-to-be-banned-by-…

Begging prosecutions increase dramatically across England and Wales

Number of cases rises 70%, prompting concerns that cuts in support and benefits make more people resort to begging


Man begging outside a bank
The number of charges for begging in Merseyside rose nearly 400% from 60 cases to 291 in 12 months. 
Prosecutions for begging have rocketed across England and Wales over the past year with dramatic increases recorded in many police force areas.

The number of cases brought to court under the 1824 Vagrancy Act has surged by 70%, prompting concerns that cuts to support services and benefits are pushing more people to resort to begging...

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Demand for Members of parliament to be drug tested. Starting with George Osborne

Demand for Members of parliament to be drug tested.  Starting with George Osborne.

5,991 of 6,000 signatures...


Enforce compulsory drug tests for all Members of parliament, and where necessary prosecute under the misuse of substances act.


Why is this important?


"Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne's appearance and bizarre behaviour during Prime Minister's Questions on the 26th of November 2014 begs the question of whether or not he was or had recently been under the influence of drugs. The government's exponentially failing drug policy puts public health at risk and defies the advice of their own researchers, whilst lining the pockets of dubious pharmaceutical companies and criminal gangs dealing on the black market. It is also in the public interest to know whether MPs are dabbling in legal highs, in a bid to escape failing a conventional drug test."


SIGN THE PETITION HERE


Ian Duncan Smith’s policy: starve the poor into committing crime - by Michael Meacher MP

The papers are full-on when members or ex-members of the government make a fool of themselves behaving badly when they can’t get their way – Andrew Mitchell foul-mouthing a policeman with the toxic ‘plebs’ allegedly added in because he couldn’t ride his bike through the No.10 gates, and David Mellor ranting at a black cab driver over the best route home to his £8m pad near Tower Bridge.

But what really matters about members of the government is not their silly misbehaviour, it’s they way they’re crucifying millions of people even to the point where they’re denying them food and shelter.   On this, with a few honourable exceptions, the media are largely silent on the grounds presumably that they don’t matter because they’re not famous.

A million people have been sanctioned by government ministers over this last year, which means that they are deprived of all their benefit for often petty infringements (e.g. being 5 minutes late for a job interview) and hence have no money for at least 4 weeks and sometimes 3 months, forcing them to steal to survive.

If they’re caught, the penalty for stealing some meat from a supermarket might be a fine of some £200  which of course they cannot conceivably pay, or it might be 6 weeks in prison. 

IDS supervises the sanctioning (though it’s outsourced to a privatised firm doing his dirty work for him), while Grayling takes care of the imprisonment.  

This is the treadmill of impoverishment to which this government is now sentencing hundreds of thousands of people every year, a crescendo of wanton harshness out of all proportion to the treatment meted out to other miscreants.

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Living standards crisis gives Chancellor £17bn tax gap 'headache', says TUC


The government is collecting £17 billion less than forecast in income tax because of the lack of earnings growth in the UK, according to new analysis published by the TUC.

If earnings growth had been in line with the forecast made in June 2010 by the Office for Budgetary Responsibility (OBR) – the official watchdog for the government’s fiscal policy – income tax receipts this year would be £176 billion. But the Treasury is now expected to collect just £159 billion in 2014/15 – £17 billion less than forecast.

The shortfall has occurred because earnings growth has been even weaker than the OBR’s cautious 2010 forecast, despite an assumption that wage increases would be lower than the pre-recession trend. If earnings growth since 2010 had been in line with the pre-recession trend, income tax receipts in 2014/15 would be £189 billion. This is £30 billion more than the figure now expected.

The £17 billion gap is equivalent to a rise in the basic rate of income tax of 4p, or an increase to VAT of 4 per cent.

TUC General Secretary Frances O’Grady said: “The government’s failure to get wages growing again has not only left families far worse off than in 2010, it’s put the public finances in a mess too. “The economy has become very good at creating low-paid jobs, but not the better paid work that brings in income tax.

“The Chancellor’s sums just don’t add up – he can’t make the tax cuts for the better off that he is promising and meet his deficit reduction target without making cuts to public services. His cuts would be so deep that no government could deliver them without doing damage to both the economy and the fabric of our society."

