Contact an All Party Parliamentary Group about the Benefit cuts

Contact an All Party Parliamentary Group about the Benefit cuts

The following article has just been posted on the DPAC website and it deserves to be read by as many people as possible, which is why I have copied it below. It goes in to detail about the planned Spring Statement Cuts that the Right Wing Government that we are currently stuck with are proposing. The original post can be read by clicking on this paragraph.

It is well worth a read and should open a lot of peoples eyes to the reality of the situation on the ground for disabled people living in 21st Century Britain

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As well as contacting your own MP about the proposed benefits cuts, you may be able to get your message to other MPs of all parties, if there is  an All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) which covers your condition.

The race to try to persuade MPs that the Green Paper provisions will be a disaster for many claimants is likely to be a short one.

There are growing reports that Labour aim to introduce a bill in May and, if it certified as a money bill, the Lords will not be able to amend or delay it for more than a month, meaning the PIP and UC cuts could be  on the statute book by the end of July, ready to be implemented next year.

So, the more MPs who hear from claimants who are going to suffer real harm from the changes, the better.

APPGs consist of members of both Houses of Parliament, from all parties, who share an interest in a particular topic.  A number of these groups relate to different health conditions.

We’ve listed some of the ones we think are most relevant below, but you can see a complete list of all APPGs here.

You should probably email the person listed as the Public Enquiry Point first and ask them to forward your concerns about the effects of the cuts to all members of the group.

As always, emails need to be polite and short enough that people will read them.  In this case, MPs should want to be informed about whether people with the condition they meet about are likely to be affected by the Green Paper cuts.

Acquired Brain Injury

Ageing and Older People

Autism

Brain Tumours

Carers

Deafness

Debt and Financial Inclusion

Dementia

Diabetes

Down Syndrome

Dyslexia

Eating Disorders

Endometriosis

Eye Health and Visual Impairment

Food Banks

Genetic, Rare and Undiagnosed Conditions

Health

Homelessness

Less Survivable Cancers

Liver Disease and Liver Cancer

Long Covid

Mental Health

Motor Neurone Disease

Multiple Sclerosis

Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME)

Obesity

Obstructive Sleep Apnoea

Osteoporosis and Bone Health

Parkinson’s

Prostate Cancer

Respiratory Health

Special Educational Needs and Disabilities

Spinal Cord Injury

Suicide and Self-Harm Prevention

Usher Syndrome

Vascular and Venous Disease

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