I sat through two hours of this. She was giving the last evidence, along with a DWP civil servant, Hayes, to the Work and Pensions Select Committee inquiry into sanctions. After two hours the BBC Parliament channel left the session and I couldn't bring myself to go to it on the computer. I'd felt myself losing the will to live inside ten minutes.
A bit of the flavour of it is reported by the Guardian here. But they are trying to be too even-handed. It was dire. McVey waffled and fudged, didn't answer the question, cited surveys she then couldn't detail, and turned to Hayes whenever it got complicated. The Chair, Dame Anne Begg, was tougher than usual, but it was only when the other Labour members of the committee, Debbie Abrahams, Sheila Gilmore, Glenda Jackson and Teresa Pearce, were set loose that McVey showed the gulf between what she (and her boss and the DWP) would like to think is happening and what is actually happening.
One lie has clearly been nailed. The committee has heard about the way in which Work Programme providers are obliged to refer someone for sanction whenever there is a perceived infringement of the rules. This is going to be changed, by the way; they are to have discretion, which is what they want. But it needs primary legislation and a renegotiation of the contracts, so won't happen yet. But McVey was not reminded of the fact that she has lied about this in Parliament, insisting that sanctions are only used as a last resort. Another lie was repeated. McVey was adamant that there are no targets. This became a bit of a muddle, with Jackson and McVey both referring to the same letter from the PCS union; and in fairness McVey was right. But, at least while I was watching, we never got to the truth about targets in Jobcentres.
The Guardian and the Independent have been publishing the truth, with articles here, here and here, and the New Statesman has joined in. All these pieces give the picture which McVey determinedly denied today. Let's hope that the committee's report doesn't get too watered down by the Tories on it. They've heard the truth and should report it. But, as I've said before, it won't make a scrap of difference if the Tories get in in May.
Showing posts with label Sheila Gilmore MP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sheila Gilmore MP. Show all posts
Wednesday, 4 February 2015
Sunday, 1 February 2015
Esther McVey - and related matters
On Wednesday morning, 4 February, if you are not otherwise occupied, I suggest you watch Esther McVey give evidence to the Work & Pensions Select Committee on the whole issue of sanctions. If it isn't on the BBC parliament channel it will be on the government's own parliament website. The committee has been taking evidence on the effect and workings of the sanctions regime, and they've been hearing the truth from the right people. So let's see if McVey will repeat her lie in the House of Commons that "sanctions are only used as a last resort". Even if the rather restrained Chair, Dame Anne Begg, doesn't go for her I'm sure Glenda Jackson, Sheila Gilmore and Debbie Abrahams will. Radio 4 did an excellent File on Four programme while the previous evidence sessions were going on, and the mainstream press have begun to see the light. The sad truth is, though, that nothing will come of this if a Conservative government is elected.
And that brings me to another reason why February is important. On 5 February it's National Voter Registration Day, a day of action to get people who haven't already done so to register to vote in May. Please, if you're one of those who haven't bothered, get online and sign up to register. Go to the www.bitetheballot.co.uk website and it will take you through it.
Oh, I know I'll get comments saying someone wouldn't dream of voting, for all the usual reasons. But whether you vote or not, you'll wake up on 8 May with an MP in your constituency and a government in Westminster. If you want change - and don't we all - look at Greece. Peacefully and democratically the Greek people have voted in an anti-austerity government. And now Spain looks like going the same way. It can be done. Sermon over.
And that brings me to another reason why February is important. On 5 February it's National Voter Registration Day, a day of action to get people who haven't already done so to register to vote in May. Please, if you're one of those who haven't bothered, get online and sign up to register. Go to the www.bitetheballot.co.uk website and it will take you through it.
Oh, I know I'll get comments saying someone wouldn't dream of voting, for all the usual reasons. But whether you vote or not, you'll wake up on 8 May with an MP in your constituency and a government in Westminster. If you want change - and don't we all - look at Greece. Peacefully and democratically the Greek people have voted in an anti-austerity government. And now Spain looks like going the same way. It can be done. Sermon over.
Monday, 19 May 2014
The mess that is Universal Credit
If you depended on the BBC for your news - and apparently many still do - or if you thought that the Sun, the Mail and the Express were newspapers, you would know nothing about Universal Credit beyond the vague assurances that it's coming and will "make work pay". But there are still some real journalists who take an interest in such matters. One of them is Emily Dugan, who wrote a disturbing piece for the Independent on Saturday. She went to Warrington, one of the pilot areas, and spoke to the people who are having to suffer the consequences of UC; the claimants whose benefit wasn't paid or who found themselves in rent arrears because the money which was supposed to go straight to the landlord didn't; the Housing Associations trying to cope with a haphazard system which puts tenants at risk of eviction through no fault of their own; the CAB worker who says that the problems are increasing.
Sheila Gilmore MP is on the Work & Pensions select committee. She has written a piece on the Progress website about what they are being told and why they don't believe it. The meaningless waffle they get from civil servants is familiar to many of us, but it's trying to hide the fact that UC is a grotesque failure.
There are still only about 6,000 people on UC, and they are all the "easy" cases - single, no complications. Yet the IT obviously doesn't work even for them. I reckon that the plan for the Tories is simply to coast towards the 2015 election, delaying the roll-out. After that, whoever gets in can make the decision on whether to cancel the whole grisly project or to plough on since the only people who will suffer don't count.
The same may well apply to Help to Work. It was supposed to have started, but the workfare component was delayed to give at least the semblance of legitimacy to G4S's chunk of the contracts (no one was fooled but the DWP doesn't care). The rest of it - signing on every day, spending all day every day doing "jobsearch" in the Jobcentre - was never feasible and hasn't started either. But as far as Iain Duncan Smith is concerned, who cares? The propaganda has been successful beyond his wildest dreams. And there are very few journalists out there willing to report the truth.
Sheila Gilmore MP is on the Work & Pensions select committee. She has written a piece on the Progress website about what they are being told and why they don't believe it. The meaningless waffle they get from civil servants is familiar to many of us, but it's trying to hide the fact that UC is a grotesque failure.
There are still only about 6,000 people on UC, and they are all the "easy" cases - single, no complications. Yet the IT obviously doesn't work even for them. I reckon that the plan for the Tories is simply to coast towards the 2015 election, delaying the roll-out. After that, whoever gets in can make the decision on whether to cancel the whole grisly project or to plough on since the only people who will suffer don't count.
The same may well apply to Help to Work. It was supposed to have started, but the workfare component was delayed to give at least the semblance of legitimacy to G4S's chunk of the contracts (no one was fooled but the DWP doesn't care). The rest of it - signing on every day, spending all day every day doing "jobsearch" in the Jobcentre - was never feasible and hasn't started either. But as far as Iain Duncan Smith is concerned, who cares? The propaganda has been successful beyond his wildest dreams. And there are very few journalists out there willing to report the truth.
Labels:
BBC,
Emily Dugan,
Help to Work,
Iain Duncan Smith,
Independent,
Sheila Gilmore MP,
Universal Credit,
Warrington
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)