Benefits for Those Unemployed Due to Illness or Disability
The amount of welfare benefits paid to those unemployed due to disability or illness has been the subject of a number of votes in Parliament.
Photo:
UK Parliament
Corri Wilson consistently voted for paying higher benefits over longer periods for those unable to work due to illness or disability
TheyWorkForYou has automatically calculated this MP’s stance based on all
of their votes on the topic. You can browse the source
data on PublicWhip.org.uk.
-
On 20 Jul 2016:
Corri Wilson voted not to cut housing benefit for recipients in supported housing.
Show vote
This policy conflicts with:
-
On 8 Jun 2016:
Corri Wilson voted against reductions in benefits for disabled and ill claimants required to participate in activities intended to increase their chances of obtaining work.
Show vote
This policy conflicts with:
-
On 2 Mar 2016:
Corri Wilson voted to make the removal of the work-related activity component from employment and support allowance conditional on an impact assessment and to require Parliament to approve details of implementing the change.
Show vote
This policy conflicts with:
-
On 2 Mar 2016:
Corri Wilson voted to make the removal of the limited capability for work element of universal credit conditional on an impact assessment and to require Parliament to approve details of implementing the change.
Show vote
This policy conflicts with:
-
On 27 Oct 2015:
Corri Wilson voted to retain the "work-related activity component" in the Employment and Support Allowance.
Show vote
This policy conflicts with:
-
On 27 Oct 2015:
Corri Wilson voted to retain the "limited capability for work" element of Universal Credit.
Show vote
This policy conflicts with:
-
On 27 Oct 2015:
Corri Wilson voted against reducing the household benefit cap, against freezing the rate of many working-age benefits, against reducing social rents in England and against other changes to the benefits system.
Show vote
This policy conflicts with:
-
On 20 Jul 2015:
Corri Wilson voted against reducing the household benefit cap, against freezing the rate of many working-age benefits, against reducing social rents in England and against other changes to the benefits system.
Show vote
This policy conflicts with:
Agreements are when Parliament takes a decision without holding a vote.
This does not necessarily mean universal approval, but does mean there were no (or few) objections made to the decision being made.
No scoring agreements are part of this policy while this member was elected.
Agreements are when Parliament takes a decision without holding a vote.
This does not necessarily mean universal approval, but does mean there were no (or few) objections made to the decision being made.
No informative agreements are part of this policy while this member was elected.