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Politics v economics

Nick Robinson | 10:50 AM, Monday, 21 July 2008

Consider. Two stories. One day.

Story One - Government to propose "revolutionary" benefit changes.

Story Two - Unemployment could hit two million.

There is, we are told, a new political consensus on the need for tough love to get people off welfare and into work, and the need to spend now to save later. The economics, on the other hand, couldn't be less propitious for such a change - jobs will be closing, welfare rolls expanding and public spending squeezed.

What's more, Incapacity Benefit claims have remained stubbornly high despite a series of ministers - Tory and Labour - promising to bring them down. There are a series of perverse incentives which have made it hard for them to bring about change:

  • Ministers and officials have often preferred a higher IB count to a higher unemployment count
  • IB claimants who might be able to work (and I know many can't) sometimes prefer, quite naturally, to be on a higher level of benefit long-term to the indignity and insecurity of moving between low-paid jobs and lower benefit levels
  • The administrators of any system find it very hard to distinguish the truly unable to work from the malingerer and can be inclined to give the benefit of the doubt to people in poor areas who are not exactly going to be made rich by being put on IB

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  • 1. At 11:24am on 21 Jul 2008, threnodio wrote:

    A new word for the English language then - predemonisation.

    There is nothing new about people who are out of work for whatever reason being categorised as social security scroungers when unemployment is at an unacceptably high level. Doing so before it reaches that point seems to be little more than stigmatising people who are at risk of the consequences of an economic downturn.

    Community service has been a mechanism for law breakers to pay their dues without recourse to custody. Making the unemployed do community service will not only make life very difficult for the probation service but it comes dangerously close to criminalising the out of work.

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  • 2. At 11:43am on 21 Jul 2008, extremesense wrote:

    These proposals are frankly disgraceful!

    #1 therenodio, I agree, the proposals (New Labour) or ideas (Conservatives - they don't come up with anything concrete) are effectively sentencing long-term claimants to community service. The big difference is that those meting out the sentences will be those working for the benefits agency.

    Once again, the government has taken the 'Daily Mail/Daily Express' ground because they're obviously desperate for voters.

    They've lost the plot!

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  • 3. At 11:50am on 21 Jul 2008, UglyJohn wrote:

    "IB claimants who might be able to work sometimes prefer, quite naturally, to be on a higher level of benefit long-term to the indignity and insecurity of moving between low-paid jobs and lower benefit levels "

    Are you serious Nick?

    Who gives a stuff what these people 'prefer!' If they can work, they damn well should.

    Isn't that the point of the whole minimum wage debacle?

    With all due respect to these people, their dignity is irrelevant to the debate. IB is a benefit for those who cannot work, not those who can, but choose not to.

    No wonder we have so many people on IB if this is the sort of attitude that prevails.

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  • 4. At 11:52am on 21 Jul 2008, threnodio wrote:

    - and whoever came up with the idea of floating this plan three days before the Glasgow East by election needs to sign up for Incapacity Benefit to cover his period of psychiatric treatment.

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  • 5. At 11:52am on 21 Jul 2008, U12638968 wrote:

    Whatever plans are made, laws and regulatios outlined, when it comes to crunch nothing much will happen and the status quo will continue. This idea will provide lots of make-work for those officially already in employment - the managers, the delegators, the line-managers, the clerks, all the way down to the little guys and gals interviewing Jo and Jill Public. Lord protect us from 'orrible yobs on community service work coming along to paint our railings and drop even more litter than their mates will ever be able to pick up!

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  • 6. At 11:54am on 21 Jul 2008, JohnConstable wrote:

    We could just say 'Welcome to the Welfare State'.

    However that would be too trite.

    We have to have a safety net but not for the feckless and lazy.

    That is where, in my opinion, the balance is wrong and is belatedly being addressed by these politicians.

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  • 7. At 12:01pm on 21 Jul 2008, extremesense wrote:

    Consequently, as these ideas come from the US, lets have a look at how successful they appear to be:

    - 2.7 million of the population in prison (more than China and Russia who the next biggest put together)

    - The vast majority of this prison population is made up of the poor, unemployed population

    The US has some of the World's most dangerous cities (in areas where there is large unemployed population):

    - Flint, Michigan
    - Detroit, Michigan
    - Cleveland, Ohio
    - Oakland, California
    - St Louis, Missouri

    The common factor relating to all of the above-mentioned cities is that they used to industrial cities.

    Looks like they're on to a real winner in the States.

    By the way, Nick, all of your points make sense.

    Well, I suppose there will be quite a few openings for Prison Officers when these proposals are voted in (as they preumably will be).

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  • 8. At 12:01pm on 21 Jul 2008, thegangofone wrote:

    #1 threnodio

    I agree.

    Community service won't lead to work but a work related assignment would be useful. But that won't happen.

    It might have been a vote winner when everybody expected their position to be secure. But today when everybody is worried about the economy .....

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  • 9. At 12:06pm on 21 Jul 2008, thegangofone wrote:

    I was on incapacity benefit due to a heart bypass.

    It cannot make sense to make people who have had serious hospital treatment attend a doctor (mine was an ATOS doctor) to prove that they are in fact ill. What a surprise I was found to be ill - thats why the surgeon cut me open I suppose.

    So if you interview largely legitimate people you are losing a lot of money before you even start trying to save. More to the point if I understand it correctly even a terminally ill person would have to attend. The idea is sick.








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  • 10. At 12:17pm on 21 Jul 2008, bfoandc wrote:

    You have missed one key aspect of the persistent core of IB claimants who are difficult to 'remove'. Namely that, whatever the original reason for an IB claim, once someone has been sitting on benefit for a number of years they are very likely to have additional problems.
    The 'old' IB system concentrated entirely on what people could NOT do and those that 'passed' the test of their incapacity where 'awarded' their IB. If claimants volunteered, even for a few hours, or studied they risked losing their benefit.
    This approach to IB meant that people were effectively encouraged to do very little for themselves or their community. This resulted in the situation were after someone had been on IB for over two years the most common reason for leaving benefit was reaching retirement age or dying! I'm unusual in leaving IB after 8 years to do p/t work - but it has been hard and I'm financially not much better off.
    The IB system does need reforming, not in a punitive way, but so that it actually helps people. It must be accompanied by greater provision through the Access to Work scheme (which supports disabled people in work) and a policing of the Disability Discrimination Act in relation to employment.
    It should also be accepted that the disabling focus of the IB system (under both Tory and Labour Govts) has been responsible for creating this problem and that those who have been further disabled by this system need time and help to adjust.

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  • 11. At 12:18pm on 21 Jul 2008, Triffid100 wrote:

    Nick,

    I was a bit confused by the interview on Radio 4 today. To the question as to what happens if people don't work and who just prefer to stay in bed Mr Purnell singularly failed to answer.

    Isn't the truth that whilst Auntie Beeb is talking about a revolutionary policy - it's all spin ?

    If I don't want to work then payments will continue regardless.

    True or false ?

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  • 12. At 12:23pm on 21 Jul 2008, StrictlyPickled wrote:

    I'm in favour of reducing the number of work capable people claiming benefits as a lifestyle of choice, but I seriously doubt that these proposals will amount to very much by the time they reach the "point of delivery".

    3.7 million (apparently) is a massive number of people to deal with, the problem has simply been allowed to grow an extent it is difficult to see what can be done practically to address it. Perhaps that was intentional..........But if they don't start attempting reform, then they won't finish....

    I agree that the timing of doing this is less than ideal economy wise. Even Alistair Darling has realised that the country is finding it increasingly difficult to fund this level of benefits, and has effectively ran out of money. I'd never heard of James Purnell until yesterday either ! Interesting that both AD and JP made these statements when Gordon Brown was out of the country - perhaps I've seen to many episodes of the X-Files.

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  • 13. At 12:27pm on 21 Jul 2008, StrictlyPickled wrote:

    The recent 10p tax fiasco has effectively reduced the lowest wages in the job market, effectively reducing the gap between benefits and possible earnings.

    This can hardly help or encourage the people who can work to move from benefits into employment.

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  • 14. At 12:38pm on 21 Jul 2008, RobinJD wrote:

    The repeated failure of this government to deal with the problem of the long term unemployed, the sick and the work-shy is just another example of its disasterous inability to manage its way out of a paper bag.

    Who cares if it the new ideas are difficult to implement? I thought that was Gordon Brown's promise to us that he would take the difficult long term decisions.

    There is no popular support for a benefits system that favours the able bodied sitting at home watching day-time TV. This is the legacy of eleven years of NewLabour (and why so many ministers take the trouble to appear on day time TV)

    There is no greater indignity than someone sitting at home doing nothing when they could be usefully employed and they have to be made to understand that whether they like it or not.

    Three cheers for a bit of consensus from both sides of the house that this long overdue problem will now be dealt with.

    It's a good way to save some money at a time the country can't afford persistent benefits claims.

    Three cheers to NewLabour cuts.

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  • 15. At 12:39pm on 21 Jul 2008, threnodio wrote:

    There are broadly speaking three categories of people who are out of work. There are those who are unable to work because of health issues, those who are unemployed for economic reasons beyond their control and those who are working the system because it suits them to be out of work.

    As regards the first, I am with Frank Field. DLA (Disability Living Allowance) removes any stigma because being unfit on medical grounds is a perfectly legitimate reason for not working. On the other hand, it is not income related so there is a genuine incentive for those minded to do so to develop home based businesses or use their talents in an appropriate way without fear of being deprived of a basic living. Many successful small businesses have come on stream in this way.

    The second should, in the best of circumstances, be a temporary situation. Looking back to the mass closures in steel, mining and ship building in the latter part of the last century, it is clear that the only solution is large scale investment in alternative skills and industries. Simply demonising people for not having relevant skills is totally non-productive.

    The third are committing offenses. We should be clear about this but understand that it is an enforcement issue not an administrative one. Changing the name of the benefit is an exercise in futility.

    The real problem is IB. IB is a catch all for people who are not well enough to work but not sick enough to qualify for DLA. It is in all but name Unemployment Benefit but without entering a JSA agreement and sending in a sick note instead of signing on.

