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UK Government 'must take Scottish approach to disability payments'
UK Government 'must take Scottish approach to disability payments'

The National

time03-07-2025

  • Health
  • The National

UK Government 'must take Scottish approach to disability payments'

Welcome to this week's Branch Office Updates! Subscribe (for free) by clicking on the linked banner above. A PROMINENT disability campaigner has called for the UK Labour Government to take the 'more humane' approach Scotland is taking with disability payments. It comes after the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill passed its first hurdle on Tuesday. When the legislation was first announced, it included measures to limit eligibility for Pip, the main disability benefit in England, Wales and Northern Ireland, and freeze the health-related element of universal credit. But a huge backbench rebellion saw the changes to Pip stripped from the legislation with a review commissioned. The so-called Timms review is expected to report next autumn after consulting with the disabled community and stakeholders. READ MORE: Faslane nuclear base radioactive secrets to be released after FoI battle That same day, Marylynne Hunter – an ex-Labour member and activist who resigned in March – told The National that she received a call from Social Security Scotland, who administers the devolved Adult Disability Payment (ADP) and Child Disability Payment. Her daughter Freya has severe complex health problems and disabilities, is non-verbal and blind and requires full-time oxygen and at-home nursing care. 'The guy from Social Security Scotland was amazing. They actually spoke to me with dignity and respect,' she said. 'And I was part of those consultations way back with (former minister for equalities) Jeane Freeman in the Scottish Parliament talking about the way in which you're spoken to by people down in Westminster sometimes before it was devolved and it could be quite distressing.' Hunter added: 'But this guy was brilliant. The dignity and respect part is there, you know, it's completely there. It was actually a really nice meeting, and he met Freya online and everything and he was lovely.' (Image: Marylynne Hunter) She also said that with the Scotland's Child Disability Payment, with someone with Freya's condition, they won't have to reapply for the Adult Disability Payment – an aspect which would have been the case if she was applying for PiP. 'She'll just naturally go to the next stage of Adult Disability Payment without any big forms or anything,' Hunter said. 'It's just a wee form that you have to fill in because she's not going to get better. So, that's the Scottish way of doing it. But if it had been the English way of doing it, I would have had to have reapplied. I would have had to have applied for Pip for Freya. And it would have been horrific.' She added: 'It's that whole thing about having to do that big massive form again and talk about what she can't do. I'd rather talk about what she can do, because that's distressing when I have to talk about what Freya needs in terms of her medical care. It's horrific. I don't want to be reminded of that because it's really difficult for me to deal with.' 'The Scottish Government do it in a really good way where they take all the information from the GP and consultants and they don't put you through that torture.' Hunter went on: 'You know what, that's the power of consultation with people who are on the ground with lived experience. The Scottish Government did that, they've consulted with people who are actually accessing these benefits. 'They've done it right.'

What I saw during Angela Rayner's farcical visit to Scotland
What I saw during Angela Rayner's farcical visit to Scotland

