New Clause 3 — Assessment of limited capability for work

Part of Orders of the Day – in the House of Commons at 4:45 pm on 9 January 2007.

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Photo of Chris Bryant Chris Bryant Labour, Rhondda 4:45, 9 January 2007

I agree that it would be utterly inappropriate for us to suggest that the vast majority of people who are in receipt of incapacity benefit are shirkers who are deliberately trying to avoid the world of work. In my experience, the vast majority would like to be in work if there were a means of the state helping them to get into it. The single most important thing that I would like to inject into the debate is the passion felt in many communities that have had a very rough time, resulting in historically high levels of deprivation, which want to get back up off their knees. They will only be able to do so if more people are able to get off benefits and into work.

Mr. Hunt, in a splendid speech, made an important point in response to Mr. Redwood when he mentioned the possibility that the Government's system of assessment might be thought to have been designed to reduce the number of people on incapacity benefit or its successor benefit. That clearly should not be the case. The Government should not be trying to use their assessment process to force people off benefit and into work. However, it is equally right—many Labour Members will feel this more acutely than others because we have higher numbers of people on incapacity benefit—that the Government should be desperately seeking to enable more people who are on those benefits to get into work.