Martin Bonner ๐ฆ @argentas.bsky.social
2.1K posts

Martin Bonner ๐ฆ @argentas.bsky.social
@MartinJBonner
Exeter, UK. Interested in Science, Technology, Healthcare, and Disability Rights. Partner of Heart/Lung transplant recipient. Self Employed. Unpaid carer.




Disabled by @marksandspencer yet again โผ๏ธNow I can no longer shop independently because the chiller cabinet doors pull toward you & these ridiculous racks at the base get caught on wheels & prevent you getting close enough to reach handles let alone food inside ๐งต

Who is actually serious about fixing our broken welfare system? Well weโre about to find out... This week, Labour, the Lib Dems, SNP, Greens, Independents - and Reform - all voted for more welfare spending, more handouts, and no reform! By 2030, sickness benefits alone are on track to cost ยฃ100 billion a year. Thatโs not just unaffordable โ itโs unjustifiable and immoral. And Labour and Reform want to go further. Starmer is now flirting with scrapping the two-child benefit cap โ and Reform are right behind him. Farage even says heโs โnot finished yetโ with benefits giveaways. The public deserve to know where each party stands. So next week, weโre putting forward tough, no-nonsense amendments that: ๐ Require face-to-face PIP assessments โ to stop reported abuse of the system ๐ End automatic โsevere conditionโ status for low level mental health issues like anxiety and ADHD ๐ Block Labourโs Universal Credit uplift until real reform happens Britain needs politicians who tell the truth - not those chasing easy applause. Only then can we deliver the real change our country so desperately needs.










My monologue from todayโs The Times at One with Andrew Neil on @TimesRadio Keir Starmerโs government has become the master of maximum pain for minimum gain. Thatโs what it achieved with the winter fuel allowance โ squandering shedloads of political capital for very modest savings โ and itโs now repeating the exercise with its half-hearted attempts at welfare reform.ย The case for radical welfare reform is strong. But it was never made by Labour in opposition, which did no policy work on it.ย It turned to it in power to save money and meet Rachel Reevesโs fiscal rules rather roll out an over-arching grand strategy. As a result itโs in a mess.ย Welfare reform was meant to save ยฃ5 billion by the end of the decade, a modest enough target given total welfare spending is in the hundreds of billions.ย But even that pittance has gone. To buy off Labour rebels, on whom welfare reform was sprung, half the savings are already gone. Add in the cost of the U-turn over the winter fuel allowance and just about all the ยฃ5 billion saving has been wiped out.ย So Chancellor Reeves will have to find ยฃ5 billion from elsewhere to make her sums add up which makes tax rises โ already on the cards โ in her autumn Budget, if sheโs still at the Treasury, pretty much a dead cert.ย So widespread unpopularity in the country and a massive rebellion in its own ranks โ and for what? No savings. And, more important, no chance now of serious welfare reform.ย We currently spend ยฃ330 billion a year on welfare, including state pensions. Thatโs 10% of our GDP and a quarter of total government spending. Within that total we devote ยฃ75 billion to sickness and disability related benefits โ categories that are rising fast as several thousand new recipients join up every day.ย By 2030 total welfare spending is projected to be around ยฃ380 billion โ a nominal rise of ยฃ50 billion, with sickness and disability related benefits accounting for almost ยฃ100 billion of that.ย Labour promised the fastest growing economy in the G7. Instead it is building on a grim inheritance from the Tories: the biggest proportion of those of working age โon the sickโ or on disability allowance in the G7.ย After this weekโs demeaning retreat, Labour is unlikely to do much about this between now and the end of the decade.ย On the basis that โonly Nixon could go to Chinaโ so it was thought Labour was best placed to pursue sensible welfare reform. That is now off the agenda.ย To be sure there are powerful forces pushing up welfare spending โ an ageing population, that expensive triple lock on pensions, that voracious rise in health and disability benefits for those of working age.ย ย But we are no longer generating the wealth to anything like the degree required to pay for the inexorable rise in welfare spending.ย Indeed there is a populist cry across the political spectrum for the sort of policies โ a wealth tax, more regulation, more state intervention, more state investment โ that are proven wealth destroyers.ย A country hooked on welfare โ and dead set economic policies that will not create the wealth to pay for it.ย If ever there was a definition of a country in economic decline thatโs it. A decline Labour will not reverse โย and to which the parties in opposition also have precious few answers.



Senior govt sources saying this morning that by forcing the govt to abandon its welfare reforms Labour MPs have likely killed off any hope of lifting the two child benefit cap One says thatโs a great shame for the govtโs child poverty ambitions. Starmer had wanted to lift it



If youโre suicidal about benefits changes, please remember nothing can change at all soon: ๐ Samaritans โ 116 123 (24/7) ๐ CALM - 0800 58 58 58 (5pm-12) ๐ Mind โ 0300 123 3393 (Mon-Fri, 9am-6pm) ๐ Papyrus โ 0800 068 4141 (9am-midnight) ๐ Citizens Advice โ 0800 144 8848 J๐