    Basically, it is a mechanism which enables the government to massage statistics. If unemployment reaches a level which is politically unacceptable, eligibility for IB is relaxed. When the Social Security spend is too high, people on IB myteriously recover and are required to sign on. (Remember Peter Lilly - 1997-8?). It is an artificial benefit because it embraces everything from the flu to the Black Death and it gives government the scope to make the figures say anything they want them to.

    Measures to ensure that people who do not work for reasons which are entirely legitimate are treated with due respect and dignity would make it far easier to distinguish them from those who are manipulating the system and ensure that any stigma attaches only to those who deserve it.

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  • 16. At 12:53pm on 21 Jul 2008, Rogerborg wrote:

    The government - by which I mean Brussels - won't allow even the most recidivist waster to starve, so the result will simply be yet another tier of benefits.

    So we'll have Disability Living Allowance, Incapacity Benefit, Jobseeker's Allowance, Income Support and now... Basic Subsistence Allowance?

    On the 'bright' side, at least it will require 'employing' more people in the DSS (or whatever it's branded as these days) in order to shuffle the extra forms.

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  • 17. At 1:05pm on 21 Jul 2008, John_from_Hendon wrote:

    Will the proposed 'work-fair' system put graffiti and street cleaners out of a job?

    We should be told!

    If a job needs to be done should it not be paid for at the proper rate?



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  • 18. At 1:19pm on 21 Jul 2008, woodfordhalse wrote:

    Measures to take people out of benefit dependency need to be accompanied by reform of taxation to ensure that those on low incomes do not pay income tax. It is immoral that recipients of the statutory minimum wage are liable to pay income tax.

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  • 19. At 1:19pm on 21 Jul 2008, worriedmotheroftwo wrote:

    I am the mother of a now adult who has struggled with mental illness for over 8 years. She is currently attempting to get herself into the world of work but faces enormous hurdles along the way. Firstly, employers don't appear to want to "take the risk" of employing someone with a history of mental illness and secondly as soon as she is offered even temporary employment she looses the security of her benefits and has to start all over again.
    These new proposals are causing her (and me) a lot of additional stress - she doesn't deserve to be made to pick up litter or to do the menial type of job that she keeps being offered by the job centre.
    She would love not to have to rely on benefits - perhaps those making the decisions should be required to suffer a mental illness and then make these decisions.
    By all means screen those receiving benefits more closely, and yest there are a lot of poeple who could and should be working but please don't treat them all the same.

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  • 20. At 1:23pm on 21 Jul 2008, Rosskernow wrote:

    I'm what is now called a 'disabled' guy after a year on IB and thence transferred to DLA. This government has lost the plot. All this is doing is worrying people like myself and making us feel like criminals and thence making us more ill through stress and worry . I would love to be back at work and mixing with colleagues and feeling part of a team again but my health doesn't allow this. What with being 'mothered' by a nanny state, our personal freedoms being curbed and now criminalised for being ill no wonder the nation is feeling depressed.

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  • 21. At 1:28pm on 21 Jul 2008, Jock0909 wrote:

    While most people are trying not to spend what they don't have, the government seems to look everywhere else but not themselves.
    MP's - Stop spending on increasing your own salary(our money) is going on wage rise bonus and furnishing their properties.
    Cut back on Politicians salary
    Abolish the mortgage and furnishing payments.
    Learn to live with what you have, that would help the UK more than spending like there is no tomorrow.

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  • 22. At 1:28pm on 21 Jul 2008, DavidGinsberg wrote:

    This sort of proposal always plays well in the headlines and the polls but the devil will be in the detail. On balance it appears to be a common sense proposal but I have doubts that the bloated civil service will implement this properly at a national or local level. In particular I can see local government unions being a real block to this as it will make anyone administering benefits at the coalface's job much more difficult and confrontational.

    I think the government have come up with a winner idea here but I just wonder if they have the stomach to actually implement it. In the past they have all too often gone for the easy headline rather than getting this sort of proposal to work.

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  • 23. At 1:47pm on 21 Jul 2008, jimbrant wrote:

    I think it is a mistake for some of the people I would normally agree with on here to imagine that there is no problem that needs sorting out. I have two pieces of evidence that persuades me that there are significant numbers of people who exploit the system:

    1. the very large variation in the proportions of people drawing IB from one part of the country to another. Some of his difference is I think explicable in terms of the type of industry traditionally associated with some areas, and historically high levels of unemployment with consequential deprivation and ill-health. However, I don't think those factors go close to explaining the problem altogether.

    2. My brother is physically severely disabled. He gets a pension from the RAF, after being invalided out many years ago, and he could be quite comfortably off if he simply drew the benefit he would undoubtedly be entitled to and forgot all about work. Instead he had a number of jobs, and was never unemployed. His last job was working for his local Benefits Office, where he found himself authorising IB payments to people who were much more capable of work than he was, but who thought they had better things to do with their time. In some cases, because this was in a relatively small town, what they did was work in the 'black economy'.

    Of course in trying to deal with the problem it is important not to make things even worse for those who are genuinely in trouble, and there is no magic wand solution that I can see. However, the proposals just outlined do seem to me to be relatively sensible and sensitive.

    Can I also say that I thought #10 bfoandc makes some excellent points.

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  • 24. At 1:48pm on 21 Jul 2008, Pot_Kettle wrote:

    Now GB constantly goes on about record levels of employment.

    I'm with #15 on this one this government recategorised many that were on UB40 and put them on this IB.

    The total number not working is 4.5 million a very similar number to the supposed bad old days when the tories had 4 million not gainfully employed. The only diference is the category they sit in.

    I return to a post I made in another blog and say again a socialist government NEVER delivers on the promises it gives to the poor it claims to support! NuLabour have failed this group particularly badly as their policies have increased the gap between haves and have nots reduced social mobility and increased poverty.

    Surely this initiative should have been a day one policy for Labour rather than thier vote buying qango job creation scheme which costs more to the tax payer than leaving those 2 million signing on.

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  • 25. At 1:50pm on 21 Jul 2008, extremesense wrote:

    #14 RobinJD, you mention the long term unemployed, sick and the work shy.

    Attempting to read between the lines I've established that you've probably ticked-off the long term unemployed and the work shy in your attack, however, what about the sick?

    Do you propose that they just get shoved to one side without any clear means to support themselves?

    I haven't found incapacity benefit easy to claim. In fact, I was summoned to see a doctor shortly after major surgery and had to take the various pieces of equipment that sustain my life with me. They employ systems and targets not thinking individuals to determine who gets what. Oh, they did relucantly allow to wait until I'd left hospital.

    Whilst I'm sure there are some who don't really need it, I find the rhetoric, or sometimes lack of it, insulting.

    This to me is just going to be another stress in an already very challenging life.

    NB - Yes, you're probably right, the worst part of it is not being able to work.

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  • 26. At 1:55pm on 21 Jul 2008, FreedomIW wrote:

    This proposal has proved popular on the Have Your Say page.

    Given the demographic which normally holds sway there, I think I have to oppose it on principle...

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  • 27. At 1:59pm on 21 Jul 2008, spidges wrote:

    Ten doctors in a room. Nine of them think a person should remain on Incapacity Benefit. One of them doesnt. guess who gets the job screening people for the dwp.

    People are going to lose their lives over this and I am worried I might be one of them.

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  • 28. At 2:00pm on 21 Jul 2008, badgercourage wrote:

    This is designed to please the Mail and Express, and is just the latest example to this government wanting to appear to be busy rather than quietly getting one with improving UK plc.

    It won't work if tried, and I suspect it will never even make the statute book - we are only at the pre-Green Paper stage, after this there will have to be a White Paper, a Bill and then this will have to get through both Houses.

    I predict that if (when?) they are the government in under two years' time the Tories will quietly drop the worst elements of this, or water it down so that it doesn't involve treating the unemployed and disabled like criminals.

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  • 29. At 2:02pm on 21 Jul 2008, getridofgordonnow wrote:

    Whether or not it's fair all hinges on the amount of hours worked and the amount of benefits claimed.

    If you receive 20 quid benefit for working 30 hours then obviously it's not fair; it needs to be pegged to the minimum wage as a safety net so that people on benefits don't end up being, effectively, slave labour for the councils/government.

    Brown has been pushing for slave labour for years; he did it with children (under various guises such as unpaid "apprenticeships" where schoolchildren are forced to work in factories/shops for no money), he plans to introduce slavery for immigrants ("compulsory voluntary" work to get a visa), so we all need to be extremely careful/worried about this latest wheeze from a man who's been actively pushing for slavery in the uk for certain sections of society.

    Be very wary/cynical about the small print on this one; it's potentially horrific.

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  • 30. At 2:04pm on 21 Jul 2008, Pot_Kettle wrote:

    It must really stick in the craw of the staunch labourites on here that this latest initiative is almost identical to the solutions offered up by the Tories in January

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  • 31. At 2:04pm on 21 Jul 2008, AqualungCumbria wrote:

    It looks good in headlines but the fact is this government already pay a private company to do medicals for DLA a contract that was worth £400 million at the time.

    Are they now saying this hasn't worked ???

    I have no trouble with people having to attend a medical if it is done fairly but how can some one meet targets for getting people off benefits without some people being wrongly refused.

    Anybody could set up a firm to do that but heres the catch....at some point someone is going to have an accident at work through their medical condition who's going to pick up the bill then ??? its all lawyer fodder.

    Firms quite rightly dont want to take the chance with disabled people because of increased insurance costs to employ them.

    What the government should concentrate on is catching those who are claiming while working and removing foreign workers from the country who are working illegally this will free up work and rates of pay for workers will rise in jobs that people tend to shun.
    The introduction of a minimum wage is seen as a maximum to hide behind by most employers, instead of supply and demand dictating wage rates.

    People on benefits should be nowhere near the minimum wage levels , it is a damning indictment of failed policies if they are.

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  • 32. At 2:08pm on 21 Jul 2008, all_english wrote:

    These Ideas have been floating around for decades but have never actually happened.


    I think it very unlikely they will this time why?