She added: “We can’t cut our way out of this problem any more than we can dig ourselves out of a hole. More austerity would only keep us stuck in a downward spiral. The Chancellor should use next week’s Autumn Statement to invest in growth and to put a wages recovery at the top of the agenda.”

* The full TUC analysis can be found at http://www.tuc.org.uk/sites/default/files/The%20Living%20Standards%20Tax...

Friday, November 28, 2014

The first of the new workhouses?


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The new workhouse: A former bus depot in Blackburn is set to be changed into a Victorian-style workhouse, providing accommodation for up to 10 homeless people in return for work.

Following a discussion on Twitter yesterday evening, the following article from the Lancashire Telegraph was pointed out. Is this building in Blackburn the first of the Coalition government’s new workhouses?

THE semi-derelict former Transdev/Lancashire United bus depot in Blackburn town centre could be brought back into life as a charity and recycling centre, writes Bill Jacobs.

Up 10 otherwise homeless people would live at the site under supervision...

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Wednesday, November 26, 2014

Iain Duncan Smith: The 'quiet man' has become the 'Teflon man'. Nothing sticks

Reblogged from Samuel Miller:



Emily Thornberry, the shadow attorney general, was sacked by Ed Miliband for sneering at a family home draped with England flags. Anti-poverty campaigner Jack Monroe was sacked by Sainsbury's after saying David Cameron should resign for using his ‘dead son’ as a front to privatise the NHS.

So why wasn't Iain Duncan Smith, the Work and Pensions Secretary, sacked in 2012 for his ignorant and heartless remarks after saying that disabled Remploy workers were “not doing any work... just making cups of coffee”?

Why wasn't Iain Duncan Smith sacked in 2014, after the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) publicly admitted it was wrong, that it should not have axed the disability benefits of Asperger's sufferer Mark Wood, who starved to death just five months later, weighing five-and-a-half stone.

I could cite additional examples, but suffice it to say that Iain Duncan Smith has committed more wrongdoing than Emily Thornberry and Jack Monroe combined—and astonishingly, has not been forced to resign.  The 'quiet man' has become the 'Teflon man'.  Nothing sticks.

A list of official rebukes for Tory lies





Here is catalogue of officially recognised Tory lies used to justify their unjustifiable policies, which have have resulted in official reprimands:

David Cameron rebuked by statistics watchdog over national debt claims- PM said the government was ‘paying down Britain’s debts’ in a political broadcast, even though debt is actually rising.

“Now that his false claims have been exposed, it’s time the prime minister stopped deliberately misleading people about his economic record.”- Rachel Reeves.

Finally Exposed! The Deficit Myth! So, David Cameron When Are You Going to Apologise? David Cameron rebuked over austerity claims – David Cameron has been corrected by the Treasury’s own forecaster over claims that cuts in public spending are not reducing economic growth. The Office for Budget Responsibility told the Prime Minister that it does believe that cutting public spending will reduce economic growth in the short term.

Robert Chote, the head of the OBR, contradicted a claim Mr…

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Who do they think they are? How much more proof do we need that the smug elite despise the rest of us




‘Not as nice as he looks, David Mellor. The vainglorious former Tory Cabinet minister turned broadcaster is again in the mire.

The target of his sneering rudeness this time was a London taxi driver who failed to treat Mr Mellor with the respect he felt he deserved.

In the course of a five-mile journey, Mr Mellor swore at the driver repeatedly, boasted about his achievements and belittled the man for his comparatively low standing.’

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Monday, November 24, 2014

People starving to death in the UK – on David Cameron’s doorstep


Originally posted on Pride's Purge:

 (not satire – it’s the UK today!)

Austerity kills. It killed Mark Wood and it killed David Clapson. Both starved to death as a direct consequence of the coalition government’s austerity programme. Both were vulnerable adults who starved alone, bewildered at being punished by those they thought were helping them.

The two people closest to these victims will share a platform on 27 November in Witney, David Cameron’s constituency. Cathie Wood, the sister of Mark Wood, and Gill Thompson, the sister of David Clapson, will demand to know why their brothers died at the hands of the state. They are determined that other vulnerable people should not share their brothers’ fate, victims of an inhuman political ideology.

