Politics
DWP ‘honesty’ isn’t what it seems
The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) decided yesterday to share why the number of people claiming Universal Credit (UC) has risen. This came as a surprise to disabled campaigners, who have been fighting against the waves of disability hatred coming from the DWP for years.
The DWP being honest? Nahhh
While hatred against benefit claimants has always been bad, it seems to have ramped up overwhelmingly in the last couple of years. Not just from the media, which is of course fed the stories by the DWP, but also from ministers and MPs themselves.
But, after months of pushing that too many on Universal Credit are unemployed layabouts, Labour are apparently telling the truth. That the main reason there’s a huge influx is UC claims is that the DWP are making people switch over to UC.
On Twitter, they declared:
Here’s what’s actually happening with the increase in the Universal Credit caseload
Nearly 80% of the increase is people being moved from old benefits onto Universal Credit
Not new claims
A transition we inherited
Data source https://t.co/mnxKOZS3fP pic.twitter.com/SgzDOjuu7s
— Department for Work and Pensions (@DWPgovuk) February 17, 2026
The chart attached showed that in the last year, 1 million new people claimed Universal Credit. However, 800,000 of those are people who’d been forced to move over.
They quickly followed this up with sharing how many claimants couldn’t work and how forced migration inflated those figures too. Though it wasn’t reported by the DWP in that way:
And it’s the same story for those with no work requirements – at least 72% of that increase is legacy benefit claimants moving across
It’s felt very odd that they just out of the blue shared this, seemingly completely off their own backs, on a random afternoon. Especially considering that just a few months ago, they were feeding the rags ffigures on how it’d “shot up”.
There’s always a reason
For many, it was jarring to see them be so honest, but the reason why is there for everyone to see. And as usual, it’s in their sly wording.
The DWP should surely have used their own classification when reporting this second dataset- “people with limited capability for work”. Instead, they chose to say “those with no work requirements”. This implies that they’re choosing not to work, when they’ve actually already gone through a gross assessment process and been judged as not fit for work.
This subtle change in language has fueled the rags in their hatred of disabled people, because instead of it being clearly understood, this lets people draw their own conclusions. And that’s exactly what they want.
This display of “transparency” also says nothing of the 400,000 people who lost their benefits because they found the migration process too complex. But hey the DWP don’t give a fuck about them, so why should the public?
We also can’t gloss over the fact that they’re still blaming the Tories, despite having been in power for almost two years. And in that time, they’ve only made the culture worse for disabled claimants.
Disabled unemployed people screwed again
It’s no coincidence that while they’re just casually throwing out figures, DWP bigwig Pat McFadden is trying any way possible to force disabled people into work. As of April, new claimants who can’t work will get £200 less a month.
When announcing this change, the DWP said they were tackling “perverse incentives” that make people “choose” benefits over finding work. I’m not sure you can call supporting people too sick to work “perverse”, but then I don’t hate disabled people.
This is, of course, more propaganda so they can continue forcing disabled people into work. Pushing ahead with his disgusting Get Britain Working plan, McFadden is now introducing Mobile Jobcentres. Finally, an even grosser pop-up than when Embarrassing Bodies would arrive in town to tell young women their acne made them ugly!
DWP not fit for purpose
More than anything though, this just feels like another desperate attempt by the DWP to show that they are actually in any way fit for purpose. When countless committees, from Work and Pensions to Public Accounts are proving otherwise.
While this sharing of information seemed pretty inconspicuous, we must remember that the DWP always has an agenda. This wasn’t them finally being honest, they were further embedding that disabled unemployed people are the problem. And scarily one they plan to fix by any means necessary.
Featured image via the Canary