Following today’s news six major disability charities have warned the government about its use of ‘scrounger’ rhetoric, we look at how widespread it has become.
Six leading disability charities have spoken out against the government’s ‘scrounger’ rhetoric on welfare cuts, saying it fuels abuse of disabled people.
The Guardian reports:
While the charities speaking out – Scope, Mencap, Leonard Cheshire Disability, the National Autistic Society, Royal National Institute for the Blind (RNIB), and Disability Alliance – say inflammatory media coverage has played a role in this, they primarily blame ministers and civil servants for repeatedly highlighting the supposed mass abuse of the disability benefits system, much of which is unfounded…
Scope’s regular polling of people with disabilities shows that in September two-thirds said they had experienced recent hostility or taunts, up from 41 per cent four months before. In the last poll almost half said attitudes towards them had deteriorated in the past year.
Left Foot Forward reported about the tabloid attacks on disabled people back in June last year, following the results of an appalling survey carried out by Scope which revealed that half of London respondents said they experienced discrimination on a daily or weekly basis, and that 63 per cent of people with disabilities in London thought others did not believe they were disabled.
Dominic Browne wrote:
Many journalists cultivate the perception that if you are on a disability benefit you are either, a drug addict, a cheat, have to be forced into work, or should stop moaning because disability can be good for you. The second to last link, taken from the Mail, has a picture caption reading:
“Feet up: Claimants will lose their disability benefits as the public spending cuts bite (Posed by model).”
For an article about disabled people having their benefits cut we have a completely staged photo of a able-bodied man sitting on a sofa smoking a cigarette.
And of course just last week, Left Foot Forward reported on Rod Liddle’s disgusting – if unsurprising – attack on the ‘fake disabled’, in which he wrote:
My New Year’s resolution for 2012 was to become disabled. Nothing too serious, maybe just a bit of a bad back or one of those newly invented illnesses which make you a bit peaky for decades – fibromyalgia, or M.E…
Just the day after, James Dellingpole joined in the attack, blaming “the fake disabled” for “crippling our economy”.
But although the tabloids are doing the dirty work, the DWP is not innocent in this peddling of slurs. They routinely misrepresent their own statistics in a manner guaranteed to generate negative coverage of disabled people – and, surely coincidentally, ease the passage of their legislation.
As Steve Griffiths wrote for us last month:
The DWP press release opens with a mis-statement of the legislation:
‘The figures also show that a further 17 per cent can do some work with the right help and support’.
This interprets those assessed as belonging to the ESA work related activity group are as having been found ‘fit for work’. Yet the legislation states clearly that people qualify for ESA, including the work related activity group, because it is ‘unreasonable to expect them to work’ because of their ‘physical or mental condition’.
It is a misrepresentation that goes unchallenged almost daily.
Secondly, the 36 per cent whose claim was ‘abandoned’ before their assessment was complete are routinely represented as found ‘fit for work’.
Peddling the scrounger myth was only ever going to have one result. The DWP will have seen this coming, and the fact that they did it anyway is a disgrace.
See also:
• Look Left – The hate-filled Right hone in on their next target: Disabled people – Shamik Das, January 27th 2012
• Liddle’s latest outrage shouldn’t surprise us – Alex Hern, January 26th 2012
• It’s nearly time for the DWP’s quarterly love-in with the tabloids – Steve Griffiths, January 20th 2012
• Aggression is a fact of life for the disabled in London, as the tabloids continue to attack – Dominic Browne, June 13th 2011
• Society and the media are failing the sick and disabled – Sue Marsh, May 13th 2011
58 Responses to “The DWP’s ‘scrounger’ rhetoric is causing real harm”
Anonymous
Ah yes. Fingers in the ears.
Balletdancer
Bad News for Disabled People: How the Newspapers are Reporting Disability
by Strathclyde Centre for Disability Research and Glasgow Media Unit
http://www.gla.ac.uk/media/media_214917_en.pdf
balletdancer
Bad News for Disabled People: How the Newspapers are Reporting Disability
by Strathclyde Centre for Disability and Glasgow Media Unit
http://www.gla.ac.uk/media/media_214917_en.pdf
Look Left - Beginning of the end on the NHS bill | Left Foot Forward
[…] week’s most read: 1. The DWP’s ‘scrounger’ rhetoric is causing real harm – Alex […]
Jane Leach
RT @leftfootfwd: The DWP’s ‘scrounger’ rhetoric is causing real harm http://t.co/gFKgA5cK