An estimated million disabled people will lose their benefits as part of Labour’s overhaul of the ballooning welfare budget.
Work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall announced that the bulk of the changes, aimed at saving £5bn by 2030, would fall on personal independence payments (PIP) by raising the threshold that people can qualify for them.
The changes come after concerns that the bill for those on disability and long term sickness benefits will hit £70bn by 2030 with the number of claimants rising from the current 2.8m to 4m.
Charities, trade unions and leftwing Labour MPs united to brand the changes “immoral” even though there was some welcome for other measures, including not freezing the level of PIPs and ending regular assessments.

Charles Gillies, senior policy officer at the MS Society said: “These immoral and devastating benefits cuts will push more disabled people into poverty, and worsen people’s health.”
PCS union general secretary Fran Heathcote said: “Targeting the most vulnerable with benefit cuts to meet arbitrary fiscal rules is an immoral choice at any time, but at a time of rising poverty, long NHS waiting lists and when the cost-of-living crisis continues to bite is abhorrent.”
But Ms Kendall said: “This is a significant reform package that is expected to save over £5 billion in 2029/30 and the OBR (Office for Budget Responsibility) will set out their final assessment of the costings next week.”
She pointed out that there were 1,000 new PIP claimants every week which she described as “unsustainable”.
Amid a barrage of criticism, Sir Keir Starmer later tweeted in support: “This government will always protect the most severely disabled people to live with dignity. But we’re not prepared to stand back and do nothing while millions of people — especially young people — who have potential to work and live independent lives, instead become trapped out of work and abandoned by the system. It would be morally bankrupt to let their life chances waste away.”
Under the current system PIP claimants can qualify for standard support by accumulating eight points and enhanced support by accumulating 12 points.
Points are awarded for different levels of disability in 14 categories ranging 0 to 8 points based on severity. But from next year anyone claiming PIPs will need to have a score of at least 4 points in one or more category.
This would include being unable to cook, wash or go to the toiletry without help or need more than 3.5 hours of therapy a week.

But there was anger from charities.
Dr Sarah Hughes, Chief Executive of Mind, said: “Mental health problems are not a choice – but it is a political choice to make it harder for people to access the support they need to live with dignity and independence. These reforms will only serve to deepen the nation’s mental health crisis.”
In parliament, MPs gave a mixed reaction.
Debbie Abrahams, Labour MP for Oldham East and Saddleworth, warned the government against “balancing the books on the backs of sick and disabled people”.
Labour Norwich South MP Clive Lewis added: “I would like her department to be able to look my constituents in the eye to tell them this is going to work for them. My constituents, my friends, my family are very angry about this and they do not think this is the kind of action a Labour government takes.”
The government also said it will not publish the equality impact assessment and the poverty analysis detailing the impact of benefit cuts.
Ms Kendall said the current social security system is “failing the very people it is supposed to help and holding our country back”.
Addressing Parliament, Ms Kendall announced the “work capability assessment” for universal credit – which is used to determine eligibility for incapacity benefit payments based on someone’s fitness for work – will be scrapped in 2028.
She said instead extra financial support for health conditions will in future be based on a person’s health or disability, rather than their capacity to work.
She also said the government will bring in a “permanent, above-inflation rise” to the standard allowance of universal credit as well as legislating to “rebalance” payments for the benefit.
Ms Kendall said this would equate to a £775 annual increase in cash terms by 2029.
The Conservatives branded the government’s welfare reforms as “too little, too late”, with Ms Kendall being urged to be “tougher”.
Shadow work and pensions secretary Helen Whately told the Commons: “This is a now or never chance to seize the moment, a now or never for millions of people who will otherwise be signed off for what could end up being a lifetime on benefits, but this announcement today leaves me with more questions than answers.