Current Affairs The Conservative Party

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Rather than getting all hot under the collar about the non existent 'Corbyn's a spy' the Tories need to concentrate on their despicable treatment of people with disablities.

More than a million benefits sanctions imposed on disabled people ...

Disability
The Observer
More than a million benefits sanctions imposed on disabled people since 2010


Groundbreaking Demos study reveals ‘culture of disbelief’ about disability among jobcentre staff leads to money being docked

Michael Savage, with case studies by Donna Ferguson

Sun 18 Feb 2018 00.05 GMTLast modified on Tue 20 Feb 2018 13.20 GMT


Disabled people protest against cuts to their disability allowance. Photograph: Jay Shaw Baker/NurPhoto/Rex/Shutterstock
Disabled people receiving state benefits have been hit with a million sanctions in less than a decade, according to alarming new evidence that they are being discriminated against by the welfare system.

A comprehensive analysis of the treatment of unemployed disabled claimants has revealed that they are up to 53% more likely to be docked money than claimant who are not disabled. This raises serious concerns about how they and their conditions are treated.

The findings, from a four-year study by academic Ben Baumberg Geiger in collaboration with the Demos thinktank, will cause worry that a government drive to help a million more disabled people into work over the next 10 years could lead to more unfair treatment.

Sanctions – the cutting or withholding of benefits – are applied as a punishment when claimants infringe the conditions of their payments by, say, as missing appointments or failing to apply for enough jobs.

While the sanctions regime has been championed by the government as a means of encouraging people to take a job or boosting their chances of finding one, most experts consulted as part of the Demos project concluded that conditionality has little or no effect on improving employment for disabled people. There was also widespread anecdotal evidence that the threat of sanctions can lead to anxiety and broader ill health.

The study found that disabled claimants receiving jobseekers’ allowance – given to people who are out of work – were 26-53% more likely to be sanctioned than claimants who were not. Those hit by sanctions reported that the disparity arose because jobcentre staff failed to take sufficient account of their disabilities.

However, a spokesman for the Department for Work and Pensions said it did not recognise these figures: “If someone has a health condition, we work with them to reduce what they need to do, and people are always supported to meet the requirements of a tailored claimant commitment, which they agree with their work coach. This sets out what is expected of them in return for the support they will receive. Sanctions are only used when someone has failed to meet these requirements without good reason – this is in a minority of cases and people are given every opportunity to explain why they have failed to do so before a decision is made.”

A majority thought that disabled people’s benefits should be cut if they do not take a job they can do, but they were less supportive of sanctioning for minor noncompliance, such as sometimes turning up late for meetings. Even those who supported sanctions preferred much weaker punishments than those the government uses.

The research recommends a reduction in the use of so-called “benefit conditionality” for disabled people and a strengthening of the safeguards to ensure disabled people are not unfairly punished.

Polly Mackenzie, director of Demos, said it was now clear that the benefits system isn’t working for disabled people: “Conditionality is important in any benefits system, but when disabled people are so much more likely to be sanctioned, something is going wrong. Jobcentre advisers and capability assessors too often have a culture of disbelief about disability, especially mental illness, that leads them to sanction claimants who genuinely could not do the job they are being bullied into applying for.

“We need to think again about how we assess work capability. Employers also need to be better at adapting to disabled people’s needs so that more jobs can be done by people with fluctuating conditions.”

This follows a damning report by the National Audit Office in 2016, which found that there was no evidence that sanctions were working. It also found a failure to measure whether money was being saved, and that the application of sanctions varied from one jobcentre to another.

‘There’s no room for compassion’


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Nina Grant: ‘This government treats disabled people with utter contempt.’
Nina Grant, 32
Nina Grant has Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, a genetic collagen defect that causes chronic pain, fatigue and frequent joint injuries. She was sanctioned in 2016 after she informed the Department for Work and Pensions that she was carrying out what the department specifically describes as “permitted work” while on disability benefits. “I only found out about the sanction when I checked my bank balance and realised the payment hadn’t gone in as usual.”

After she complained, her benefits were reinstated. “They didn’t apologise. They didn’t offer any explanation. If I hadn’t called them, it could have gone on for months. It made me feel like I was being punished for trying to contribute while disabled, and scared that they were going to use that as an excuse not to pay me.”

