Labour Government Continues Unlawful Assault on Disability Benefits, Following Tory Blueprint

Labour continues to pledge to cut the disability benefits bill, despite a High Court ruling which found that the previous government's consultation into the plans was unlawful

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Clement Attlee, Keir Starmer, Keir Hardie
Clement Attlee, Keir Starmer, Keir Hardie

Labour’s Betrayal: The Cruel Continuation of Tory Disability Cuts

When Sir Keir Starmer boasted to The Sun about having the “balls to take an axe to Britain’s benefits bill,” while pledging £3.5 billion annually to Ukraine for as long as it takes, whatever that means, he laid bare a stark moral contradiction. Here was a Labour leader who could find billions for foreign military aid yet saw fit to celebrate cutting support from Britain’s most vulnerable citizens.

The irony couldn’t be more caustic – or more revealing. In that single moment, Starmer exposed the hollow core of today’s Labour Party: a Party that has chosen to continue the Conservative’s unlawful assault on disabled people while wrapping it in the cynical language of fiscal responsibility.

Let’s be crystal clear about what’s happening: Labour is actively choosing to implement £3 billion in disability benefit cuts that were so poorly conceived, so “misleading,” “rushed,” and “unfair” that the High Court struck them down as unlawful. This isn’t inheritance; it’s adoption.

The numbers tell a devastating story. By 2029, 424,000 people would lose access to vital support worth £400 monthly. Behind these statistics are real lives: parents skipping meals to feed their disabled children, people choosing between heating and life-saving medical equipment, and families already stretched to breaking point. When two-thirds of food bank users are disabled people, how can any Labour government – worthy of the name – justify further cuts?

Rachel Reeves, channelling her inner George Osborne, speaks of “delivering savings” and “fiscal sustainability.” But let’s translate this Westminster-speak: Labour plans to balance its books on the backs of Britain’s disabled community, while corporations enjoy record profits and tax avoidance remains an art form for the wealthy.

The technical defence offered – that they’ll “re-consult” on these cuts – is particularly galling. It’s as if Labour believes the problem with the Tories’s cruel policy wasn’t the cruelty itself, but merely the paperwork. This is governance by spreadsheet, where human dignity is reduced to a line item that can be trimmed for political convenience.

I remember speaking with a disability rights activist in Manchester last month who said, “We fought against these cuts under the Tories because they were wrong, not because they were Tory.”

Her words cut to the heart of Labour’s moral failure. The Party seems to have forgotten that opposition to austerity wasn’t merely partisan positioning – it was rooted in fundamental principles of social justice and human dignity.

Ayla Ozmen, director of policy and campaigns at anti-poverty charity, Z2K, said: “When the government re-consults on the proposals, it will simply be clearer on the real driver of these reforms – cost-cutting.

“If taken forward, the impact of these proposals could be devastating and would undermine the government’s own commitments on poverty. The changes would inevitably increase absolute poverty among disabled people.”

“And one in four people who currently receive these benefits have children. So the proposals could see over 100,000 families losing access to vital payments of over £400 a month – an even worse reduction in income on an individual level than the two-child limit imposes,” Ozmen added.

The historical irony is bitter. Labour, the Party born from the struggle for workers’ rights and social protection, now champions policies that would have made the notorious former Tory, Work and pension secretary Iain Duncan Smith resign.

Clement Attlee, who helped build our welfare state from the ashes of World War II, would scarcely recognise this iteration of his Party never mind Keir Hardie.

Those defending these cuts might argue that difficult decisions are necessary for economic stability. But this argument collapses under scrutiny. When we can find billions for military adventures and corporate subsidies, the decision to target the disabled isn’t about necessity – it’s about priorities.

Liz Kendall, the secretary of state for work and pensions, speaking in parliament. Image: Flickr/ House of Commons/ UK Parliament

The High Court’s ruling provides Labour with a perfect opportunity to change course. Instead of merely repackaging Tory cruelty in a red wrapper, they could demonstrate true leadership by developing policies that protect the vulnerable while pursuing tax justice and economic reform.

The question now isn’t whether Labour can implement these cuts legally – it’s whether they should do so at all. A Party that claims to represent working people while undermining social protection is engaging in a form of political gaslighting that threatens the very foundations of our social contract.

The disabled community deserves better than this cynical continuation of Conservative policy. They deserve a Labour Party that remembers its purpose: to protect the vulnerable, to fight for social justice, and to build a society that measures its worth not by the size of its cuts, but by how it treats its most vulnerable members.

If Labour proceeds with these cuts, they won’t just be breaking promises – they’ll be breaking the fundamental trust that generations of supporters have placed in them. And that, far more than any budget deficit, is a debt they will never repay.

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