“We are sticking to the task. But that doesn’t just mean making difficult decisions on public spending. It also means something more profound. It means building a leaner, more efficient state. We need…

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Historic Westminster child abuse and murder claims ‘only tip of the iceberg’ in scandal, Theresa May warns



‘Revelations that politicians allegedly murdered and raped young boys is “only the tip of the iceberg” in the Westminster historic child abuse scandal, Theresa May has warned.

The Home Secretary expressed dismay that institutions designed to protect children failed in the past and said she was determined to bring those guilty to justice, whatever their position.’

Read more...

Thursday, November 20, 2014

Food Bank Demand Driven By Cuts And Sanctions To Benefits, New Report Finds

More than half of people driven by acute poverty to apply for emergency food aid are there because of delays, sudden cuts or sanctions imposed on welfare payments, according to new research

The Trussell Trust’s findings are a direct challenge to the coalition government’s insistence that the meteoric rise in the numbers of food bank users is unconnected to the cuts to the social security system, and is only linked to the growth in provision.

The charity, which runs the country’s largest network of food banks, analysed more than 900 different users at a range of facilities across the country, as well as conducting 40 more in-depth interviews and 178 different caseloads from people accessing one of their advice services.

Up to two-thirds of those analysed by the study, which was commissioned by the charity along with the Church of England, Oxfam and the Child Poverty Action Group, said they were waiting for their benefits which had been delayed, because they had been sanctioned by jobcentres or because they had been suddenly hit by the so-called bedroom tax.

“The promise of a social security safety net that is there to protect people at times of crisis is something that can, and must be, preserved and protected. Food banks, whilst providing a vital and welcoming lifeline to many, should not become a readily accepted part of that formal provision,“ the study says.

The Trust has handed out food parcels to at least 913,000 people from 2013-2014, a threefold increase. The Trust says those figures are a low estimate for the numbers suffering from acute personal finance crisis, many more are likely to be relying on help from friends or neighbours.

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Support Group Chances Increased By Upper Tribunal Decision

A recent upper tribunal decision may have significantly increased the chances of employment and support allowance (ESA) claimants being placed in the support group rather than being forced to carry out work-related activities that cause a substantial risk to their health. The decision has come about because, just two months after taking power in 2010, IDS did away with one of the stages of the work capability assessment in order to push through the transfer of incapacity benefit claimants to ESA as hastily as possible.

The work-focused health related assessment (WFHRA) was a ‘second medical’ at which an Atos health professional looked at what capability for work you still had and ways in which it could be improved by the taking of steps in relation to your physical or mental condition.

The subsequent report was passed on to your personal adviser who used it to decide what kind of work-related activities you might be capable of. It was a vital part of the WCA because it was the only way the DWP passed on information about the way your condition affects you to the person supposed to be preparing you for work – they have never been allowed access to the medical assessment itself.

WFHRAs were suspended for two years in July 2010 due to their having achieved only ‘mixed results’ and because of the increasing backlog of ESA medicals. They were subsequently abolished altogether.

A recent three judge upper tribunal hearing, however, has almost reinvented the WFHRA.

The tribunal were hearing a case in relation to regulation 35(2). In essence, this says that if because of your health condition or disability, there would be a substantial risk to the mental or physical health of any person if you were required to carry out work-related activities, then you should be placed in the support group.

The tribunal judges held that where a tribunal is considering whether a claimant should be covered by regulation 35(2) the onus is on the DWP to provide a significant amount of additional evidence if they think the claimant should not be placed in the support group.

This includes evidence about what activities work providers in your specific location send people on, which ones it would be reasonable to require you to do and what mechanism the DWP can point to that will give the tribunal confidence that the information will be effectively communicated to the work programme provider and acted upon.

If the DWP can’t do all this to the tribunal’s satisfaction then it must find that you are eligible for the support group.

Not surprisingly the DWP are very unhappy about this and are appealing the decision to the Court of Appeal. In the meantime, the DWP appear to be trying to get all appeals to first tier tribunals that raise the issue of regulation 35 stayed until the Court of Appeal has heard the case and reached a decision – which could be many months away.

We’ve updated both of our guides to claiming ESA to take account of this decision.

Meanwhile, if you are an ESA claimant, we’d be very interested to see your comments below on what work-related activities you have been forced to do and whether they were appropriate.

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