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Showing posts with the label UK Politics

Beyond Incompetence: The UK’s Political System Is Morally Bankrupt and Built for Impunity By Dusty Wentworth

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What Happens When Power Faces No Consequences? Imagine if a CEO squandered hundreds of millions of pounds on a project that never launched. Imagine if they handed multi-million-pound contracts to personal contacts without scrutiny, then walked away with a promotion. In the private sector, they'd face legal action, shareholder revolt, and professional disgrace. In British politics, they face none of the above. In the United Kingdom today, power is wielded without legal consequence. Ministers waste vast public sums, push through unworkable schemes, and mislead the nation—yet no one is prosecuted, fined, or held to account. This isn’t just negligence. It is systemic impunity. And it is morally unforgivable. Rwanda, PPE, HS2: A Catalogue of Unpunished Failure The Rwanda deportation scheme cost the taxpayer over £290 million. Not a single deportation flight ever took place. A Supreme Court ruling in November 2023 deemed the plan unlawful. The government responded by passing ...

The Shifting Sands of Civility: Are We Losing the Ability to Disagree? By Dusty Wentworth

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There was a time—not so long ago—when two people could sit across a table, engage in a spirited debate, shake hands, and part ways without questioning the other’s character. Political opponents could cross the aisle for a drink, families could hold divergent views without the Sunday roast descending into a shouting match, and disagreement, though often heated, was still seen as a natural and necessary part of civic life. Today, that picture feels increasingly like an artefact of a bygone era. In the public square—whether that square is physical or digital—the ability to disagree without declaring an enemy appears to be eroding. The line between challenging someone’s opinion and attacking their character has blurred to the point of near-invisibility. The consequences of this shift are not merely social niceties lost; they are structural fractures in the way our society processes difference. If we cannot disagree without malice, we cannot debate meaningfully. And if we cannot...

Veteran’s Call for Accountability By Dusty Wentworth

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As a veteran, I'm compelled to defend my fellow citizens, challenging a government that seems to forget its fundamental duty to those it serves. This isn't just about veterans; it's about every individual facing hardship in the United Kingdom – from the disabled and unemployed, to the hard-working citizens struggling in the face of a failing economy, which is, ultimately, the government's responsibility.  Before persecuting the average person in the street, before cutting benefits for the vulnerable, this government must first rectify its own systemic failings and address its own shocking lack of accountability. It’s not just the injustice of being unsupported as a disabled veteran—it’s the systemic rot that allows it to persist. Consider the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP), the very body meant to provide welfare and support for millions. Staggeringly, its accounts haven't been signed off in over 36 years. This shocking revelation, as confirmed by...

A Tale of Two Realities: When Political Perks Clash with Public Hardship By Dusty Wentworth

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It's a stark contrast that's hard to ignore: while the UK government discusses tightening the purse strings on vital support for disabled people, many Members of Parliament appear to be enjoying a more cushioned existence, complete with lucrative second jobs. This disparity has fuelled a heated debate, leaving many questioning the fairness of a system that seems to offer one set of rules for the vulnerable and another for those in power. The Squeeze on Disability Support   The government has openly expressed concerns about the escalating cost of Personal Independence Payment (PIP) and other disability benefits. Proposals have included a “four-point rule” for new PIP claimants, aiming to direct support to those with the most severe conditions.   While recent concessions suggest these changes might only impact new claimants from a future date, and current PIP recipients will be protected, the message is clear: the era of seemingly unfettered benefit increas...

The Fox in the Henhouse: Why the PIP Review Can’t Be Trusted By Dusty Wentworth

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“It’s the political equivalent of putting a fox in your henhouse and asking it to count the chickens.” This is precisely the scenario unfolding with the newly announced review of Personal Independence Payments (PIP)—a supposedly impartial reassessment of the benefits system, led not by an independent body, but by the very minister who oversees it: Sir Stephen Timms, Minister of State for Social Security and Disability. The government wants us to believe this review is about fairness and modernisation. But from where I’m sitting—in a wheelchair I never planned for, navigating a system I never imagined I’d need—it looks more like a politically controlled damage limitation exercise than genuine reform. A Review Already Tainted The review, announced just days before Parliament passed the controversial welfare reform bill, is set to run until Autumn 2026. It was presented as a concession—a reason not to worry about proposed cuts to PIP. But let’s be clear: appointing...

Two-Tier Britain: What the Welfare Vote Reveals About Power, Prejudice, and Disabled Lives By Dusty Wentworth

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Imagine waking up tomorrow and discovering your essential support—your lifeline—is suddenly worth less than someone else’s. Not because your needs have changed, but because of an arbitrary date on a calendar. This is the stark reality now facing disabled people across the UK after last night’s parliamentary vote. Parliament voted 335 to 260 in favour of the government’s amended welfare reform bill. On paper, it passed with “concessions.” In reality, it passed with a chilling message: disabled lives are not equal—they are politically expendable. With that vote, the UK has solidified a disturbing new phase of social policy: one that brazenly creates a two-tier disability support system. A system where the date you became disabled now determines the level of help you receive. Not your condition. Not your needs. Not your humanity. Just your timing. This is more than policy—it’s precedent. What the Bill Really Does Under the new legislation, the split is clear: Existing claimant...

A U-Turn Under Pressure: What the Government’s Reversal on Welfare Cuts Really Means By Dusty Wentworth

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In a dramatic turn of events that sent ripples through Westminster and brought a sigh of relief to millions, the UK government on Friday, 27th June 2025, executed a significant U-turn on its controversial welfare reforms. This eleventh-hour reversal scraps several proposed changes that threatened to severely impact disabled people, pensioners, and low-income households. This ambitious original plan, embedded within Chancellor Rachel Reeves' March 2025 Spring Budget, sought to slash a staggering £5 billion annually from the welfare budget. However, it was met with an unprecedented wave of resistance: intense public backlash, relentless advocacy from disability rights groups, and crucially, a threatened rebellion from over 100 Labour MPs. Trapped between political survival and public outcry, the government found itself cornered, leading to a partial U-turn that, while protecting existing claimants, leaves a vast landscape of welfare policy ripe for continued scrutiny. The...

Broken Promises: What the UK’s Treatment of Disabled People Says About the State of Our Nation

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This is not just about policy. It’s about principle. I served this country. I came home injured. But this isn’t a story about a failed veteran. It’s a story about a system that’s failing all of us. Across the UK, over 14.6 million disabled people are living in a state of manufactured scarcity — not because their needs are unclear, but because the systems around them are deliberately designed to delay, deny, and degrade. I know this because I live it. I live with complex, overlapping conditions: combat-related PTSD, a brain injury following a subarachnoid haemorrhage, Functional Neurological Disorder (FND), severe fibromyalgia, partial blindness, significant hearing loss, and neurological seizures and tremors. These aren’t static labels. They interact, compound, and affect every part of my life. Yet, the people assessing me often have no experience of any of them. The Flawed Assessment System Personal Independence Payment (PIP) assessments are outsourced to private contracto...