    Well it seems to me that the public sector unions on whom brown is dependant on for funding will not like the idea

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  • 33. At 2:09pm on 21 Jul 2008, PoliticalVoice wrote:

    If skilled people are spending all day painting fences, when are they supposed to find the time to actually look for the proper work that the job centre is supposed to help them find?

    Is this just a one size fits all solution or more to the point a one size fits nobody. It they are going to make say an IT professional do minimum wage work, why not find them an IT company to take them on.

    Won't paying the minimum wage actually cost the taxpayer much more than paying job seekers allowance?

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  • 34. At 2:09pm on 21 Jul 2008, extremesense wrote:

    #23 jimbrant, I take both of your points on board, however, my I refer you to my posting at #25 - that's my personal experience and when attending 'that' appointment the doctor was embaressed.

    I really don't see the need the for new legislation. I just think that more people should be reviewing any information provided by claimants rather the systems provided by CapGemini/Capita/Accenture or whoever as they clearly don't work.

    I'm again very disappointed that the government have been drawn into a 'tough on benefits' battle with the Conservatives.

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  • 35. At 2:16pm on 21 Jul 2008, brian_m wrote:

    Well, I'm on invalidity benefit due to degenerative disk disease at three different locations in my spine, plus heart disease. Could I do *some* work? Yes, but in the area where I'm qualified to work (I have a Ph.D.) the chances of getting an employer to take on someone working by telecommuting, on flexible hours, and part-time are a big, fat ZERO. I CAN'T guarantee to be fit to work to a pre-ordained schedule. All the work experience stuff might be relevant to the new school leaver on unemployment benefit, but I worked for 20 years before my back gave out to the extent that I could no longer manage to work full time, and was (effectively) shown the door.

    The bottom line is that for a significant percentage of invalidity benefit claimants, it's not that they need to be "encouraged" to go back to work, it's that employers need to be "encouraged" to make accomodations for their disabilities so that they CAN work. I switched from a high-paid job to living on IB, and if anyone thinks I would do that voluntarily, they've got to be crazy. Living off benefits (at least the ones I get) is NO FUN WHATSOEVER. If I could only find a job which I could do GIVEN my limitations, I'd be back to work tomorrow.

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  • 36. At 2:44pm on 21 Jul 2008, jimbrant wrote:

    #34, #35 - But you and people like you are not the problem, and there has to be some system in place to distinguish you from those who are the problem.

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  • 37. At 2:47pm on 21 Jul 2008, DavidGinsberg wrote:

    I think a lot of people posting on here are missing the point, this change is designed to safeguard the benefits of the truly needy. The economy is heading into recession and we just can't continue to fund a bloated welfare system that is paying out to the undeserving. If you want examples of the state's largesse to the unworthy just pop down to the benefits office on Lisson Grove London and marvel at the numerous IB and welfare recepients having a quick can of super T before heading in to sign on.

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  • 38. At 2:53pm on 21 Jul 2008, threnodio wrote:

    #36 - jimbrant

    Exactly, Jim, but government by numbers is a bit like painting by numbers. You can can look very clever very quickly but a fraud can be spotted a mile off.

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  • 39. At 3:03pm on 21 Jul 2008, Freddddy wrote:

    I don't see how this is so difficult to put into practice. You get the IB teams to report for community service wearing their blue jumpsuits so the public can feel good about their tax dollars being spent well. Any that don't turn up are de facto benefit fraudsters and get issued an orange jumpsuit to go and pick up litter with the crims. "Tough on grime, tough on the causes of grime."

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  • 40. At 3:05pm on 21 Jul 2008, starsailor123uk wrote:

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/africa/7516873.stm

    As well as the saving on the welfare state maybe brown and co can be convinced to follow an excellent example

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  • 41. At 3:06pm on 21 Jul 2008, brian_m wrote:

    jimibrant, #36 - but what do you bet the doctor set up to "review" my case is going to be working to a set percentage of people to whom he must deny benefit? Then we get another round of bureaucracy, I have to appeal the decision, etc. etc. It really is an insult to my doctor that it's (apparently) thought that he would state that I was unable to work if the opposite was the case. It took them about five years to determine that the chronic pain conditions from which I suffer were actually referred pain from the damage in my back, is a reviewing doctor meant to get his head around all that medical information before making a decision? No chance, so many minutes per claimant, and just make sure you deny a certain percentage, and that will do HMG nicely, thank you.

    For someone to be taken off invalidity benefit, they should need to be offered a job which they CAN do and which is suitable for them. I know what I can do, all I need is an employer who will make the necessary accommodations to allow me to do it.

    Too much of industry still suffers from the "bums on seats" mentality, where your physical presence is seen as more important than what you actually achieve. I lost almost 90% of my income when I had to stop work and claim benefits. Anyone here really think I'd do that VOLUNTARILY? I'd happily go back half-time, if only an employer had the courage and the FLEXIBILITY to take me on in a way which would enable me to work.

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  • 42. At 3:18pm on 21 Jul 2008, Brownedov wrote:

    Re #4 threnodio

    That was my initial reaction too, but oldnat makes a good try at explaining it in his #637 on the
    2nd Page of Brian Taylor's "Labour lagging in by-election race" at http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/thereporters/briantaylor/2008/07/labour_lagging_in_byelection_r.html?page=2#comments

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  • 43. At 3:25pm on 21 Jul 2008, Pot_Kettle wrote:

    @41
    No one is denying your legitimacy.
    Now your doctor would be genuine authorising your case, but how do you think he feels when a low life scumbag comes into his surgery and he has to tell him he is off benefits? Do you think he would be comfortable in the face of the agression, and threats of physical abuse or do you think he would take the easy route and rubbersttamp the claim for a quiet life?
    In the inner cities let me tell you they are rubber stamping as fast as they can to get these workshy hoodlums out of their offices so that they can get on with the real work of diagnosing people that need real treatment.

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  • 44. At 3:33pm on 21 Jul 2008, power_to_the_ppl wrote:

    Labour have had 11 years to sort things out and they haven't--- things have got steadily worse with lies, corruption, idiotic top-down centralisation, stealth taxes, state-sponsored nannying, fear of and refusal to listen to the electorate... As usual this is just vote-buying spin. They haven't even kept their manifesto promises so why should we believe them this time? These proposals will fizzle out or there'll be a U-turn or they'll deny saying anything about it, you'll see. Things will only start to change when they're buried in the landslide in two years time.

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  • 45. At 3:38pm on 21 Jul 2008, badgercourage wrote:

    #39 I like "Tough on grime, tough on the causes of grime."

    Have you ever thought of being a PR man for the Government...?

    # 37 "The economy is heading into recession and we just can't continue to fund a bloated welfare system..."

    Or the Iraq war, or ID cards, or PFI contracts, or new Trident missiles...the list goes on.

    Government is surely about priorities. The current lot seem to choose theirs in a very strange way...

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  • 46. At 3:38pm on 21 Jul 2008, threnodio wrote:

    #42 - Brownedov

    It's a nice try but my money is still on the trick cyclist.

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  • 47. At 3:39pm on 21 Jul 2008, mrcynict4 wrote:

    I don't know about a "revolutionary idea" we have been saying for the past 40 years! Maybe just maybe we are starting to see the end of the do gooder society and "bad back Britain". This government is always banging on about hard working families. At long last they seem to be going to do something about "bone idle families". Hopefully now we might be able to look forward a "get off your backside Britain".

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  • 48. At 3:43pm on 21 Jul 2008, Brownedov wrote:

    Re #15 threnodio

    Excellent analyis, but as U11714077's #13 points out, the 10% tax fiasco has reduced the gap between benefits and possible earnings and so has made things even worse than before.

    Yet again, NuLabour are tinkering with one piece of the jigsaw in the hope of a good headline and/or by-election while refusing to deal with the fundamental isses of the whole tax/benefits/NI/Pension system, which is long overdue for rethinking from scratch. Tax credits are just another layer of complexity and should be scrapped in favour of negative income tax rates where appropriate.

    If it were not for our national pastime of institutional incompetence, a single agency could handle the whole system with many fewer staff and much less cost than the many agencies and departments who currently have a finger in the pie. Outside aid from the oft-maligned Police CSOs could perhaps help in the eforcement and fraud detection area.

    Perhaps separate agencies for the 4 countries of the UK would have a better chance of success but the starting point should be a plan to cover all payments and receipts between state and citizens.

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  • 49. At 3:49pm on 21 Jul 2008, Brownedov wrote:

    Re #23 jimbrant

    Just to show I have an open mind, jimbrant, I really do agree with 100% of your post full stop

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  • 50. At 4:02pm on 21 Jul 2008, RobinJD wrote:

    It's fantastic news that the tories manage to draw this government into an unpleasant argument on evry single issue.

    Praticularly impressive is having to be drawn into a row their own people (Frank Field) warned about. It's high time the got tough on slackers tough on the causes of slackers.

    I understand it must stick in the throat of every died in the wool NewLabour apologist to see their party attacking their own turf.

    Shucks. You've had eleven years to sort it out and now the spending machine has gone completely out of control. I can't wait for Alistair Darling's memoirs when he reveals what a car crash of an ecenomy he inherited from his predecessor. He's not going to take the blame for the mess Gordon Brown got us into. You can already spot it every time he answers a question in theat indignant way 'it's not my fault, you know'. He's the unluckiest man alive.

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  • 51. At 4:02pm on 21 Jul 2008, brian_m wrote:

    #43. The thing which gets me so annoyed about all this is not so much that my case is reviewed, it's that there's a *presumption* that I'm a skiver.

    Even now, the DWP is trying tricks to get me off benefit - they recently sent me a form to complete, and stapled to the front of the form was a little bit of paper, looked like a mass-produced tear-off slip, which informed me that if I didn't return the form by a certain date (about three weeks) they would assume that I wished to discontinue my claim.

    Does anybody else here think the mail is 100% reliable? Besides the DWP, that is? I wonder how many claimants this trick is going to get off IB, even just given the Mail's own figures for lost letters? I had no advance warning that this form was being sent to me, of course.

