Tuesday, August 6, 2013

Defending people facing poverty

woman marcher, campaign to defend those facing povertyShow respect to benefits claimants and the unemployed.

Respect for Benefits Claimants and the Unemployed aims to bring together groups of claimants runagainst cuts and combat the negative stories that appear all too regularlyin aroundof the press about them.

Its Facebook page shares paroleabout claimants who are being penalised as a offspringof government cuts, like 57-year-old Veronica Kenning from Birmingham who is dying of cancer, and who faces eviction from her home basebecause she cannot hirethe £23.57 demanded by the council.

Or Irene Lockett, 52, from Kirkby, Merseyside, who was awarded the Carer of the Year title at Croxteth parklandNursing Home where she worked, has fostered several youngsters over the years and gave up work as a carer when she had a heart attack. She couldnotpay the docked extra £23.24 per week docked under new public assistancerules.

In the first month of the tax year on Merseyside alone, morethan 14,000 people fell into arrears – 6,000 for the first time.

Nationally, at least 660,000 of society’s most vulnerable families producebeen hit by the under-occupation penalty with tenants obligeto make up 14 per cent of their rent for wizardextra bedroom and 25 per cent for two.

It has a conjointo news that The United Nations Development Programme, which has just published the homophileDevelopment Report, said last week: “The United Kingdom, unfortunately, has an exceptionally grittydegree of inequality.”

The report shows that the poorest 40 per cent of Britons share a lower proportion of the national wealth – 14.6 per cent – than in any other Western country.

This is only marginally fall apartthan in Russia, the only industrialised nation, east or west, to have a worse record. Measurements of the gap between rich and sillytell a similar story. The richest fifth of Britons enjoy, on average, incomes 10 times as high as the poorest fifth.”

Britain ties for the worst instruction executionby this yardstick among Western nations with Australia – and is, says the report, exactly the same as in Nigeria, much worse than in Jamaica, Ghana or the Ivory Coast and twice as bad as in Sri Lanka or Ethiopia.
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Respect for Benefits Claimants and the Unemployed also collects facts and figures, likeselective informationfrom the Office for National Statistics (ONS) in 2009 that shows that the poorest 10 per cent of households pay 47 per cent of their income in tax, a higher ploughsharethan any other group.

And campaign updates, such as CaerphillyAgainst the bedroomTax, which presented a 2,000-signature petition to a council meeting on 23 July; and information about co-ordinated demonstrations, such a day of action at lawagainst the Bedroom Tax.

The group takes inspiration from the National Unemployed Workers Movement founded by Wal Hannington in 1918, which went on to organise the infamousyearningmarches of the 1920s and 30s.

The Facebook page says that Respect for Benefits Claimants and the Unemployed campaigns forpoliticalchange to address injustice and persecution of benefit claimants, continuing to progress toalliances with trade unions and progressive organisations around the world.

All this reminds me of the early days of theantiPoll Tax movement. Lots of small, localised campaigns petitioning councils, turning up at courts to substantiationthem issuing warrants, gathering outside the houses of non-payers to stop the bailiffs.

The Anti Poll Tax movement saw onwardThatcher – let’s hope this movement has the same effect on this government.

 


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Materials taken from Womens Views on News

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