Siobhan Fenton writes:
We’ve known since May that welfare cuts under the
Conservative government would be brutal, but it wasn’t until the weekend that
we found out just how bad they're going to be.
It’s now been revealed that £12bn worth of welfare cuts will be included in next month’s budget, with even more
rolled out in the autumn spending review.
Such cuts are based on nothing
more than the Tory myth that poverty is a choice which people can be scared or
starved out of. Osborne’s logic appears to be that if the Tories make life for
poor people insufferable, they will simply choose to be well-off.
As such,
poverty is a lifestyle choice or a moral failing.
By framing the issue in this
way, the Conservatives have narrowed the conversation, and hope people won’t be
able to see the wider structural inequalities and economic failings, for which
they are responsible.
But in reality, the reason why
there are teenagers who will leave school this year and sign on for Jobseekers’
Allowance – rather going up to Oxford University like David Cameron and George
Osborne – isn't because of choices they made as individuals.
They didn't choose
to be born into a family who could not send them to Eton or St Pauls, nor did
they choose to be born into the most savage economic climate in living memory.
Nor does anyone
"choose" to be disabled.
Or to belong to a social class, gender or
ethnic group which has been economically oppressed for centuries by the
establishment.
Nor do unemployed people choose
to not be in jobs which simply do not exist.
Being further deprived of their right to live with basic
dignity will not mean that people on welfare will simply decide to become
employed or non-disabled.
Rather, these welfare cuts will serve to test, punish
and degrade them further.
Under existing cuts to welfare, there have been
reports of welfare claimants, disabled and unemployed, who have died after being sanctioned.
In July of last year, diabetic David Clapson was found dead with just £3.44 in his bank account, without food, electricity or essential medicine in his
home after his benefits were stopped.
Just last week, it emerged that Iain Duncan Smith is refusing to reveal how many people have died after having their benefits
stopped, despite the Information Commissioner telling him there was no
justification for his refusal.
Quite why he would seek to block the figures
being public is tragically transparent and represents the real cost of welfare
cuts.
For many on welfare, already
stretched to their limits by current cuts, the only "choice" posed by
£12bn welfare cuts is the choice between poverty and death.
That’s not a choice
which they themselves get to make, but a decision that has just been made by their
Tory Government, and something that those on welfare will just have to live, or
die, with.
The logic of such brutal
welfare cuts reminds me of a trick which farmers used in my village when I was
growing up in the Irish countryside.
To force a fox out of a fox hole, they set
fire to something and drop it down the hole. As the tunnel fills up with fumes
and licks of flame, the fox has two "choices": to stay and burn to
death, or rush out of the tunnel to the awaiting farmer’s pitchfork.
Similarly, this £12bn in cuts
is simply dropping fire into the welfare fox hole and waiting for people to
rush out of poverty and unemployment
But for many of the most vulnerable in
our society, there simply isn’t anywhere to run to.
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