Skip to main content
Scope demands 'overhaul' of PIP system after its chairman has benefits cut
Scope chairman Andrew McDonald

DISABILITY charity Scope is calling for an overhaul of Personal Independence Payments (PIP) after its chairman Andrew McDonald had his benefits cut despite being diagnosed with Parkinson's disease and incurable prostate cancer.

PIP is currently distributed to nearly two million people in Britain and the points-based benefit pays claimants between £57.30 for applicants with eight points and £85.60 for 12 or more towards daily living each week.

Mr McDonald said the daily living element of his PIP was withdrawn entirely after an assessment reduced his points from 11 to two because of “informal observations” by the assessor.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
universal credit
Universal credit / 25 November 2025
25 November 2025

DYLAN MURPHY reports that far from helping people back into work, the sanctions regime is inflicting unnecessary trauma on working-class families

Business Secretary Peter Kyle, Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves and Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer on stage ahead of Reeves's keynote speech during the Labour Party Conference at the Liverpool Arena, September 29, 2025
Labour Party Conference 2025 / 30 September 2025
30 September 2025

Labour will find increases in the state pension age are unacceptable, just as cuts to the Winter Fuel Allowance, personal independence payments and universal credit are — it needs to change direction immediately, writes PCS general secretary FRAN HEATHCOTE

A Universal Credit sign on a door of a job centre plus in ea
Features / 12 September 2025
12 September 2025

A new report from the Citizens Advice destroys the government narrative about disabled people ‘choosing’ not to work, showing the £3,000 annual cuts will create a two-tiered system based on claim dates rather than needs, writes DYLAN MURPHY