While the government falls apart over Brexit, Universal Credit is in the news again. On the day the disgraced former home secretary Amber Rudd rejoined the Cabinet as work and pensions secretary, the United Nations (UN) slammed Universal Credit in a report on poverty in the UK.

And though the government might be hoping it slips under the radar as Brexit discussions rumble on, other politicians aren’t letting that happen.

Government condemned

One of those who called out the government over Universal Credit’s failings was Green Party co-leader, Jonathan Bartley. He tweeted, condemning the policy and the wider package of welfare reforms. And in it, he summed up everything that’s wrong with Universal Credit and other changes the government has made to benefits.

Bartley referenced the findings of the damning UN report:

14m in poverty. 1.5m destitute. Government in breach of human rights relating to women, children and the disabled. All entirely avoidable & the result of political choices. Scrap sanctions & universal credit. Reverse welfare cuts. Introduce a basic income. https://t.co/0DGI3Xagcv — Jonathan Bartley (@jon_bartley) November 17, 2018

But Bartley wasn’t alone in laying into the government. Other politicians also criticised the impact of its welfare reforms.

Fellow Green Party politician and MEP for South West England and Gibraltar, Molly Scott-Cato shared Bartley’s tweet. She added that Universal Credit was an example of “shameful inhumanity” and hit out at “cruel Tory welfare policy”:

Enough! We must end this shameful inhumanity Last night I saw a huge number of people sleeping in shop doorways in Bristol. Ordinary, decent people who have been made homeless by cruel Tory welfare policy Why are 40% of people still intending to vote Conservative? https://t.co/LtubyWEitT — Molly Scott Cato MEP (@MollyMEP) November 17, 2018

Labour’s Shadow Home Secretary Diane Abbott was also among those who shared the critique of the government:

Whether it is the people that come to my advice sessions or the increasing numbers of homeless on the streets, I am ashamed that a wealthy country like the UK has these spiralling levels of poverty. #austerity https://t.co/iPiS4kpI9v — Diane Abbott (@HackneyAbbott) November 16, 2018

Universal Credit: “Punitive, mean-spirited and often callous”

It’s unsurprising that politicians are lining up to attack the government over Universal Credit, as the UN’s report was utterly damning. The report claimed that Universal Credit and wider welfare reforms are a:

punitive, mean-spirited, and often callous approach apparently designed to instill discipline where it is least useful

It went on to claim the reforms are designed:

to impose a rigid order on the lives of those least capable of coping with today’s world, and elevating the goal of enforcing blind compliance over a genuine concern to improve the well-being of those at the lowest levels of British society

Elsewhere, the report criticised the wider package of government austerity measures for shocking human impacts. The report showed that one in five people in the UK currently lives in poverty. It also highlighted that 1.5 million people are unable to afford even basic essentials.

The publication of the UN report gives additional weight to existing criticism of Universal Credit. Earlier this month, the Trussell Trust argued that the introduction of Universal Credit was increasing the numbers of people using food banks. The Observer also found in October that it is a significant contributor to homelessness. And a study of claimants on Universal Credit found that it was impacting their mental health so much that some were considering suicide.

The UN report supported all of these findings.

As the Conservative Party tears itself apart over Brexit, the evidence is still mounting against Universal Credit. The UN report and the condemnations from politicians are just the latest part of this evidence. But what it all shows is that Universal Credit must be scrapped.

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Featured image via Jwslubbock – Wikimedia Commons