    As regards your point about my own doctor, then the answer is simple. All I ask is that my own doctor has input into the process. I'm not asking for him to be the one to tell me of the decision - put me through the review by all means, BUT ask my doctor for his input too, AND make the reviewer take notice of what my doctor has to say.

    Once again, it's not so much the bureaucracy, it's the PRESUMPTION of guilt that really hurts. If we lived under a Napoleonic code of justice, I could perhaps accept it. You just get tired of having to fight the same fight, over and over again, to prove that you really are ill. It's ironic that the people best placed to cope with all of this stress and pressure are the real skivers who ARE making the fradulent claims. The more you deserve the benefit, the greater the strain is likely to be in actually proving the fact.

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  • 52. At 4:07pm on 21 Jul 2008, MonkeyBot5000 wrote:

    If they ever try to implement this, I'm starting a grafitti-cleaning company and suing the government for anti-competitive behaviour. What am I saying? If they do this, the first thing they'll do will be to see if they can get any money out of the private sector in exchange for some cheap labour.

    The real question here is, if there is all this litter picking, grafitti-cleaning and general maintenance work to do, why are the government not employing someone to do it?

    The work they would be given won't give them any useful skills to get back into work, won't be recognised as work experience by employers and will be viewed as a punishment for unemployment by those genuinely seeking work.

    Meanwhile the (massively overestimated) people who do just want to live off benefits will find this a cushier option than getting a real job. More than likely, they'll come to view it as a job you can't be fired from no matter how bad you are at it.

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  • 53. At 4:17pm on 21 Jul 2008, freemansteve wrote:

    This is simply the next in a long line of diversionary tactics from a government that is intellectually bankrupt, stone deaf and incompetent. Whatever they do, you can be sure it?ll cost us more, especially when we have to fund all their mates in the private businesses who?ll be called in to administer the schemes. The first attack was all about removing traditional British freedoms following their disastrous foreign policy. This latest attack is simply designed to pick on the most vulnerable people following their failed economic policy. Let's build an economy, US-style, based on mountains of debt, and then pull the rug away from people at the first sign of trouble; unemployment is about to explode, so let's take money and dignity away from the sick instead of something more equitable, like taxing those rich people currently not paying tax. I'm sure everyone will agree that there are benefit scroungers out there who could be working, but let's not conflate this idea with threats to people who cannot work through mental illness or physical disabilities (and I don't mean just a bad back). I know people in this situation that are already becoming more ill just from the thought of ?the eye of Sauron? being turned towards them.

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  • 54. At 4:18pm on 21 Jul 2008, MonkeyBot5000 wrote:

    43. At 3:25pm on 21 Jul 2008, Pot_Kettle wrote:
    "@41
    No one is denying your legitimacy."

    No, but they are seriously calling it into question with all the demands to get tough on benefits.

    People will say "of course we know you're genuine, we meant all of those other people on IB".

    Unfortunately, the genuine claimants get made to jump through all the hoops again to prove their condition/disease is real and make sure that they show the correct degree of subservience to the government. When this is done as a crackdown, it is implicit that the government distrusts you and the claimants have to beg for the benefits that they're entitled to.

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  • 55. At 4:22pm on 21 Jul 2008, power_to_the_ppl wrote:

    re: 52

    "More than likely, they'll come to view it as a job you can't be fired from no matter how bad you are at it."

    Just like an MP then!

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  • 56. At 4:28pm on 21 Jul 2008, Only jocking wrote:

    In reality, however good the intentions, this package of measures will result in making life more difficult for those with genuine need for benefit whilst allowing the benefit cheats to continue to work the system.

    The most powerful law enacted by this Government is the law of unintended consequences, a seemingly omnipresent feature of every piece of litigation they pass. This initiative will fare no better.

    Statistically it will doubtless be a different story. Result reporting will be driven by the service providers whose financial rewards depend on the success of the initiative and by a Government whose credibility relies on that same success. Guess what will happen ?

    Having said all that, the stated problem is very real and it is one which is much easier to identify than solve.

    It has built up over a long period during which, inter alia:
    ? the benefits regime, which was intended originally to be a safety net, has come a fishing net ? partly one suspects to create a client state of dependent citizens
    ? for many individuals, 'disability' has become a proxy for 'fit unemployed' ,due to the Tories using the IB ploy to massage the unemployment figures and Labour happily embracing the ploy ever since.
    ? elements of the tax and benefits regime mean many people are financially worse off, or no better off, if they take a job
    ? these and other things have combined to create conditions which encourage rather than discourage working in the black economy
    ? it has been deemed preferable to bring in immigrant workers to tackle shortage of labour than to tackle the contribution to that problem of all of the above

    Sorting the mess created by years of that kind of stuff is a bit like trying to get the toothpaste back in the tube, after brushing one's teeth and rinsing.

    Still - good to know that the days of boom and bust are behind us.


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  • 57. At 4:29pm on 21 Jul 2008, Pot_Kettle wrote:

    @51

    I am completely with you on all your points.
    It is really unfortunate that genuine cases are lumped in with the malingerers.

    As for the issue with the post I know of a similar scenario with DVLA.
    If someone sells you a clone vehicle with a V5 that looks genuine, you send off to transfer ownership, they look and it looks dodgy, they write to the person they have on record as the owner asking them to confirm within 14 days wether or not they have sold the vehicle, If they fail to respond they issue a new V5. therefore cloned vehicle now has apparently a genuine V5 until either you or the real owner actually sell the vehicle.
    Aside from the post being unreliable, imagine now that they ask for confirmation in August when real owner is about to go on holiday. said owner gets the request and thinks OK I'll deal with that when i get back. puts it with other mail and forgets about it until after their 2 week break to lanzarote, If they remember to do anything about it when they get back its already too late and the V5 has been issued to the cloned vehicle.
    Yes I have been caught out being sold a cloned vehcle the police said I should have spotted that the forgers had used the wrong font on the lettering on their stolen blank V5. after 5 weeks with no V5 the police came knocking and confiscated the vehicle 3 years later still no vehicle, no compensation and no conviction for the perpertrator even though he is known to the police for doing this on 16 other occasions.
    Scumbag took my mondeo as part ex the police were meant to pick that up and return it to me also but I still dont have that back either.

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  • 58. At 4:31pm on 21 Jul 2008, UglyJohn wrote:

    Why do people endlessly throw red herrings into this discussion?

    Yes, there are people wo are genuinely unable to work, and measures like this are not about them. There are other people, many other people, whose only problem is state sponsored lazyness.

    These people should not be tolerated. The fact that they system currently does is a disgrace. If these proposals make a dent in this chronic waste, all the better.

    This process does not need to be subjective either. There are various assesment indexes that can give assesments of disability / incapacity on a percentage basis that are wholly objective.

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  • 59. At 4:39pm on 21 Jul 2008, RobinJD wrote:

    But if you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear?

    After all that's the argument NewLabour are using on ID cards so why shouldn't thye use it for IB claimants?

    Makes perfect Third Reich, Stalinist sense.

    Now all those on this post who have argued against this initiativ by the goverment I say: "Have you something to hide?"

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  • 60. At 4:40pm on 21 Jul 2008, Pot_Kettle wrote:

    @58

    That is a rehash of the "If you have nothing to hide you have nothing to fear" argument trotted out by the government supporters for 42 days.

    The thing is with this government you have everything to fear.

    What is really insane is that this targets thier core vote and I suspect it may ensure an SNP win in Glasgow East where they have more than their fair share of malingerers on IB

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  • 61. At 4:44pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    The Welfare Green Paper is worth a read.

    Party political rants like #44 are not helpful since the proposals are largely supported by the Tories, and the time-scale proposed for the pilots make it unlikely that full-scale implementation would, in fact, happen before 2010.

    The underlying principles of the paper would, I think be supported by most people. The problem, as always, is in the detail, but we'll see how that turns out from the Glasgow pilot.

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  • 62. At 4:44pm on 21 Jul 2008, Brownhas2eyes wrote:

    To me this just seems a way of punishing all those who are un-employed, yes we have lots of scroungers in our society, mostly them who have churned out kids for benefits. But i dont see their name on the list, making innocent ill people do community work, or prove that they are ill is just a little over the mark for me. All this rubbish of that there is high employment is nothing but a total whitewash. Face the facts, the govt has no idea how many immigrants we have on our soil, and has no idea on how many illegal immigrants we have on our soil either. But with our system we have at the moment these undetected people, will continue to take the easy jobs because our so-called lazy wont do it, why? well that all depends on the place you live at isnt it.

    Charging people to do a punishing job, because they cant honestly find a job to suit their own expenses is very wrong. Im afraid that fixing this problem with a sledgehammer wont work.

    And yes i have a job!

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  • 63. At 5:10pm on 21 Jul 2008, power_to_the_ppl wrote:

    re: 51

    I agree, the best way to differentiate between the sick and the scumbags is if the doctor has input. If the system is changed so that the claimant's doctor makes the final decision as to whether they are capable of working (not in the patient's presence of course, to prevent the possible violence you mention) then this will solve the problem, as long as doctors are not arm-twisted by the government into reaching any of these ridiculous 'targets'. If the IB claims decisions were made entirely by doctors who then passed the decision on to the government, then only those who could fool the doctors (not many) would be able to get away with fraudulent claims, and there would be no need for any potentially tinkering. The changes Labour have proposed are for the already-failed purpose of clawing back credibility, not to genuinely alter the way the system works.

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  • 64. At 5:23pm on 21 Jul 2008, SecretSkivver wrote:

    I think most people in receipt of benefits should be required to attend some location for 40 hours a week (just like the tax-payers who are supporting them). I suspect the numbers making claims would shrink dramatically - certainly here in Manchester, where working a fiddle job while claiming benefits has been a way of life for decades. By encouraging fecklessness the welfare state has destroyed British society and weakened social solidarity. If someone leaves school with no qualifications and drifts into a life on the dole while immigrants come here to work and prosper, why should I pay tax to support his lifestyle ?