The National

time29-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The National

What I saw during Angela Rayner's farcical visit to Scotland

Welcome to this week's Branch Office Updates. It's Xander Elliards here stepping in for James Walker this week. KARL Marx's famous maxim states that history repeats, first as tragedy, second as farce. In the case of Angela Rayner's recent visits to Scotland, it's been farce both times. Thursday's not-at-all-publicised visit north of the Border was a case in point. At first, Labour had ungraciously informed the Scottish media that they would have precisely no access to the Deputy Prime Minister. That would have heralded a repeat of her visit to Govan in January, where no media were allowed to speak to the top Labour MP. That had been reflected by Lisa Nandy's visit to Scotland in March, during which she also spoke to no Scottish media. But as pressure from all quarters grew, Labour were forced into a minor concession, one on which they have leant before and no doubt will again. READ MORE: How is Labour's Hamilton by-election campaign so bad? Rayner would now speak to a select few members of the broadcast media, we were told. PA – the news wire which shares its writing with other outlets – would also be allowed to ask just two questions. However, Scottish newspapers would not be allowed anywhere near the Deputy Prime Minister (except, it later transpired, the Labour-friendly Daily Record ... who just backed the SNP in the by-election. Awkward ...) Labour would then be able to deny allegations that Rayner had not spoken to any Scottish media, and deny allegations that she had not spoken to any Scottish newspapers. As The National reported just weeks ago, that was exactly what Chancellor Rachel Reeves did during her own visit north of the Border. Rachel Reeves refused to speak to any Scottish newspapers during her visit to a whisky distillery in May (Image: Andrew Milligan) Unhappy with yet another snub to the Scottish media – despite what Labour may call it – The National decided to turn up at the party's Hamilton by-election campaign office and ask Rayner some questions anyway. When I arrived in Hamilton at 1pm on Thursday – a little ahead of time – it was quickly apparent that we were far from the only people with the idea of 'doorstepping' the Deputy Prime Minister. The Labour campaign office was essentially besieged by pro-Palestine protesters, who I'm told had learned of the visit early that morning and pulled together a last-minute demonstration. 'Resisting genocide is human' is written on the ground in front of Labour activists, who had been asked to make a wall between Labour's campaign office and the pro-Palestine protest (Image: NQ) Chants of 'Rayner, Rayner you can't hide, you're supporting genocide' were echoing up the streets of the Scottish town. As it turns out, however, Rayner very much can hide. And that's just what she did. In what can only be described as a humiliation for the Labour deputy, she was reduced to scarpering away and answering the few questions she had agreed to from the lawn of a private residence in a small village outside Hamilton. It seemed that, with the campaign office surrounded by Palestine protesters deemed too embarrassing for Rayner, Labour's 'backroom boys' (as former shadow chancellor John McDonnell called them) were unable to find anywhere else willing to host her – at such short notice anyway. Rayner was then forced to utter half-hearted claims that she hadn't run away from pro-Palestine protesters literally miles away from the pro-Palestine protesters she ran away from. For posterity's sake: the Deputy First Minister spoke to PA – who Labour had decided would question Rayner in place of all of Scotland's print media (bar the Record) – for less than one minute. The National was then allowed two questions, which lasted slightly longer but saw Rayner say the same amount of nothing. The continuing message is clear: UK Labour have simply no time – and no respect – for Scotland's print media.

Anas Sarwar's silence as UK Government fails Gaza is deafening
Anas Sarwar's silence as UK Government fails Gaza is deafening

The National

time22-05-2025

  • Politics
  • The National

Anas Sarwar's silence as UK Government fails Gaza is deafening

Welcome to this week's Branch Office Updates! Subscribe for free using the link above. ANAS Sarwar's silence over the past week on Gaza has been deafening. It's an issue on which the Scottish Labour leader, on occasion, has taken a welcome stronger stance – at least compared with the majority of his party colleagues. But he hasn't raised his head above the parapet when it has really mattered. Already, in October 2023, he accused Israel of a "clear breach" of international law. David Lammy U-turned on that assertion in March – and he has said nothing on this. READ MORE: Residents in Edinburgh suburb 'forced to pay £40k for retrofit scheme', report warns When I spoke with Sarwar at the Labour conference in Liverpool last year, he urged the UK Government to help Palestinians with family in the UK resettle here via a bespoke visa scheme. But when Keir Starmer explicitly ruled out a family visa scheme for Palestinians in February, he remained silent. He said nothing, again, when the Prime Minister closed down the legal loophole that allowed a Palestinian family to settle here. Last month, he defied the central UK leadership and called for arms exports to Israel to end. (Image: PA) 'To me, it is clear that the actions of the Israeli forces do not comply with international humanitarian law and therefore the sales of arms to Israel should stop,' Sarwar said in a speech to delegates at the Scottish Trades Union Congress annual summit. But when asked about the issue last week amid the legal case against the UK Government, he instead said Labour should not allow the export of any "proactive arms' to Israel. He added that there was a legal 'grey area' around whether parts for F-35 fighter jets, which have been documented being used in Gaza, counted as offensive or defensive. And now, at a time when Israel has restated its ambition to ethnically cleanse Gaza and as the UN has warned that 14,000 children could die from famine, at a time Sarwar could be pushing UK Labour on all the points above – he has done none of the above, publicly at least. Margaret Curran is back In other news, Baroness Curran has been appointed a minister in the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero. The 66-year-old, who lost her Glasgow seat in the Commons at the 2015 election, had previously served as shadow Scottish secretary. Her son, Chris Murray, is Scottish Labour MP for Edinburgh East and Musselburgh.

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