Agora que por cá vamos voltar a ter socialistas de esquerda a substituir socialistas de direita é interessante pensar o que uns conseguem fazer e outros não:
"Liz Kendall, the work and pensions secretary, has described Britain's status as the "sick man of Europe" as a national disgrace as she prepares to unveil ambitious employment reforms.About £5 billion of welfare cuts are planned, with the long-term sick expected to be required to work....Those with mental health conditions will also find it harder to claim separate disability benefits. Hundreds of thousands of people could find their payments reduced. There are more than 9.3 million working-age people in the UK who are not looking for employment....Figures published this year revealed that 2.4 million incapacity benefit claimants now have no work conditions attached to their paymentsup 50 per cent in five years. Kendall said: "Labour's message is clear: if you can work, you should, and this government is stepping up to its duty to fix this and restore trust and fairness in the system....The Treasury has told City bosses, who are spooked about the prospect of further tax rises, that savings in the welfare bill will avoid the need to reopen the budget. Welfare is expected to be one area, along with the ballooning size of the civil service, that the chancellor will target for cuts."
"Employment minister Alison McGovern has signalled Labour might tear up the process that determines financial help for sick and disabled people by 'focusing on what they can't do on a worst day, not on what they would like to do or what support they think they would need. Britain 'can't afford the level of resources', she says, ahead of a government green paper that will aim to put more people into work."
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