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  • 65. At 5:28pm on 21 Jul 2008, monkeysuncle83 wrote:

    Was there not an advertising campaign advertising the fact that if you had a suspicion that someone was claiming a benefit you could 'dob' them in? "No ifs, no buts" I whink it went. If you glance for a moment at the discussion on the HYS boards everyone seems to know someone claiming whilst sitting watching a "50 plasma tv and are using that board to vent about it, why not just phone them in? If it means that the unemployment figure soars then that's a small price to pay for the savings in not paying some of these claiments. If someone is claiming legitimately then neighbours and friends would know this much better than some admin clerk who can easily mistake a genuine reason for being off work for bone idleness. And they wouldn't need to dip into the taxpayers pocket to hire investigators, I'm sure judging from the ranting on the boards that some of those submitting would gladly do it for free!

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  • 66. At 5:31pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #63 and other similar posters

    In the unlikely event that you are interested in reality rather than spleen venting, much of the Green Paper's proposals on reforming the sick note system etc are based on Dame Carol Black's review of the health of Britain?s
    working age population.

    You can see this at

    http://www.workingforhealth.gov.uk/documents/working-for-a-healthier-tomorrow-tagged.pdf

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  • 67. At 5:37pm on 21 Jul 2008, Brownhas2eyes wrote:

    64. why should I pay tax to support his lifestyle

    we pay for taxes to introduce Islamic belief on our own british culture. Yes thanks for the britishness.

    Yes we have many scroungers, and have for the last decade. The benefits ud get for being a unemployed single parent, has created a lifestyle of single parents, and scroungers.





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  • 68. At 5:47pm on 21 Jul 2008, mikepko wrote:

    It used to be said that a hungry man would find work, no matter what, to feed his family.

    Today many would rather steal than work to feed his/her drug, smoking, alcohol adiction, and stuff the family.

    Excuse me if I am rather cynical but I have plenty of experience of the non-working class.

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  • 69. At 5:53pm on 21 Jul 2008, Jon_Cornwall wrote:

    so what's going to happen to all the people that are currently EMPLOYED to pick up litter, clean graffiti, etc?

    obvioulsy they'll loose their jobs, why would the council continue to pay them when benefit claimants have to do it?

    they could end up doing exactly the same job but for benefits instead of a real wage

    yet another government knee-jerk idea that hasn't been thought through properly (or at all)

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  • 70. At 5:53pm on 21 Jul 2008, mikepko wrote:

    Just as a follow-up, there are lots of jobs available in the UK. Most are done by migrant workers because most of our population wouldn't do the jobs. Harvesting fruit and vegetables. Working an cafes. etc. Benefits are much better paid!!!

    Anyway, which would you prefer when going into a cafe. Friendly, attentive, smiling staff, or morose, uninterested staff. If you prefer the former then go to cafes with eastern European staff.

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  • 71. At 5:57pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #67

    I won't quote your user_name, since it is clearly discriminatory against those with an eye injury and, judging from your post probably against most of the human race.

    Not sure what you mean by "british culture" (sic), but if your views represented it then even most of the posters who identify themselves as "British" would rush to disassociate themselves from it.

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  • 72. At 6:21pm on 21 Jul 2008, Casseroleon wrote:

    I am not sure that this is the way to tackle the problem. But we also need to be aware of the way that the option of long-term unemployment has in my experience over a 37 year teaching career had a terrible and corrosive impact upon education and educational aspirations.

    As a comprehensive school teacher I battled for years against a view that was held my a significant number of pupils that - as Pink Floyd put it -"We don't need no education." I spent much of my career trying to explain that jobs that could be done by people with no education would almost certainly move to countries where there was no education- and wages levels would be much lower. "Oh well!" Came the ready rejoinder" If the government can't find us a job, it will just have to pay us the dole and we will live on benefit."

    Of course subsequently jobs that can go abroad seem to have done so and we are left with service jobs that have to be done "in situ". And since the introduction of the minimum wage there is a growing demand that jobs requiring a very minimal competence merit higher earnings than the free market would accord.

    In fact one contributor on a thread about youth culture and knives points to the frustration of those who have been foolish enough to try to learn at school only to end up doing some mindless and uncreative service job like working in a supermarket- because our creative and productive industries have shrunk dramatically.

    I fear that we have lowered expectations generally and will not solve the problem of the long term unemployed in isolation. What we need is a new national project which is what Gordon Brown said his government was going to be. But it has come down to the "hard working people"- that he is fond of talking about- working hard to supply money for countless targetted initiatives that do not complement each other or create any overall national momentum.

    Casseroleon

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  • 73. At 6:26pm on 21 Jul 2008, U12638968 wrote:

    71 oldnat

    Concerning #67, I think you are being rather harsh to he/she who will remain with the name that dares not say its name. This writer seems very bitter, probably a disappointed old socialist, if previous comments are anything to go by. It is pathetic when we read of Blears' patronising schemes to "educate" Moslems, and that High Court Judge Phillips wishing to introduce sharia law into the UK. The writer in question is obviously angry and not very eloquent. That unfortunately, has happened to me when emotions take over from cool logic. We should all try and be calm. Very hard in these crazy times!

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  • 74. At 6:44pm on 21 Jul 2008, warblers wrote:

    Regardless of what may be right or wrong with the benefit system, I think Mr Purnell is being quite hypocritical ln making these proposals at the same time as he, along with the majority of our MPs, continues to abuse the parliamentary allowances system - he managed to get through about £150,000 last year despite his more than adequate salary, pension, ministerial car, etc.

    An even more blatant case is the Wintertons who have and continue to build a property portfolio entirely from their MP's allowances; have managed the almost impossible achievement of breaking the rules MPs created for themeselves and, as a punishment, are given 6 months to stop breaking the rules - compare that with the punishment for someone found guilty of benefit fraud.

    Until parliament gets it's own house in order it is not in any position to make moral judgements on anyone.

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  • 75. At 6:48pm on 21 Jul 2008, StrictlyPickled wrote:

    Whatever your views on the merits etc of the proposals, does anyone genuinely think that they will actually happen ?

    In my view what the government says, and what they end up doing are usually two entirely different things. And they usually affect the people who are the real problem least.

    I'm still really surprised that they made this announcement, especially a week before a bye-election and when Gordon Brown is out of the country. Is there some Macevellian New Labour Leadership challenge sub-plot here, or or they just trying to wrong foot the opposition again ?

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  • 76. At 7:16pm on 21 Jul 2008, Only jocking wrote:

    #66 oldnat

    I think I am right in saying that at the core of the Dame Carol Black's review was a concern to tackle the misconception that illness is necessarily incompatible with work.

    In other words, essentially about changing perceptions of medics, employers and affected individuals so as to help genuinely ill people who are able to work but who genuinely think they are not, or who genuinely can't find work due to the attitude of employers.

    I would agree that the findings of that review have influenced the sick certificate note element of these latest proposals but that is one element only and I rather fear three things.

    First that the genuinely ill are only a relatively small part of the benefits dependency issue and the genuinely ill who could work are a but a sub-set of that group.

    Second that, in attempting to help or persuade that sub-set into work, it will be very difficult for the system to distinguish between them and many of the genuinely ill who can't work and that this latter group will suffer inconvenience and worse.

    Third that the benefit claimants who could work but won't - either for the money on offer or at all - or who do work but in the black economy, will continue to successfully "work the system".

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  • 77. At 7:39pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #73 Phoenixarisen

    I accept your reprimand unreservedly. I should been more mindful of Dame Carol's reminder that thos with mental health problems are ill-served by the present system, and my father's injunction "never speak ill of the (political) dead".

    #76 Only jocking

    I agree with you, but these are the factors to be tested in the pilots. I'll reserve judgment, until they are completed.

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  • 78. At 7:42pm on 21 Jul 2008, grandGarethShaw wrote:

    I know of people who claim IB who have nothing wrong with them.

    I know of people who claim for mobility allowance who have nothing wrong with them who get a brand new car every three years.

    I know of people who claim mobiliy allowance and that they claim for their mother/grandmother so that they can drive them around as they are incapable themselves. Do they do this - No! They use the car for their own personal use.

    I know people who don't pay their utility bills but know they won't get cut off as it will look bad for those companies as they have children.

    If you have something genuinely wrong with you, you have nothing to fear by these changes.

    There are a huge amount of people who play the system.

    If you are playing the system, get to work and do what ever is necessary.

    I work bloody hard every day, I wasn't born with a silver spoon in my mouth, I studied hard in school and then in uni but I bet I am not that better off than some people on the dole, IB or what ever they are on.

    I am not saying we shouldn't look after the weak and vulnerable but equally why should I pay high taxes, high water bills, high energy bills, high income tax for people who can't be bothered to contribute to the system


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  • 79. At 8:08pm on 21 Jul 2008, T A Griffin (TAG) wrote:

    A brief point that others may well think worthwhile. Listening they want this cahnge to be reduce the numbers on disability by a million by 2015.

    Students of the social sciences and demography will establish the link between the NHS coming into existance in July 1948 and the tax year nine months later April 1949.

    Go forward 65 years from 1949 and what do you get 2014. A substantial number of those currently receiving disability payments will have reached retirement age of 65 by 2015, they will accordingly disappear off the figures whatever the government does, or does not do, either labour or conservative. The immediate post war bulge of babies can be seen to have reached a peak in about 1949/50. That is the end!

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  • 80. At 8:10pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #76 Only jocking

    Further thoughts -

    I suspect that the criminals will always manage to "beat the system", but many of the benefit claimants are the victims of structural adjustment in the 1980's, and the cultural values of their community don't include work. That doesn't mean they are necessarily "scroungers", but often the value system that they learn within their community simply doesn't include working for a living.

    To change cultural values is hugely difficult, but is essential to achieve change.

    The Local Authority that I live, and taught, in has the highest level of benefit claimants in Scotland. One of the best initiatives has been to recruit local people (not importing middle-class "do-gooders") to knock on doors and give the message that jobs are available. The scheme has been successful simply because in multi-generational deprived communities, where few people have ever worked, the assumption has been that since the heavy industries that closed in the 1980's had gone, there was no point in looking for a job, since there were none.

