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Campaigning with DPAC – Disabled People Against Cuts – gave me direction. It kept me going when I would’ve given up.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 April 2023

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Summary

Paula

In the last 12 months there’s been 64,000 reported cases of hate crime against disabled people. MPs demonise us and the media call us shirkers and work-shy. We’re on the receiving end of abuse when we go out on the street. I’ve been called a scrounger, a fraudster. We’ve been spat at. On a bus I was threatened with being punched.

When I got my letter to be reassessed for Employment and Support Allowance, I cried. Those forms are so ambiguous. They make you feel like you’re not human. It’s torturous, the financial insecurity and the hoops they put you through to prove you need support. You’re in an abusive relationship with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) that you can’t leave. You can’t enjoy life or plan anything because they can take your money away tomorrow.

We’ve all been personally impacted by austerity. I’ve gone without food to pay bills and had hospital appointments cancelled. My friend, who had bipolar, didn’t tell me she was going for the Work Capability Assessment. She was being hounded by the DWP, who made a mistake and said she’d been overpaid and owed them £26,000. When she failed the Fit for Work assessment she said, ‘I can’t deal with it.’ She jumped to her death at Petts Wood station.

Campaigning with DPAC – Disabled People Against Cuts – gave me direction. It kept me going when I would’ve given up. ATOS got over £18 billion worth of government contracts and designed the Work Capability Assessment, making a vast profit. So we made badges saying ‘ATOS Kills’. We raised awareness of how toxic this government is, how toxic these companies are. The only way they understand is when you trash their reputation and hit their profit margins. ATOS started having recruitment problems, their share price fell, and they had massive backlogs. Then in 2014 they pulled out of the government contract. People ask, ‘Is activism worth it?’ Yes, it is.

DPAC and other campaigners were instrumental in bringing about the formal investigation with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of People with Disabilities, which found that the government was guilty of grave and systematic human rights violations.

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Invisible Britain
Portraits of Hope and Resilience
, pp. 29 - 31
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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