The Londoner is reliant on a wheelchair outside her home, and finds it extremely painful even to use a pen most days. “I understand that people exploit the system, but this government treats disabled people with utter contempt.”

Josie Evans, 42
Ten years ago Josie Evans was working as a nurse when she suddenly went into anaphylactic shock. After 41 further life-threatening attacks, she has been diagnosed with idiopathic anaphylaxis, which means she is extremely allergic to more than 100 antigens and triggers.

She relies on disability benefit to pay her rent and buy food but was sanctioned in 2016 after failing to send in a form on time: “The document was 20 pages long and I was in too much pain to write, because my hands were swollen from a recent allergic reaction I’d had.”

She explained this and was told she could take her time. Ten days later, a letter arrived from her landlord saying her housing benefit had not been paid. She discovered all her disability benefits had been stopped because the form had been late. “I was scared. I knew I’d need to buy food in the next 48 hours, and I can’t use a food bank because of all my allergies.”

It took weeks for her benefit to be reinstated, and she had to borrow money from her family. “It was so stressful it brought on an allergic attack. The people who work at the DWP simply do not understand the reality of what it’s like to be disabled. There is no room for compassion.”
 
Rather than getting all hot under the collar about the non existent 'Corbyn's a spy' the Tories need to concentrate on their despicable treatment of people with disablities.

More than a million benefits sanctions imposed on disabled people ...

Disability
The Observer
More than a million benefits sanctions imposed on disabled people since 2010


Groundbreaking Demos study reveals ‘culture of disbelief’ about disability among jobcentre staff leads to money being docked

Michael Savage, with case studies by Donna Ferguson

Sun 18 Feb 2018 00.05 GMTLast modified on Tue 20 Feb 2018 13.20 GMT


Disabled people protest against cuts to their disability allowance. Photograph: Jay Shaw Baker/NurPhoto/Rex/Shutterstock
Disabled people receiving state benefits have been hit with a million sanctions in less than a decade, according to alarming new evidence that they are being discriminated against by the welfare system.

A comprehensive analysis of the treatment of unemployed disabled claimants has revealed that they are up to 53% more likely to be docked money than claimant who are not disabled. This raises serious concerns about how they and their conditions are treated.

The findings, from a four-year study by academic Ben Baumberg Geiger in collaboration with the Demos thinktank, will cause worry that a government drive to help a million more disabled people into work over the next 10 years could lead to more unfair treatment.

Sanctions – the cutting or withholding of benefits – are applied as a punishment when claimants infringe the conditions of their payments by, say, as missing appointments or failing to apply for enough jobs.

While the sanctions regime has been championed by the government as a means of encouraging people to take a job or boosting their chances of finding one, most experts consulted as part of the Demos project concluded that conditionality has little or no effect on improving employment for disabled people. There was also widespread anecdotal evidence that the threat of sanctions can lead to anxiety and broader ill health.

The study found that disabled claimants receiving jobseekers’ allowance – given to people who are out of work – were 26-53% more likely to be sanctioned than claimants who were not. Those hit by sanctions reported that the disparity arose because jobcentre staff failed to take sufficient account of their disabilities.

However, a spokesman for the Department for Work and Pensions said it did not recognise these figures: “If someone has a health condition, we work with them to reduce what they need to do, and people are always supported to meet the requirements of a tailored claimant commitment, which they agree with their work coach. This sets out what is expected of them in return for the support they will receive. Sanctions are only used when someone has failed to meet these requirements without good reason – this is in a minority of cases and people are given every opportunity to explain why they have failed to do so before a decision is made.”

A majority thought that disabled people’s benefits should be cut if they do not take a job they can do, but they were less supportive of sanctioning for minor noncompliance, such as sometimes turning up late for meetings. Even those who supported sanctions preferred much weaker punishments than those the government uses.

The research recommends a reduction in the use of so-called “benefit conditionality” for disabled people and a strengthening of the safeguards to ensure disabled people are not unfairly punished.

Polly Mackenzie, director of Demos, said it was now clear that the benefits system isn’t working for disabled people: “Conditionality is important in any benefits system, but when disabled people are so much more likely to be sanctioned, something is going wrong. Jobcentre advisers and capability assessors too often have a culture of disbelief about disability, especially mental illness, that leads them to sanction claimants who genuinely could not do the job they are being bullied into applying for.

