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#KeepTheUplift: people are slamming the Tories’ Universal Credit cut

Steve Topple by Steve Topple
15 July 2021
in Trending, UK
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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The Tories’ cut to Universal Credit was at the front of many people’s minds on Wednesday 14 July. A campaigning trade union group had organised a day of action across the UK on the 14th.

Universal Credit chaos

The Canary has been covering Universal Credit during the coronavirus (Covid-19) pandemic. There’s been a lot of debate about the £20 a week uplift. In April 2020, the DWP increased the rate of Universal Credit by this amount. Then, the chancellor Rishi Sunak confirmed in his Budget on Wednesday 3 March 2021 that the DWP would keep the £20 uplift. But as the Mirror pointed out, 6 million people still faced a:

£20-a-week cut

This is because Sunak and the DWP have only put the £20 increase in place until September 2021.

The Canary previously reported on how some research called the £20 uplift “inadequate” anyway. It found that people were still financially struggling on Universal Credit. This was even with the extra money. Now, the government has also released the latest inflation figures. The cost of goods and services, driven by increases to things like food, rose by 2.5% year-on-year in June. This may well mean that the £20 uplift is now worth less than it was in April 2020.

So, amid all this on 14 July, people were campaigning to keep the £20 – and more.

Unite against the cut

Unite Community is a division of Unite the Union. It’s been taking action against the Tories’ and DWP’s £20 cut. The group said on Facebook:

A warm home and food are not luxuries but for the six million people who rely on Universal Credit to get by, it’s literally the difference between eating and heating.

Unite Community organised leafleting sessions and street stalls across the UK. And people took to social media to call out the Tories’ action.

#KeepTheUplift

People were posting using #KeepTheUplift and #CancelTheCut. A Mirror journalist got involved:

Love this from Unite Community.
One of the most pernicious cuts of all, & just the start of a new stealth austerity, done with a winning smile from the Chancellor.
After years of anti-welfare rhetoric, street stalls a great way to explain what UC cut really means#CancelTheCut https://t.co/cYjNtXUkwE

— Real Britain Ros (@realbritainros) July 14, 2021

So did several Labour MPs:

The £20 Universal Credit income boost is paying for basics like food and heating, not luxuries.

Please sign up to support @Unite_Community’s campaign to #CanceltheCut to Universal credit and extend it to all claimants. #20MoreForAll https://t.co/yDBDH5giA3 pic.twitter.com/SBGNahAtxa

— Ian Lavery (@IanLaveryMP) July 14, 2021

The £20 Universal Credit uplift has meant the difference between having to choose between heating and eating for so many.

I am supporting @Unite_Community’s campaign to #CanceltheCut to UC and extend it to all claimants.

Join the campaign here👇https://t.co/6fN55fAb4h pic.twitter.com/F8Ppgqg2go

— Carolyn Harris (@carolynharris24) July 14, 2021

People shared their personal stories:

When I left my husband and had my first baby last year, I went on benefits for the first time in my life. The £20 uplift has massively helped me and my premature daughter to be able to live! #keeptheuplift https://t.co/ebyXf3MD0h

— Beth Hiscox OTS (@BethHiscox) July 7, 2021

People also used #20MoreForAll. This is because 2.2 million people still claim so-called ‘legacy benefits’. These include Employment and Support Allowance (ESA). Three-quarters of these claimants are disabled people. And the government has not increased their social security payments in line with the Universal Credit uplift.

The cruellest of cuts

Sunak and the DWP’s £20 a week cut will further entrench deprivation in the UK. As The Canary has documented, inequality and poverty have got worse since March last year. For example:

  • The number of households living in destitution more than doubled in 2020.
  • A parliamentary report suggested more people died of coronavirus and suffered unnecessarily during the pandemic due to historical Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) cuts.
  • People using foodbanks rose even more; 33% for the Trussell Trust alone.

Now, the Tories seem hell-bent on making matters worse. The opposition to this needs to be strong and vocal. And Unite Community’s day of action served as an important part of the fight.

Featured image via Unite Community 

Tags: Conservative PartyDepartment for Work and Pensions (DWP)disabilityprotestuniversal credit
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