Heading: |
Personal Independence Payment |
Question ID: |
1814506 |
UIN: |
61304 |
House: |
Commons |
Date tabled: |
2025-06-19 |
Asking Member ID: |
5177 |
Asking Member display name: |
Ann Davies
|
Asking Member handle: |
|
Asking Member Twitter reference: |
Ann Davies
|
Member interest: |
false |
Question text: |
To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, pursuant to the Answer of 23 April 2025 to Question 45439 on Personal Independence Payments and with reference to the Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill, published on 18 June 2025, |
Is named day: |
true |
Date of holding answer: |
|
Date answered: |
2025-06-25 |
Date answer corrected: |
|
Is holding answer: |
false |
Is correcting answer: |
false |
Answering Member ID: |
163 |
Answering Member display name: |
Sir Stephen Timms
|
Answering Member handle: |
stephenctimms
|
Answering Member Twitter reference: |
@stephenctimms
|
Correcting Member ID: |
|
Correcting Member display name: |
|
Correcting Member handle: |
|
Correcting Member Twitter reference: |
|
Answer text: |
The vast majority of claimants over State Pension age are on ongoing awards, with a light-touch review scheduled for 10 years. This is because we know that, as people get older, their conditions tend to get worse rather than better, and as such we think t... |
Original answer text: |
|
Comparable answer text: |
|
Answering body ID: |
29 |
Answering body name: |
Department for Work and Pensions |
Tweeted: |
true |