The Conservatives will regret turning the NHS into a party political football

July 25, 2013 in Parliament

You can read my latest article for the Express & Echo here.

Why I support the Labour Party - Chris Hallam

July 15, 2013 in Local, Parliament

Local resident, Chris Hallam, has blogged about why he supports the Labour Party here.

My decision to donate proposed pay rise to charity

July 15, 2013 in Local, Parliament

You can read about my decision to donate the proposed rise in MPs pay to Exeter charities here.

Age UK summer fete

July 15, 2013 in Local

I had a lovely time visiting the Age UK summer fete in St Thomas Pleasure Grounds on 6th July.

 

Exeter Community Bikes

July 15, 2013 in Local

I recently visited Exeter Community Bikes, a great new project from Exeter Community Initiatives.

Article for The Exeter Daily

July 11, 2013 in Local

You can read my piece for The Exeter Daily on trade unions, the living wage and Exeter’s night life here.

An Exeter constituent on why they are joining the Labour Party

July 10, 2013 in Local, Parliament

When Ted Heath was elected in 1970, I was 10 years old and my Dad gave me a ten shilling note in celebration. Brought up in a strongly Tory and newly middle class family I never doubted that the welfare state would care for the vulnerable, and when I started to pay my taxes, did so willingly, believing this to be the case.

Fast forward 40 years. My adult autistic son is suffering severe depression and anxiety. There is a tranche of professional evidence that he needs ongoing care and support. He has a congenital immune deficiency which is linked to his coeliac disease and other long term health problems. He is destitute.

He consents me to apply for ESA on his behalf. The initial phone call takes 50 minutes and costs 31p a minute from a mobile. “Oh but you can apply online” I hear DWP chime. But my son has no money to get broadband. And he cannot get to the library because he cannot manage the crowds and noise, and when he tries, he panics, and is seen dashing into the road in front of cars. Last time he saw the GP, the consultation took place outside the surgery, the GP crouched down by my son, who was curled up in a ball in the gutter.

In receipt of the evidence that he has no income and is suffering from severe depression and anxiety, DWP computers generate 2 letters which arrive in seperate envelopes in the same post. One states that his application is defective and will not be processed. The other calculates his income as £0.00 and informs him that the government consider that is enough to live on.

Eventually we source specialised support from a VCS organisation*, who evidence and send a complex legal request to DWP for reconsideration, on my son’s behalf. My son is awarded ESA in youth (no longer available to new claimants) and middle rate DLA, as he is entitled to under the law of our land. They treat him with respect, care and kindness.

I am not jubilant that we are getting money out of the system. I don’t think my son is “lucky” to get benefits, any more than I thought he was “lucky” to get free prescriptions for gluten free flour as a child. I would rather he was not coeliac or autistic. I would rather he could earn money and pay his own bills and have expendable cash. But I am relieved that he has some income in his own right and does not have to come “cap in hand” to us.

Witnessing him experience severe panic attacks and life threatening depression broke my heart. That was three years ago, and to my great joy, my son is now well, living with his partner and studying at University. He will continue to need ongoing care and support. He will achieve great things. He wants to make a positive contribution to society.

During the last three years, I have tried and failed to convey to Iain Duncan Smith the inaccessibility of the benefits system. What happens to men like my son who don’t have family support frightens me. That the Coalition government seems not to care frightens me more. Separately from the personal anguish of this situation, the cost to the taxpayer of supporting someone while they are too unwell to work, is much more cost effective, than the long term costs of the consequences of not doing so.

Our current government claims to support disabled people in work, whilst closing the Remploy factories which enable this to happen, and using the private firm ATOS to conduct Work Capability Assessments which are not fit for purpose. Austerity measures arising from the banking crisis have been linked to the need to cut welfare spending, with the implication that those who can work are making lifestyle choices not to. Concurrently, the Coalition government has cut benefits available for low paid workers, causing great hardship to individuals and families. The plethora of food banks now needed to support destitute people is an indictment of a Government who claim “We are all in this together”.

I am joining the Labour Party and working with them to win a 2015 election victory, because I want a government that values hard working people and supports the low paid, and because I am genuinely afraid what will happen to the most vulnerable members of our society if the Tories or Coalition government win a second 5 year term.

*Quids for Kids, Devon Welfare Rights support families with children or young adults with additional needs up to the age of 22.

- By an Exeter constituent

Playing at Wimbledon

July 8, 2013 in Local

I spoke to the Express and Echo about the experience of playing at Wimbledon and the future of tennis in Exeter and across the UK, which you can read here.

My question on Marine Conservation Zones

July 5, 2013 in Local, Parliament

At yesterday’s Environment, Food and Rural Affairs questions, I asked the minister about protecting our marine environment.

Mr Ben Bradshaw (Exeter) (Lab): Vital marine habitats off Devon and Cornwall will be lost for ever because this Government are not implementing a fully ecologically coherent network of marine conservation zones or following the time scale laid down in the Marine and Coastal Access Act 2009. Will the Minister please think again and tell the Chancellor that the costs of inaction in the long run will be far greater than the costs of protecting our marine environment now?

Richard Benyon: The right hon. Gentleman is looking at marine conservation zones as if they are the only show in town. We have 42 special areas of conservation and 37 special protection areas around the English coast. About a quarter of our inshore waters are protected and we have more than 300 sites of special scientific interest in the intertidal zone. What we are trying to do with marine conservation zones is part of a much bigger picture of marine protection. We will be one of the leading countries in the world for marine conversation and the right hon. Gentleman should feel proud about that.

 

Handing in the 350,000 strong petition calling on the Prime Minister to do more to protect our seas & fish stocks in June 2013.

My question on pastoral care in the Church of England

July 5, 2013 in Parliament

Yesterday I asked the Second Church Estates Commissioner about pastoral care in the Church of England for same sex couples and their children.

Mr Ben Bradshaw (Exeter) (Lab): What guidance the Church of England plans to issue to parishes and Church schools on pastoral care for same sex couples and their children. [163104]

The Second Church Estates Commissioner (Sir Tony Baldry): The House of Bishops issued a pastoral statement before the Civil Partnership Act 2004 came into force in 2005. I expect that the House of Bishops will want to issue a further statement before the legislation on same-sex marriage comes into force. The House of Bishops is due to consider this December a report on sexuality, chaired by former permanent secretary Sir Joseph Pilling. The work of that group will assist the House of Bishops in its deliberations.

Mr Bradshaw: I am grateful for that reply, because I recently came across a case of a Christian couple in a same-sex relationship and with children in the local Church primary school to whom it was made clear by the local conservative evangelical church that they would not be welcome to worship in it. Does the hon. Gentleman agree that such intolerance and bigotry have no place whatever in the Church of England? When the Church issues guidance, it is very important that that is made quite clear to both parishes and Church schools.

Sir Tony Baldry: Of course I agree with the right hon. Gentleman about that. If he would like to give me the details of that case, I will most certainly take it up with the diocesan education officer. Children in Church schools come from a wide variety of family backgrounds, and teachers offer the same compassion and care for all. Each child is valued as a child of God and deserving of the very best that schools can offer. I would not expect any Church school to discriminate against any child, whatever their personal or family circumstances. If any right hon. or hon. Member comes across any instance where he feels that a Church school is in any way falling short of the standards that this House would expect, I hope they will get in touch with me.