Big Issue readers react to benefits reforms, voter ID, an opinion piece on healthcare for young trans people and smoking bans.
Who benefits?
When I watched the benefits reforms speech by Rishi Sunak I was in disbelief. I worked all my life as a primary school teacher and loved it. However, I developed lung disease and COPD in 2016 and was unable to work so I left my job. I struggled for years after that, only being paid £300 from universal credit a month with no other income. I lived in a tent for a year at one point as I was so poor and had no savings from work as my £1,600-a-month salary didn’t go far enough to save back when I was working.
I’ve only recently been given LCWRA after years of being told I couldn’t apply due to Covid backlogs and before that not knowing about universal credit sickness benefit. I also get full PIP and still struggle to survive. I’ve also just applied for social care for a carer to look after me but then had to turn it down as I couldn’t afford the £70 a week they wanted me to pay the council for that care.
Sunak says people on benefits make it unfair for the taxpayer, but what about those who were taxpayers for many years? I know in my time as a teacher, I paid well more than £100,000 in tax plus a lot more in national insurance and certainly won’t get anywhere near that back in benefits if I’m on them for the rest of my life. He is blaming the sick and disabled for basically draining the taxpayer of all their contribution. Shouldn’t he be looking elsewhere for savings rather than from the needy? Is he trying to make everyone work so that when the war comes and conscription is introduced, no one can refuse due to health reasons?
The work capability test for universal credit is horrific and scary as it is. The system punishes people too poorly to engage with the process already. If you’re too poorly to jump through hoops your benefit is stopped.
If you’re well enough to jump through hoops you shouldn’t need benefits. The system does need changed but not in the way Sunak has proposed at all.