• Skip to main content
  • Skip to secondary menu
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Advice/Information
  • About DNS
  • Subscribe to DNS
  • Advertise with DNS
  • Support DNS
  • Contact DNS

Disability News Service

the country's only news agency specialising in disability issues

  • Home
  • Independent Living
    • Arts, Culture and Sport
    • Crime
    • Education
    • Employment
    • Housing
    • Transport
  • Activism & Campaigning
  • Benefits & Poverty
  • Politics
  • Human Rights
You are here: Home / Benefits and Poverty / DWP hides historic ‘fitness for work’ papers from National Archives
A huge concerete building about four storeys high, with a large glass annexe, with trees and a lake in the foreground

DWP hides historic ‘fitness for work’ papers from National Archives

By John Pring on 21st November 2024 Category: Benefits and Poverty

Listen

The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has stopped sending key records from a crucial period in the history of disability benefit reform to The National Archives so they can be viewed by researchers.

Under the Public Records Act, government departments have to identify documents of “historical value” and transfer them to The National Archives (pictured) by the time they are 20 years old.

But DWP has not sent any records relating to papers seen and signed by ministers and senior civil servants for more than three years, with the last batch of records only covering documents up to and including 2002.

The missing records are likely to cover the early years in the development of employment and support allowance (ESA) and the work capability assessment (WCA), which were both introduced in 2008.

In the years following 2008, the WCA process was associated with hundreds, and probably thousands, of suicides and other deaths of disabled people seeking out-of-work disability benefits.

A spokesperson for The National Archives confirmed this week that the last transfer of records from DWP in relation to “’ministers and senior officers’ papers” was in 2020 and covered records up to 2002.

The National Archives made it clear that it is government departments that decide which documents are sent to the archives, and when, and that it plays no part in those decisions.

Other major government departments, including the Home Office, the Treasury – which provided former chancellor Gordon Brown’s private office papers – the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, and the Prime Minister’s Office, have all sent records from 2003 to The National Archives.

DWP declined to produce a statement but claimed it had provided all relevant files to The National Archives.

Records previously released to The National Archives have shown how the “bureaucratic violence” of the Department of Social Security (which later became DWP) grew slowly during the 1990s through the actions of ministers and senior civil servants who devised the all work test, a forerunner of the WCA, which was introduced in 1995.

The documents are detailed in The Department*, a new book by Disability News Service editor John Pring, which describes how DWP later spent years covering up evidence of the links between its actions and the deaths of claimants.

Among the records were documents that showed how civil servants plotted to sideline GPs from their central role in the process of determining fitness for work.

A memo from 1992 showed how Conservative social security secretary Peter Lilley first told civil servants that he wanted to know more about how the insurance industry approached “sickness insurance”.

Another memo, from April 1993, described how ministers insisted that the new incapacity benefit – which was introduced in 1995 alongside the all work test – should “cost substantially less”, while the department should “aim to create an environment which encourages greater private sector provision”.

Other documents later revealed that the Department of Social Security was told of three deaths in late 1996 and early 1997 that were closely linked to the new all work test.

It is likely that key documents seen by Labour ministers and senior civil servants from 2003 onwards will include similar revelations concerning the initial development of the WCA and ESA.

Although the records that have been held back by DWP relate to decisions taken under the Labour government, the department’s decision to prevent them being sent to the National Archives was made under the last Conservative government.

*The Department: How a Violent Government Bureaucracy Killed Hundreds and Hid the Evidence, John Pring’s book on the deaths linked to DWP, is published by Pluto Press 

Picture by The National Archives

 

A note from the editor:

Please consider making a voluntary financial contribution to support the work of DNS and allow it to continue producing independent, carefully-researched news stories that focus on the lives and rights of disabled people and their user-led organisations.

Please do not contribute if you cannot afford to do so, and please note that DNS is not a charity. It is run and owned by disabled journalist John Pring and has been from its launch in April 2009.

Thank you for anything you can do to support the work of DNS…

Share this post:

Share on X (Twitter)Share on FacebookShare on WhatsAppShare on RedditShare on LinkedIn

Tags: 20-year rule DWP National Archives Public Records Act slow bureaucratic violence The Department work capability assessment

Image of front cover of The Department, showing a crinkled memo with the words ‘Restricted - Policy. The Department. How a Violent Government Bureaucracy Killed Hundreds and Hid the Evidence. John Pring.’ Next to the image is a red box with the following words in white: ‘A very interesting book... a very important contribution to this whole debate’ - Sir Stephen Timms, minister for social security and disability. plutobooks.com and the Pluto Press logo.

Related

Call for inquiry over deaths of parents driven to despair by DWP’s Child Maintenance Service
14th August 2025
Hundreds sign letter calling for ‘urgent’ action to stop Access to Work burn-outs and breakdowns
14th August 2025
Tory minister chose Capita director to carry out secret review of DWP deaths
7th August 2025

Primary Sidebar

On the left of the image are multiple heads of different colours - white, aqua, red, light brown, and dark green - all grouped together, then the words ‘Campaign for Disability Justice. Sign up to support. #OpportunitySecurityRespect’
Image of front cover of The Department, showing a crinkled memo with the words 'Restricted - Policy. The Department. How a Violent Government Bureaucracy Killed Hundreds and Hid the Evidence. John Pring.' Next to the image is a red box with the following words in white: 'A very interesting book... a very important contribution to this whole debate' - Sir Stephen Timms, minister for social security and disability. plutobooks.com and the Pluto Press logo.

Access

Latest Stories

Call for inquiry over deaths of parents driven to despair by DWP’s Child Maintenance Service

Letter to minister issues 10 ‘basic’ demands on rail accessibility

Hundreds sign letter calling for ‘urgent’ action to stop Access to Work burn-outs and breakdowns

Solicitor who betrayed disabled people after they sought discrimination justice is struck off

Council that oversaw increase in care home admissions is first to be rated ‘inadequate’ on social care

Disabled people still struggling to pay care workers, a month after payment company’s tech failure

M&S settles ‘David and Goliath’ legal case after installing inaccessible doors to chiller cabinets

Tory minister chose Capita director to carry out secret review of DWP deaths

Tory peer wrote secret report calling for DWP to reduce suicides and other ‘very bad cases’

Minister’s comments add fuel to Access to Work concerns

Readspeaker
Image of front cover of The Department, showing a crinkled memo with the words 'Restricted - Policy. The Department. How a Violent Government Bureaucracy Killed Hundreds and Hid the Evidence. John Pring.' Next to the image is a red box with the following words in white: 'A very interesting book... a very important contribution to this whole debate' - Sir Stephen Timms, minister for social security and disability. plutobooks.com and the Pluto Press logo.

Footer

The International Standard Serial Number for Disability News Service is: ISSN 2398-8924

  • Accessibility Statement
  • Privacy Policy
  • Site map
  • Bluesky
  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • Threads
  • Twitter

Copyright © 2025 Disability News Service

Site development by A Bright Clear Web