“We need to think again about how we assess work capability. Employers also need to be better at adapting to disabled people’s needs so that more jobs can be done by people with fluctuating conditions.”

This follows a damning report by the National Audit Office in 2016, which found that there was no evidence that sanctions were working. It also found a failure to measure whether money was being saved, and that the application of sanctions varied from one jobcentre to another.

‘There’s no room for compassion’


FacebookTwitterPinterest
Nina Grant: ‘This government treats disabled people with utter contempt.’
Nina Grant, 32
Nina Grant has Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, a genetic collagen defect that causes chronic pain, fatigue and frequent joint injuries. She was sanctioned in 2016 after she informed the Department for Work and Pensions that she was carrying out what the department specifically describes as “permitted work” while on disability benefits. “I only found out about the sanction when I checked my bank balance and realised the payment hadn’t gone in as usual.”

After she complained, her benefits were reinstated. “They didn’t apologise. They didn’t offer any explanation. If I hadn’t called them, it could have gone on for months. It made me feel like I was being punished for trying to contribute while disabled, and scared that they were going to use that as an excuse not to pay me.”

The Londoner is reliant on a wheelchair outside her home, and finds it extremely painful even to use a pen most days. “I understand that people exploit the system, but this government treats disabled people with utter contempt.”

Josie Evans, 42
Ten years ago Josie Evans was working as a nurse when she suddenly went into anaphylactic shock. After 41 further life-threatening attacks, she has been diagnosed with idiopathic anaphylaxis, which means she is extremely allergic to more than 100 antigens and triggers.

She relies on disability benefit to pay her rent and buy food but was sanctioned in 2016 after failing to send in a form on time: “The document was 20 pages long and I was in too much pain to write, because my hands were swollen from a recent allergic reaction I’d had.”

She explained this and was told she could take her time. Ten days later, a letter arrived from her landlord saying her housing benefit had not been paid. She discovered all her disability benefits had been stopped because the form had been late. “I was scared. I knew I’d need to buy food in the next 48 hours, and I can’t use a food bank because of all my allergies.”

It took weeks for her benefit to be reinstated, and she had to borrow money from her family. “It was so stressful it brought on an allergic attack. The people who work at the DWP simply do not understand the reality of what it’s like to be disabled. There is no room for compassion.”

It is a disgrace........
 
Jacob Rees-Mogg, following the Ben Bradly model of lying about the Gaffer on the other side of the house.



A bit rich from the person who shared a platform with known anti Semites, who also wanted mass deportation of black people and those from India and Pakistan. Rees Mogg is a scumbag of the highest order and would fit in well leading the other scrum in the Tory party. Rees Mogg hasn' t a clue about the Good Friday Agreement.
 
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Why can’t you answer a single question properly?


If the truth be known, I suspect she's never had what are regarded as traditional 'days away with the girls', and certainly not as a prime minister. Not trying to curry sympathy for the women, but it wouldn't surprise me if she doesn't have a very wide social circle at all.
 
If the truth be known, I suspect she's never had what are regarded as traditional 'days away with the girls', and certainly not as a prime minister. Not trying to curry sympathy for the women, but it wouldn't surprise me if she doesn't have a very wide social circle at all.

If that were true, how difficult would it be to just make something up?
 
From the Times, the irony of the party that accepts money hand-over-fist from the russian's accusing the opposition leader of the same. The last paragraph is ace, considering the government last week desperately held a 3-line whip to keep DUP donations secret from an official electoral investigation.

Russian oligarchs and their associates have registered donations of more than £820,000 to the Conservative Party since Theresa May became prime minister, The Sunday Times can reveal.

May promised to distance her party from Russian donors when she took office, with allies briefing that she would “sup with a long spoon” and the prime minister insisting there would not be a “business as usual” relationship with Moscow. However, the party has declared donations worth £826,100 from Russian-linked supporters since July 2016.

Last night May was under pressure to return the cash over the attempted nerve-agent murder of the Russian former spy Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia in Salisbury last Sunday.

Marina Litvinenko, the widow of the former Russian dissident Alexander, who was killed by the Kremlin in London in 2006, said: “These donations are not just from the heart and for charitable reasons. They are all calculated.” She said the Conservative Party should put Britain’s national security interests “first”.