    The Welfare Green Paper seems to me to concentrate on attitudinal changes - hence I broadly support it.

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  • 81. At 8:12pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #78 grandGarethShaw

    I presume you have reported these fraudsters to the authorities.

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  • 82. At 8:54pm on 21 Jul 2008, threnodio wrote:

    There is a bottom line which is inescapable. It is simply not acceptable in a western European society for people to be allowed to starve or go without shelter. It follows that a 'carrot and stick' approach to benefits can never really be that because society cannot use the stick effectively.

    There is one measure, however, which might help. If the utilities companies could be persuaded to co-operate, there could be a system by which the unit costs of all utilities overall were increased but a limited number of units would be at the lower end would be given free. In that way, every household would be assured of enough power and water to service basic needs of cooking and hygiene without fear of disconnection. That would create the situation which, along with housing and council tax benefit would ensure that basic needs were covered. You could then substitute food vouchers for cash in problem cases. A case of everyone staying clean, warm and fed but having to go to work if they want beer, fags and video games.

    This would also be slightly redistributive, might have an environmental impact at the margins and would assist pensioners and small family units. The benefits assessors would have discretion as to whether to make cash or voucher payments so that where they were satisfied a claim was genuine cash could still be paid.

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  • 83. At 9:02pm on 21 Jul 2008, CarrotsneedaQUANGO2 wrote:

    33. PoliticalVoice

    Over the last 20 years I have employed hundreds of Aussies and Kiwis in London.

    They are astonished at how easy it is to find a job here. Most have work within 48hrs of looking for it. As do many eastern Europeans today. So if you are looking for work it really does not take too long.

    I often have local lads resign from a job, only to receive a letter telling me that they were now claiming job seekers allowance and asking me why they were laid off. This has happend 3 times already this year. I actually rang one up, as he had told me that he had found a better job and made him an improved offer as we were very busy at the time. He told me he needed a rest and had decided to go on to benefits for a while, but would let me know.

    When we interview for staff we are often asked if we pay cash as the job applicant does not want to loose his benefits.

    Oh yes and we dont pay any one anywhere near the minimum wage except to a few school leaves in their first 3-6 months of employment.

    I know the scale of the abuse must be massive and many small firms do pay cash.

    Id like to think this is a serious move and not just some political point scoring exercise.








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  • 84. At 9:18pm on 21 Jul 2008, U12638968 wrote:

    #77 oldnat

    I wouldnt' dream of reprimanding you, and I'm sorry if it came out that way. I've had a tough time on this board today, actually got muzzled, so I'd better consider my words carefully. There are others I'd like to reprimand, but I have no right to do so, and unlike some who will remain nameless I'm not Mr Knowall, who snaps like a frenzied terrier whenever one contradicts him. No prizes for guessing who! Have a nice evening.

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  • 85. At 9:25pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #84 Phoenixarisen

    I was being ironic. No apology is required.

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  • 86. At 9:35pm on 21 Jul 2008, preacherjogger wrote:

    There's a very good case for getting ths current government off benefits and into work

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  • 87. At 10:30pm on 21 Jul 2008, threnodio wrote:

    #86 - preacherjogger

    . . . or giving them all P.45s and putting them out to grass.

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  • 88. At 10:43pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    # 86 and 87

    Brilliant ideas! - though no one would be left to take any decisions, except the unelected House of Lords. Or do you see yourselves as being the decision-makers?

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  • 89. At 10:52pm on 21 Jul 2008, Only jocking wrote:

    oldnat

    #77 It is a fair point to suggest we should await the results of the pilots. However, I am sorry to say that whether or not we can believe them is also an issue. Based on recent history, I expect they will prove to be broadly successful - at least based on the statistics produced. Whether that will reflect the reality - - ?

    Cynical, I concede but then cynicism is very often the product of experience.

    #80
    Like you, I support the intention to change attitudes and thence behaviours. However, I am very dubious about the methods, which I fear will do more to create resentment than change attitudes. I hope I'm wrong.

    By the way, I think the initiative by your local authority sounds very good, with the merit of being local, simple, informative and non-threatening. It would be good if this initiative contained more (any?) elements with such
    characteristics.

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  • 90. At 10:59pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #89 Only Jocking

    "It would be good if this initiative contained more (any?) elements with such
    characteristics."

    Sorry, don't understand this sentence.

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  • 91. At 11:04pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #89 Only Jocking

    Just re-read your comment, and I think I understand it now.

    The Welfare Green Paper does indeed encourage local initiatives like the one I described.

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  • 92. At 11:23pm on 21 Jul 2008, Only jocking wrote:

    #91 oldnat

    Seems to have disappeared ? Odd.

    However, to respond your point re local elements. Delivered in the locality perhaps but centrally designed, imposed and policed ?

    And simple ? Non-threatening ?

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  • 93. At 11:48pm on 21 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #92 Only Jocking

    See pp 89-90 of the Green Paper.

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  • 94. At 10:04am on 22 Jul 2008, Only jocking wrote:

    #93 oldnat

    Picking my way through the management consultant type jargon, I'm afraid my hear was more sinking than soaring at the propsects of success of this combination of centrally constructed black box
    of outcomes and targets combined with freedom of methods for local providers, including the world-leading Jobcentre Plus.

    Again, I hope I'm wrong.

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  • 95. At 10:25am on 22 Jul 2008, timepassescarmichael wrote:

    David Cameron arrived in Glasgow a wee while ago on a relatively warm West Scotland day and spent his time reciting right-wing, pseudo-laissez-faire values, in order to talk to his target constituents and interest his potential voters and, here's a hint, he wasn't talking to the people in Glasgow East. Now, in this same context, Labour pushed back a debate on an embryology bill and rushed themselves into a u-turn on raising fuel duty. All of which indicates, at least, Labour, from Westminster, are trying their darndest still to talk to and interest people in Glasgow East. Yet, here's the rub, and it's quite a big rub, from where on earth, or from where in the Cabinet, did this right-wing, pseudo-laissez-faire reform of the welfare system spring into infancy.

    James Purnell, what a fine fellow, no doubt, and from Gordon Brown, off somewhere where he wears bullet-proof vests and sits astride a machine-gun which, presumably, is for the image to be portrayed of a PM who would like to do bad things to bad people. Or, at least, hark back to the days of British Victorian imperialist superiority complexes, out there, wherever there happened to be, fighting for dear ol' blighty (I digress). Interestingly, with Purnell and Brown's pseudo-laissez-faire reforms it isn't just Victorian imperialist superiority complexes Brown is hoping to hark back to. I, for one, expect Poor Laws to be the next consideration, then perhaps, just in their kindness, the Corn Laws will become a central issue of debate. All the while, I'm sure, Brown will still be considering himself as one who does bad things to bad people - he will only be half-right.

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  • 96. At 11:29am on 22 Jul 2008, badgercourage wrote:

    #95

    As a historian and a pedant I must point out that the Corn Laws were introduced in Georgian times and repealed by the Victorians (1815 and 1846) and the Poor Laws dated back well before then. They were amended in 1834 (three years before Victoria) and later made more humane under her reign.

    But the rest of your point is well made: the government are trying to introduce punitive rules (mainly to suck up to the readership of the Mial and Express) that will make things worse not better.

    What we need is electoral reform (cf. the Great Reform Act of 1832) to make representation of the people fairer (smaller numbers of MPS, proportional representation, fixed term parliaments) so a party with 35 percent of the vote and 25 percent of the electorate can't claim a mandate and drive through oppressive laws through a supine, whipped majority.

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  • 97. At 12:24pm on 22 Jul 2008, timepassescarmichael wrote:

    ~96 badgercourage,

    Great name, and I never knew the Corn Laws were introduced in Georgian times but I think I'll stand by the two examples I gave because both were aspects of Victorian debate whether to amend or repeal or just have a chinwag about them. I think any readers got the point, anyway, I hope.

    You're right, electoral reform is needed for the Westminster Parliament and, from the experience of the Scottish Parliament, I think the Mixed-Member Proportional System would work well ('07 experience disregarded) for Westminster. The problem at Westminster, though, has as much to do with the type of elite-culture that maintains the archaic-levels of access and transparency, the 'winner-takes-all' values, and the anachronistic ideas that the centre, centre, centre should govern all. I suppose, come electoral reform, such a culture could transform, but I doubt it, I think it's far too deep-rooted and so Westminster will remain the victim of constitutional meanderings until some event or other forces the hand. What that event could be, one could only speculate.

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  • 98. At 12:44pm on 22 Jul 2008, threnodio wrote:

    Send the bishops to Lambeth, the Law Lords to a new Supreme Court, the peers to spend more time with their families and use the Chamber for a democratic proportionally elected English parliament.

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  • 99. At 1:09pm on 22 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #97 timepassescarmichael

    I also am a historian and a pedant! (wonder if the 2 go together?)

    Our PR system is the Additional Member form - though looking at some of the Labour MSPs, your "Mixed Member" description may be more accurate.

    Although the system was an attempt at gerrymandering by Labour - to prevent the SNP ever gaining a majority - it actually works reasonably well.

    Minority Government works because the Government has to make compromises to get the Budget through. Thereafter they get on with running the country, but can always be voted down if they get things badly wrong.

    The winning party cannot simply push its manifesto through - and a good thing too!

    The smaller parties can use the system cleverly (as the Tories and Greens do) to ensure some of their agenda is pushed forward.

    Labour and the Lib Dems are still sulking about losing, and can't adjust to the new realities. But they'll learn after their next thrashing, and will become productive members of society again!

    The only

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  • 100. At 1:11pm on 22 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #98 threnodio

    Sounds a good idea - but the two Parliaments will have to work out who gets that hideously expensive Portcullis House.

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  • 101. At 1:47pm on 22 Jul 2008, timepassescarmichael wrote:

    #99 oldnat,

    lol - perhaps the two do go together. History, after all, being the things people have generally agreed upon while pedantry is the correction of the things people have generally agreed upon.

