Table of Contents
1. 🧩 What’s the U‑Turn About?
Facing significant rebellion from its own MPs, Labour partially reversed planned cuts to Personal Independence Payments (PIP) and Universal Credit (UC). Key concessions announced on 30 June 2025 include:
- Existing PIP claimants remain unaffected, with only new applications from November 2026 subject to stricter criteria.
- UC recipients keep their current income levels, with a new UC standard rate of £106/week by April 2026—protecting over 2 million families from losses of £250–500/year.
2. 💰 Fiscal Impact: £2.5 Billion to the Treasury
The concessions slash projected welfare savings from around £5 billion to £2–2.5 billion by 2029–30. The U-turn itself will cost £2.5 billion—although some estimates suggest the refinancing could reach £3 billion, accounting for reinstated winter fuel payments .
3. ⚠️ Who’s Still at Risk?
Despite the changes, the revised welfare package still risks pushing 150,000 people into poverty by the end of the decade—significantly lower than the 250,000 projected under original plans, but still concerning .

4. 🏛️ Political Fallout & Internal Tensions
- Over 120 Labour MPs threatened rebellion, accusing leadership of “austerity-lite” measures and calling for more compassionate reform .
- Critics argue the two-tier system for new vs. existing claimants unfairly punishes future recipients .
- Prominent voices like Andy Burnham, Richard Burgon, and Sadiq Khan label the bill inadequate and warn further amendments are needed .
5. 🛠️ Government Defense & Next Steps
- Liz Kendall (Work & Pensions Secretary) emphasizes the need to balance fiscal responsibility with support, including £3.8 billion in employment support .
- Keir Starmer asserts the revised plan is “balanced and fair” .
- The Timms Review, co-designed with disabled individuals, is due by autumn 2026—and will further shape PIP reforms.
6. 🔍 Summary Table
Focus Area | Original Plan | Revised Position |
---|---|---|
PIP (existing) | Cut & reassess | No change until reassessment (Nov 2026) |
PIP (new claims) | Higher eligibility threshold | Apply only to new claims from Nov 2026⬇️ |
Universal Credit | Reducible | Fixed £106/week standard rate |
Fiscal Savings | £5 billion | Now £2–2.5 billion savings, U-turn costs apply |
Poverty Impact | +250,000 people | +150,000 people by 2030 |
7. 📝 Expert & Charity Perspective
- Disability advocates say reforms still “deeply flawed” with one million potentially affected post-2026 .
- Labour backbenchers demand a wealth tax alternative and an equitable safety net .
- The Opposition portrays the U-turn as a political maneuver rather than a genuine change of direction .
✅ Final Takeaway
Labour’s reduced welfare contraction comes at a steep cost—£2.5 billion by 2029–30. While easing some burden from current claimants, it still places 150,000 lives at risk. The political backlash and looming Timms Review indicate the bill remains a flashpoint in Westminster. For MPs and affected citizens alike, this is not the end of the story—but the beginning of a deeply contested debate on poverty, fairness, and fiscal discipline.