Cabinet ministers have privately accused the prime minister of adopting a “limp” approach to the assassination plot and being “in denial” by refusing to point the finger of blame at Moscow.

The prime minister shocked her colleagues by silencing Boris Johnson in cabinet on Tuesday when the foreign secretary said Russia was responsible for the poisoning. He and Gavin Williamson, the defence secretary, are expected to demand tough retaliation against Putin’s cronies at a national security council meeting tomorrow.

It was reported last night that Johnson and Amber Rudd, the home secretary, are planning to introduce a new law to target Russian officials mired in corruption and human rights abuse, hitting them with travel bans and asset freezes.

The Tories have received more than £3m from Russian-linked tycoons and their companies, as well as from lobbyists for Moscow since their return to government in 2010. One of the most controversial Russian donors paid the Tories more in a year under May than in six years under David Cameron.

Lubov Chernukhin, the wife of a former Putin minister who gave £160,000 to play tennis with Cameron, last month attended a Tory fundraising event and bid £30,000 to have dinner with Williamson.

She handed the party at least £253,950 in the year to September 2017, Electoral Commission figures show. This compares with £250,432 she donated between 2010 and Cameron’s resignation in 2016. A further £10,000 was ruled impermissible because she was not a British citizen at the time.

Chernukhin’s husband, Vladimir, was Putin’s deputy finance minister and then chairman of a state-controlled bank.

Another lobbying company closely connected to the Conservative Party, New Century Media, was paid by the Kremlin to promote a “positive image” of Russia in the UK in 2013. New Century has donated £143,000 to the Tories, including more than £24,000 since May became prime minister.

New Century Media also represents companies run by Gerard Lopez, who handed £400,000 to the Tories. The donation was given in April 2016 but declared under May’s premiership.

Lopez, whose companies appeared in the Panama Papers, which exposed ways in which the rich can exploit secretive offshore tax regimes, is chairman of the board of Rise Capital, which lists as partners Russian banks that are under EU and US sanctions.

Alexander Temerko, a London-based businessman born in Ukraine when it was part of the USSR, has given the Tories more than £1m personally and through his companies. This includes £148,000 since May became prime minister. Temerko, once a senior figure in Russia’s defence industry, rose to become a key lieutenant in the Russian oil giant Yukos. He fled to the UK after being accused of fraud. He has been a vocal critic of Putin, but some sources in western intelligence agencies still view him with suspicion. All the donations were declared and given legally and there is no suggestion of wrongdoing by the donors.

Tories and their companies were also paid to represent alleged Russian fraudsters and organised criminals, documents seen by The Sunday Times show.

Andrey Pavlov, a Russian lawyer accused of a massive fraud, hired a London consulting firm, GPW, to prevent EU sanctions from being imposed on him. In the engagement letter for the job, GPW promises to “draw on the experience” of its chairman, Andrew Fulton, a former MI6 officer and ex-chairman of the Scottish Conservatives. Fulton said last night he had “no recollection” of working for Pavlov.

Another firm, CTF Corporate and Financial Communications, was hired by Lord Goldsmith, a former Labour attorney-general, to help in the Pavlov case. The company is linked to CTF Partners, run by the Tory election guru Sir Lynton Crosby.

CTF Corporate said it had no direct contact with Pavlov and Crosby had no personal involvement with the brief, which was handled by former Tory MP Adrian Flook.

Nia Griffith, Labour’s shadow defence secretary, said: “These revelations call into question how seriously Theresa May will be willing to challenge Russia’s conduct when her party is literally being bankrolled by some close allies of the Kremlin.”

Separately, Andrew Barrand, the former election agent for the chancellor, Philip Hammond, is a board member and former campaign chairman of the Westminster-Russia Forum, a strongly pro-Putin group.

Barrand now works for the Tory MP Kevin Foster.

At a 2016 meeting of the forum, Tory MP Daniel Kawczynski said: “The time has come for us to . . . take on the anti-Russian hysteria that is pervading our political and media circles.”

More than 250 counter-terrorism police are working on the Skripal investigation.

The Conservative Party said: “All donations are properly and transparently declared to the Electoral Commission. We are looking at tightening our financial regimes to ensure the profits of corruption cannot flow from Russia into the UK.”
 
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