Reblogged
from Vox Political:
Several months ago this blog accused
Iain Duncan Smith of being a liar and a coward because, not only had he
fabricated statistics on the number of people leaving benefits because of his
new benefit cap, but he had also weaseled his way out of an appearance before
the Commons Work and Pensions Committee to account for this
behaviour.
The very next day, we
had to apologise (to readers) and publish a correction saying that the man
we call ‘Returned To Unit’ would be attending a follow-up meeting in September,
at which the 100,000-signature petition calling him to account for the benefit
cap lies, organised by Jayne Linney and Debbie Sayers, would also be presented
to MPs.
Apparently the meeting was being timed to coincide with publication of the
DWP’s annual report for 2012-13.
Now it is November, and we have still had no meeting with RTU. Nor
have we seen the annual report, which is now almost eight months late. Meanwhile
the calamities at the DWP have been mounting up.
The latest appears in a
Guardian report published yesterday, about the ongoing disaster
that is Universal Credit. You may remember, Dear Reader, that the Department for
Work and Pensions has admitted it had to write off £34 million that had been
spent on the scheme; it subsequently emerged that the total amount to be written
off might actually be as high as £161 million.
The Guardian article appears to confirm this, adding £120 million to
the £34 already written off if the DWP follows one of two possible plans to take
the nightmarish scheme forward.
This would restart Universal Credit from scratch, creating a system based on
the Internet – and reducing the need for Job Centre staff – and tends to
confirm the suggestion that staff are seen as a liability in the government’s
plan to cut back on benefit payments; despite
being told to bully, harass and intimidate everyone who darkens their doors,
they have an annoying inclination to help people claim the benefits due to
them.
The other plan would attempt to salvage the existing system, and is
understood to be favoured by the Secretary-in-a-State. The drawback is
that it could lead to an even greater waste of taxpayers’ money
(not that this has ever been a consideration for Mr… Smith in the past. He’ll
waste millions like water while depriving people of the pennies they need to
survive).
Universal Credit aims to merge six major benefits and tax credits into one,
restricting eligibility for the new benefit in order to cut down on payouts. It
relies on the government creating a computer programme that can synchronise
systems run by HM Revenue and Customs, the DWP itself, and employers. So far,
this has proved impossible and a planned rollout in April was restricted to just
one Job Centre, where staff handled only the simplest claims and worked them out
on paper. Later
revelations showed that the system as currently devised has no way of weeding
out fraudulent claims.
A leaked risk assessment says the web-based scheme is “unproven… at this
scale”, and that it would not be possible to roll out the new system “within the
preferred timescale”. Smith has continually maintained that it will be delivered
on time and on budget but, as concerns continue to be raised by senior civil
servants that systems are not working as expected and there are too many design
flaws, it seems likely this is a career-ending claim.
Is this why he hasn’t deigned to account for himself before the Work
and Pensions Committee?
Earlier this week, the
government lost its appeal against a court ruling that its regulations for
Workfare and other mandatory work activity schemes were illegal. Public
Interest Lawyers, who handled the case against the government, has taken the
view that anyone who fell foul of the regulations may now take action to get
their money back. But the matter is complicated by the fact that the government
unwisely passed a retrospective law to legalise the rules, in a bid to stop the
228,000 benefit claimants it had sanctioned after they refused to work for their
benefits from demanding the money that ministers had – in effect – stolen from
them. Iain Duncan Smith is the man behind this mess.
Is this why he hasn’t deigned to account for himself before the
committee?
We have yet to learn why this man felt justified in claiming 8,000 – and then
12,000 – people had left benefits because of the £26,000 cap he introduced in
April (he claimed it is equal to average family income but in fact it is £5,000
and change short of that amount as he failed to consider benefits that such
families could draw). Information from polling company Ipsos Mori showed that
the real number of people who had dropped their claims after hearing of the
scheme was more likely to be 450 – just nine per cent of the figure he
originally quoted.
Is this why he hasn’t put a meeting with the committee in his
diary?
Perhaps we should not be surprised, though – it seems that RTU has never had
a decent grip on the way his department works. For example, he allowed George
Osborne to cancel Disability Living Allowance for one-fifth of claimants in
2010, claiming that the benefit had been “spiralling” out of control because it
had 3.1 million claimants – triple the number since it was introduced in 1992.
Smith said the rise was “inexplicable” but in fact the explanation is simplicity
itself, as
The Guardian‘s Polly Toynbee pointed out just two days ago:
“DLA is only paid to those of working age, but when they retire they keep it,
so as more people since 1992 move into retirement, numbers rise fast. There has
been no change in numbers with physical conditions, despite a larger population;
back injuries have declined with the decline of heavy industry. There has been a
real growth in numbers with learning disabilities: more premature babies survive
but with disabilities, while those with Down’s syndrome no longer die young.
More people with mental illness claim DLA now, following changes in case law:
there has been no increase in mental illness, with 7% of the population
seriously ill enough to be receiving treatment, yet only 1% claim DLA. Psychosis
is the commonest DLA diagnosis, hardly a trivial condition. This pattern of
disability mirrors the rest of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development countries, with nothing exceptional here.”
In other words, from the moment he took over this hugely important government
department, with its huge – and controversial – budget, Iain Duncan Smith had
about as much understanding of its workings as a child.
It seems Sir John Major was exactly right when he expressed fears about the
DWP Secretary’s ability last week, claiming his genius “has not been
proven”.
Is this why we’ve seen neither hide nor … head of the Secretary of
State?
Finally, Dear Reader, you will be aware that Vox Political submitted
a Freedom of Information request to the DWP, asking for up-to-date statistics on
the number of Employment and Support Allowance claimants who have died during a
claim or while appealing against a decision about a claim – and that the
request was dismissed on the indefensible grounds that it was “vexatious”.
This was not good enough so the matter went to the Information Commissioner’s
office and, according to an email received this week, will soon be brought to a
conclusion.
Is this why Iain Duncan Smith is hiding?
Perhaps it’s time to drag him out of his bolt-hole and force some answers out
of him.
Jayne (Linney), in her blog, has called on people who use Twitter to start
tweeting demands for Smith to come forward, using the hashtags
#whereisIDS and #DWPLateReview. This is good,
and those of you who do so are welcome to use any of the information in this
article as ammunition in such a campaign.
There is nothing to stop anyone writing to the press – local or national – to
ask what is going on and why benefit claimants are being left in suspense about
the future of their claims. People have to work out how they will pay their
bills, and the continued uncertainty caused by Mr… Smith’s catalogue of
calamities is causing problems up and down the country.
A short message to your MP might help stir the Secretary of State out of his
slumber, also.
In fact, let’s use all the tools at our disposal to expose this man
for what he is – just as this blog stated in July and in May: A liar and a
coward who
has committed contempt of Parliament and should be expelled – not just from
public office, but from public life altogether.