Good morning. Welcome back to Survival Guide.
It’s our first newsletter since Labour won its historic landslide victory. Keir Starmer promised change after 14 years of Tory rule, but the new government faces extensive challenges.
There are 14 million people living in poverty in the UK. Many are going without food and essentials. People are living in cold and damp homes, sleeping rough and relying on food banks.
The benefits system is “broken”. It’s not giving people enough money to survive, but there’s also a soaring welfare bill with which to contend. The number of people out of work because of long-term sickness is at a record high of more than 2.8 million.
Many of these people are relying on disability benefits to survive – yet it’s a system which is worsening people's physical and mental health conditions, pushing them further away from the workplace.
Will Labour offer the change which is so desperately needed? I analysed what the new government has said so far about its plans for the welfare system.
The new work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall is a controversial choice for some in the charity sector. There are signs the MP for Leicester West may take a tough stance on welfare in comparison to previous Labour governments, which you can read about here.
Another new hire as a minister in the Department for Work and Pensions is Sir Stephen Timms, who I spoke to earlier this year. He told me the DWP could be “fantastic” under Labour and that he believes “Jobcentres should be a place you go to be helped, not hit”.
Alison McGovern joins him, and she also has plenty of experience advocating for better employment support and the benefits system to be improved. She’s spoken about reforming Jobcentres, devolution and a focus on good jobs.
“When you grow up knowing what unemployment does to people – what it can do to whole towns or cities – that's a reason to be political. It is mine,” McGovern said.
In this week's issue, we meet people with lived experience of poverty who call on the government to make changes. Also, read to the end for some advice on navigating that tricky disability benefits system.
If you have a story to share, we want to listen. Get in touch at isabella.mcrae@bigissue.com or share your story here.
'Dear Keir Starmer, I'm a single mum and NHS worker. Please don't make me regret voting for you'