    But, for the sake of pedantry, AMS merely indicates a group, or family, of voting systems, with the Mixed-Member system being one such example of the AMS group of systems. Plus, Additional Member connotes some sort of value judgement on the 'top-up' representatives which isn't really fair because the question becomes posed as to who is additional and why are they only additional to the others. Thus, MMS is preferable to describe our system.

    McConnell admitted it was to ensure Labour could minimise its losses should they lose power. Interestingly, despite the SNP being a minority government, we have seen that, with the strength of argument or political pressure, the rest can come round to a better way of thinking eg. Labour potentially committed to a referendum and the Lib Dem leadership candidates now seeming to support a referendum.

    I like the Mixed-Member because it avoids some of the problems of STV and, come Scottish independence, which, I think, will be the event that would lead to Westminster changing the way it does things, MMS would be a good system for Westminster for England and Wales.

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  • 102. At 2:09pm on 22 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #101 Correction accepted.

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  • 103. At 2:10pm on 22 Jul 2008, Brownedov wrote:

    Re #96 badgercourage

    I'll overlook your pedantry because I agree with your final para 100%. Having given a measure of these good things to the devolved administrations, our masters in Westminster cannot bring themselves to admit that they have worked very well and would work equally well in the House of Cards.

    Trouble is that it looks like NuLabour are going to implode so badly that Cameron will walk it next time, perhaps with 40% of the vote and 30% of the electorate. If he has a working majority even at the level Brown currently has, he will need no deals but will be trying to carry on Bliar's project - possibly without the lies.

    Of course he will be a little less right wing and authoritarian than NuLubour while trying to be a little more conservative fiscally but I fear that like NuLubour he will ignore the UK "constitution" entirely.

    That will likely mean another decade without electoral reform during which Scotland and Wales may well secede from the Union.

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  • 104. At 2:48pm on 22 Jul 2008, badgercourage wrote:

    #97, 99, 101, 103

    That's why I'm praying for a hung Parliament - I suspect that's the most likely way we're going to get meaningful electoral reform in England.

    And I can only look enviously at the Scottish position and wish the SNP well in securing independence - the only other shock to the system that might lead to electoral reform at Westminster. And maybe some loose federation of ESWI, although NI will be difficult to fit into this...

    I also think that it might lead to better relationships acroos the the E/S border and reduce the sniping on both sides.

    As well as getting shot of the Browns, Darlings, Alexanders and Brownes of this world.

    We can only hope!

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  • 105. At 3:28pm on 22 Jul 2008, Brownedov wrote:

    Re #104 badgercourage

    Please issue an immediate and grovelling apology to Taunton's Jeremy Browne, MP who is a paragon of the LibDem front bench.

    For all I know you may also have blackened the name of other blameless Browns, Darlings, Alexanders and Brownes. I hope that your list was intended to express your displeasure at a number of prominent members of the NuLabour Politburo rather than because of their places of birth.

    If the former, I applaud you. If the latter, you are a bigot although the rest of your post makes that unlikely.

    Wishful thinking re a hung parliament, I fear, unless Cameron does something sensationally stupid or NuLabour does something sensationally smart. Neither seems very likely right now.

    I would say that about the only hope would be for Brown (G) to go soon and Straw, who does believe in some electoral reform if little else, to take over as caretaker. He might just be bright enough to forge a pact based on fair voting with the LibDems and hold an autumn election to wrongfoot Cameron.

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  • 106. At 4:00pm on 22 Jul 2008, badgercourage wrote:

    #105

    They know who they are!

    I of course have nothing against Jeremy Browne MP or anyone else just because of their name; I'm sure he's a fine fellow, as you say. Carol Thatcher seems a thorough good egg, for example, and there are doubtless many people called Bush and Blair who lead blameless lives. Bigot, me??

    Not quite wishful thinking, I hope. The electoral arithmetic is not in the Tories favour - they need a huge swing and they need more votes per seat than Labour as the typical Labour seat has a significantly smaller electorate. I doubt if they will have a majority of more than 20. At lot will depend on London (and maybe Boris), also on whether the LibDems get squeezed.

    However, I don't share your favourable opinion of the Man of Straw; read Craig Murray on the subject, for example. And his recent pronouncement on electoral reform was NuLabour in its most distilled form.

    The trouble is, who else could take over if GB decides to spend more time with his family (fat chance) or is dragged out by the people in white coats?

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  • 107. At 4:07pm on 22 Jul 2008, JeremyP wrote:

    2 million? This site, yesterday. noted that 4.5 million people receive benefits related to being unemployed.


    Not a figure New Stasi would have enjoyed seeing in it's in-house website.

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  • 108. At 4:25pm on 22 Jul 2008, preacherjogger wrote:

    oldnat
    Decisions, what decisions? like wrecking the economy, the Union, and our credibility as a nation. You've got to be joking. There's only one decision I'm waiting for from Gordon; I'll give you a clue, he very nearly plucked up enough courage to make it back in the autumn of last year!

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  • 109. At 4:40pm on 22 Jul 2008, Brownedov wrote:

    Re #106 badgercourage

    Understood.

    You're right that electoral arithmetic was not in the Tories favour during what I hope was NuLabour's heyday. Now that the project seems to have a deathwish, things should be less clear-cut. Come Friday, we'll have a better measure of Scottish opinion, but having few targets seats there will not directly help the Tories. In England, the May elections pointed to serious defeat and recent by-elections to disaster.

    I am no apologist for Straw, but he does seem the leastworst of a bad bunch. On a par with Speer compared to most of his co-defendants at Nuremburg, perhaps.

    I'll read up re Mr Murray.

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  • 110. At 4:51pm on 22 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #108 preacherjogger

    In blogging it helps to quote the post number you are referring to.

    It also helps to make points that are sensible, funny or both.

    You fail on all counts - but then you are British .........

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  • 111. At 9:36pm on 22 Jul 2008, preacherjogger wrote:

    oldnat
    I'm sorry, I did'nt realise you needed so much help.
    And are you referring to common sense, or New Labour sense, and funny Ha Ha, or funny the country's going down the river? Or both?
    By the way, I'm referring to the English country.



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  • 112. At 11:51pm on 22 Jul 2008, StealthTax wrote:

    What amazes me is the ignorance of politicians about their own system. We've heard great play made of the fact that to get the 'new benefit' you will have to be seen by a doctor who isn't your GP! Wow! Trouble is the existing system has IB claimants regularly checked by a DWP appointed doctor. And that system has been in place for years!

    The tactic of abolishing a benefit and replacing it with a new one under a different name has been tried before, and has failed. Remember a few years back when abuse of the asylum system was headline news. Labour abolished the category of Exceptional Leave to Remain because it was being awarded too often. The replaced it with Humanitarian Assistance... and it made no difference whatever!

    All this spin will make no difference and, in truth, Labour don't want it to. The last thing they want is an extra 3.7M on the unemployment figures!

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  • 113. At 00:15am on 23 Jul 2008, Brownedov wrote:

    Re #108 & #111 preacherjogger

    I do realise that the House Rules only say your posts must be in English, but to use English words without putting them together into coherent phrases doesn't help the rest of us to understand what your contribution means.

    I work with people speaking English as a 2nd or 3rd language much of the time and so I'm fairly used to poor grammar but I don't understand your posts, either.

    I enjoy venting my spleen as much as anyone, but if nobody understood me, what would be the point?

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  • 114. At 01:49am on 23 Jul 2008, cruiskeen wrote:

    There are many politicians from each major parties who should themselves be unemployed and claiming Incapacity Benefit; because they are certainly not capable of doing the job they presently have.

    Perhaps if the system weeded out those unfit for purpose politicians, and put them on "community service", the return benefit would be far greater than anything to be got from hassling the poor and infirm.

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  • 115. At 02:16am on 23 Jul 2008, oldnat wrote:

    #111 preacherjogger

    If you refer to England, why are you concerned about the Union? - or maybe you're concerned about the damage that has been done to the European Union?

    #113 Brownedov

    You do have a wicked streak!

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  • 116. At 10:35am on 23 Jul 2008, timepassescarmichael wrote:

    #102 oldnat,

    Nae worries, the twa seem ae interchangeable, anyhoo.

    #104 badgercourage,

    There is an idea that I particularly am devoted to regarding the best way to organise politics in the British Isles and that is a Council of the Isles. It's sort of based on the Nordic Council and would involve (post-independence for Scotland) England, Scotland, Ireland, with Wales and Northern Ireland being recognised as devolved, all meeting together every six months where the respective PMs, and Assembly leaders, having a few days just to sit down and see if they can organise anything for mutual benfit. This would provide space for the sovereign countries to approach shared interests at the European level and the devolved countries chance to participate beyond their own territory. It would also allow Wales and, particularly importantly, NI the space and opportunity to see how they want to define themselves to the rest of the British Isles and in what capacity.

    I think that would be such a great way of doing things and would just consolidate and enhance good relations. Just a wee office in Edinburgh, a wee office in London, and a wee office in Dublin, and then maybe Cardiff, should people in Wales so decide for independence themselves. I can't think of a better way of being able to recognise political differences while also recognising our political similarities and shared interests. But, alas, it's all just a pipe-dream for the noo, aye.

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  • 117. At 12:29pm on 23 Jul 2008, Brownedov wrote:

    Re #116 timepassescarmichael

    An exceptionally good idea.

    The time has not yet come but that may well prove the only realistic option if the Tories "win" the next general election outright.

    It may be the only possible option if the NuLabour Lazarus surprises all and rises sufficiently from the dead in England to cling on to power next time.

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  • 118. At 12:47pm on 23 Jul 2008, grandantidote wrote:

    116 Timepasscarmichael, rest assured there will be no independence in Wales we have a very good relationship with England except on the Rugby pitch for eighty minutes each year when we become deadly enemies, until we meet in the pub after the game.

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  • 119. At 2:04pm on 23 Jul 2008, Casseroleon wrote:

    Well! The thread seems to have fallen into the old trend that we have had for more than 200 years- i.e- arguing about power structures and necessary reforms that will produce governments better able to wield the carrot and stick- to which Mr. Brown has referred often enough . We can even talk about what carrots? and what sticks?

