

End Social Care Disgrace
3.1K posts

@EndSCDisgrace
https://t.co/4Cdj0Zgc2u || campaign for a national care support and independent living service








“When the foundations are extractive, everything built on top is expensive.” Govt economic policy has to change and change rapidly. Any review on energy has to consider public ownership as an option. Here’s why: This isn’t just about a bad year or a temporary spike. It’s not something we fix with another sticking plaster or short term rebate. This is structural. For 40 yrs we’ve treated the basics of our economy as assets to sweat, not foundations to strengthen. Energy, water, transport, housing, even parts of our food system have been organised around extraction first, production second. When the foundations are extractive, everything built on top is expensive. High energy prices don’t just hit families trying to heat their homes. They hit factories, pubs, farms, small manufacturers. They feed straight into food prices, rents and transport costs. That’s why the cost of living crisis & the cost of doing business crisis are the same crisis. You can’t build a serious manufacturing base on top of an energy system designed to reward volatility. You can’t have food security when water companies are loaded with debt and paying out dividends. You can’t grow regional industry when transport is fragmented and overpriced. You can’t ask small firms to invest when commercial rents are inflated by land speculation. Tinkering won’t cut it. Price caps without structural reform just socialise the risk and privatise the reward. Short term subsidies ease the pain but leave the model untouched. Industrial strategy without control over energy costs is industrial strategy with one hand tied behind its back. If we’re serious about growth and renewal, we’ve got to talk about democratic control of the basics. Not control for its own sake. Control that lowers the cost of capital. Control that aligns investment with long term public need. Control that treats water, energy, transport, housing and food as the infrastructure of prosperity, not chips in a global casino. A Productive State doesn’t micromanage everything. It does something more important. It shapes the rules, owns or co-owns the natural monopolies, and makes sure essential services run at cost plus resilience, not cost plus maximum extraction. Right now we’ve got manufacturers paying some of the highest industrial energy prices in Europe. Households squeezed. Government spending billions managing the fallout instead of fixing the cause. Every time we patch instead of reform, we lock in higher structural costs. For families. For firms. For the state. The business groups are right to worry. But we won’t fix this by begging for another relief scheme. We fix it by rebuilding the foundations. Energy priced for production, not speculation. Water run for resilience and public good, not dividend flows. Transport integrated to support growth. Housing treated as infrastructure, not a tax shelter. Food supply anchored in security, not fragility. Until the basics are under far stronger democratic guidance, the cycle carries on. Higher bills. Higher business costs. Lower investment. Lower growth. That isn’t fate. It’s a policy choice. And we can choose differently.





#WelshElections2026 Unite Community Wales & DPAC Cymru held a joint conference in Cardiff on Saturday 21st February, where the conference discussed what disabled people want from a Welsh Government DDPOs, disability charities & 5 trade unions came to the conference





@Sanders4Health We Greens are largely ignoring disabled people - 25% to 30% of the population. Heavily skewed to seniors, although it targets families with SEND kids too. Massive cuts are hitting disabled people. Plus Reform saying they will abolish the Equality Act 2010.

Greens are the only party for Social Care to be funded like the NHS: free at point of use with progressive taxation taking higher % in tax from rich than those with lower incomes. We also know care workers deserve much higher pay and family carers need support.

Measles outbreak raises fears of increase in fatal brain disease among children bit.ly/46NH280


A decline in the number of jobs for people who need to work remotely, including those with disabilities, could undermine the government’s efforts to reverse rising unemployment, finds a large two-year study theguardian.com/world/2026/feb…