    Unfortunately for such believers it may still remain true that "Britons never shall be slaves"- since the English shared their ideas of democracy and the rights of man and sought to spread them throughout Great Britain and then the wider world.

    The problem with carrots and sticks, however, is that even donkeys and horses can be led to the water; but you can not make them drink.

    More people sitting around discussing more and more varied ideas in a political or philosophical context rarely leads to real economic progress. Though we have had apparent economic progress because since the "age of terror" that started at the end of the eighteenth century people have put up with various kinds of war societies and economies in order to plaster over fundamental problems faced by humankind haunted by the kind of Frankenstein vision that appeared to Mary Shelley.

    We have sailed into uncharted and unknown waters with little idea of where we are going, or why we are going anywhere. And Britannia no longer rules the waves. Is it surprising that many people are content to do nothing consructive and creative- "faut de mieux"?

    Casseroleon

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  • 120. At 9:57pm on 23 Jul 2008, timepassescarmichael wrote:

    #117 brownedov

    Aye, it could be a great way to do things and, it seems to me, would demonstrate to the rest of the world the strength in interdependency and the maturity of our collective politics.

    I think the Tories will win the next GE by an absolute whopper because all of Labour's problems will be dragged along with Brown for the next few years if he stays, or, should there be a new Labour leader then there must surely be an near-immediate GE in which case the Tories would win. Of course, the Tories would have no mandate in Scotland and would have to deal with the social democratic SNP who would be trying to push to the left while the Tories would want to go to the right - it will be nothing if not, at least, absolutely fascinating.

    #118 grandantidote

    Och, of course, I wasn't trying to suggest that Wales should be railroaded one way or the other but I don't think that good relations between Wales and England, of which there undoubtedly is, should indicate, one way or the other, what would be best for Wales politically. One may find, actually, that Wales becoming independent would improve relations, not just with England, but with Scotland and Ireland and beyond as, then, we would all recognise the interdependency of one another, work to improve ourselves, and team up for areas of mutual interest. That's my thoughts, anyway, because I actually think, despite some of the recent tabloid nonsense instigated by Labour about Scottish subsidies and a' that, that relations between Scotland and England are very good. At a governmental level Scotland has a government that would like nothing more than to live side-by-side with a successful England as our immediate neighbours. Plus, needless to say, at an individual level there is an immediate friendliness between people in England and Scotland, disregarding the few idiots who have taken a rivalry, or tabloid headlines, a bit too far. Yet, I think these current good relations would be improved with an independent Scotland. Salmond has a phrase he keeps repeating about, come Scottish independence, England would lose a surly lodger and gain a great neighbour and the same may, or may not, apply to Wales, I don't know, to be honest. I recognise and do respect that Wales is an entirely different place with a different politics than Scotland.

    Anyway, forget Rugby, football is where the real rivalry is, and football lasts for 90 minutes - a whole 10 minutes more before we can get to the pub.

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  • 121. At 10:57am on 24 Jul 2008, grandantidote wrote:

    120 timepassesmichael, quite a lot of what you say may be true.
    The problem that we would have in Wales in the unlikely event that the Welsh nationalists should take control of Wales is that they would not be content with being independent, they want Wales to take a massive backward step, they want the country to revert to the Welsh language thus alienating us even further from the English and the rest of the world, we already, unwillingly to most of us, we have street names duplicated in the Welsh language towns council forms driving licenses road signs that are painted on the roads all at a massive expense it's crazy considering that there's only about 1% of the population of Wales that doesnt speak English if that.
    The English language which is now the universally recognised language of the World would become a second language in Wales if they get their way.
    The Welsh zealots would make life unbearable, you have to remember that they were quite happy to burn down English holiday homes.
    One of the Plaid Cymru MPs recently requested in parliament that Welsh soldiers should be taught there commands in the Welsh language , have you ever heard anything so ridiculous,his request was denied, can you imagine troops underfire and being instructed in two languages and how many lives might be lost because of this idiocy.
    No my friend there is no great desire for independence in Wales.
    Forget Rugby! sacrilege! the only reason that they get an extra ten minutes in football is to make up for the time they spend brushing down their hands and knees after throwing themselves on the pitch.

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  • 122. At 4:00pm on 24 Jul 2008, Alanm_ok wrote:

    Since when is anyone entitled to be paid not to work? Blame whatever you want, point to recessions etc - there is always work to be had.

    When did this concept become acceptable that anyone can lay about all day in accomodation that the state pays for, go for a beer when they want, drop in at the bookies to see if they can win their fortune or at least enough for their chinese meal to be delivered, and then stagger home half-cut just in time to miss the rush hour?

    Work - that is what earns any right, not the simple fact of existing. Everyone except for the very incapacitated can contribute - stigmatisation or not. We are not here to make the unemployed feel wanted or the slackers feel valued.

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  • 123. At 7:27pm on 24 Jul 2008, Brownedov wrote:

    Re #121 grandantidote

    I really do agree with a great deal of your post (my mongrel ancestry includes 25% Welsh) and especially that too much is being made of compulsory Welsh Language agendas. Protect the language yes, but to ram it down people's throats is partly why Plaid has not had the take-off the SNP have had in Scotland.

    Until they appeal more broadly to the South, they have little chance of a majority in the Assembly.

    Remember, though, that the Assembly members themselves are asking for an upgrading of powers to match the Scottish Parliament and if they make a go of the grand coalition they may well get the Welsh people onside by 2011.

    If we could quickly reach the stage where the devolved powers of Scottish, Welsh, N. Irish and English goverments were comparable and a much smaller and more democratic union government handled defence, foreign affairs, taxation and border control then the clamour for independence would recede.

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  • 124. At 3:56pm on 28 Jul 2008, madfraggle wrote:

    Surely the biggest single way for the government to save money on the whole issue of benefits is to give up completely on policing them (and spending a fortune checking up on perfectly valid claims for a few fraudsters) cut the dwp staff to a third of its current level and be able to say that they have saved far more in salaries than fraudulent claims could ever cost...

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  • 125. At 2:00pm on 29 Oct 2008, bice86 wrote:

    ames Punell mind exists a parallel universe not in the real world!!!

    I agree with Mr hill in his statement above, I also agree with the government that most disabled people would like a job. A job that pays well, with full holiday and company pension provision and the right to join a union and be full time is also flexible and takes into account the persons disability. Disabled people capable and qualified would be more than happy to try and do these jobs. if it did not make their condition worse. THEY WOULD BE KILLED IN THE CRUSH OF NON DISABLED PEOPLE RUNNING FOR THESE JOBS.

    Most jobs for disabled people are part time, low paid, with no company pension, working times that are all over the place, Hence it is hard to book taxis through the ACCESS TO WORK SCHEME, the tax credits are laughable,because people are asked to work over time and a refusable to do so would be seen as non compliance. In order to work effectively the tax credit people like fixed hours of work, it makes their lives and the calculation of tax credits easier.
    know this because my fiancee for ASDA cleaning the toilets for but is employed by a company called City Facilities which as links with Remploy Interwork.
    An Asda customer Shate in a cloths changing room, my fiancee who was a weak stomach was violently sick all for £5.73p an hour.
    My perfect job would be in my local Job Centre Plus, on the other side of the desk grilling the young Bint who grills me. I keep on telling her I have no qualifications, multiple disabilities and am nearly fifty and that I am not physically capable of doing a cleaning jobs at Adsa

    I now will be facing a degrading medical from a doctor employed be Atos. I do not believe that this medical will be fair and transparent, these doctors are paid by results and are racking in the money. For my increasing anxiety and depression there is a state funded interactive computer program called BEATING THE BLUES, this program will tell me that my depression is the result of wrong thinking, not the economic down turn and the loss of my job.
    I also face the British equivalent of America Works. These Job brokers will make Whackford Squires look like Mother Tersa.

    In this regard disabled people are a very lucrative market for Atos, DWP and private job brokers such as the British Branch of America Works.We are also ideal whipping boys for times of economic woe.

    Disabled people are still nice source of income for the socio economic groups at the top of the food chain who pruport to represent them. Were would all you people be without us?
    I would also like to thank the following self righteous blood suckers below, how agreed with the closure of Remploy Factories.

    Bryan Dutton, Leonard Cheshire
    Liz Sayce, Radar
    Jo Williams, Mencap
    Paul Farmer, Mind
    John Low, Royal National Institute for Deaf People
    Jon Sparkes, Scope



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  • 126. At 2:13pm on 29 Oct 2008, flamepatricia wrote:

    There is Incapacity Benefit for those who have worked but can no longer due to disability or sickness.

    There is income support with Disability Living Allowance and Mobility Allowance for those who have never worked such as my son who had a terrible head injury, brain surgery, coma for a year, and comes under the category of "Critical". Undisputedly he cannot work. We and he wish it were different as he was in his last year at school about to take GCSEs with great predictions.

    We have come across many "skivvers" who have motability cars, house adaptations, benefits, blue badges, you name it. I have said this before and got moderated but in THIS area where we live it is common knowledge that in their places of worship (not churches) they get doctors and other professionals to sign off paperwork to say they are sick or disabled and the council workers who are of the same persuasion or religion (whatever) just dole out the dosh.

    This government has been blind to this for years and it has been a big attraction to people coming from overseas for obvious reasons.

    I reiterate, it is going to be a mammoth task to sort it out n ow that they are taking a proprietorial interest but the whole situation is so unfair on those who are genuinely in need of such help.

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  • 127. At 2:14pm on 29 Oct 2008, flamepatricia wrote:

    Are the beeb's clocks completely kaput? Look at the times on these blogs again.

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  • 128. At 2:54pm on 29 Oct 2008, shellingout wrote:

    #124 madfraggle

    Surely the biggest single way for the government to save money on the whole issue of benefits is to give up completely on policing them (and spending a fortune checking up on perfectly valid claims for a few fraudsters) cut the dwp staff to a third of its current level and be able to say that they have saved far more in salaries than fraudulent claims could ever cost...

    ....and you think this would stop people abusing the system, then....? Billions of pounds are spent on fraudulent claims and having nobody to police them would just open the floodgates wider.

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