All demandments

A FAIRER WELFARE SYSTEM

The UK’s welfare system is suffocating — not because the idea was flawed, but because you broke the deal.

For generations, British families worked, paid taxes, and contributed. They defended this country. Rebuilt it after war. Showed up in factories, in hospitals, in classrooms. And in return, they were promised something simple:

We will pay in — and when we need it, the state will be there. For us. For our children.

That was the deal.

But instead of protecting what British taxpayers built, you opened the system to first-generation migrants, some of whom now access welfare benefits within one to five years of arriving — and in some cases, immediately.

That was never part of the deal.

You knew it wasn’t sustainable. You allowed it anyway.

And when the pressure hit, you didn’t restrict the policy — you turned on British pensioners, disabled people, and struggling families.

You betrayed the very people who built the system. And now you act surprised that trust has collapsed?

We are not here to watch it burn. We are here to take it back.

Problems

  • Unfair Access to Welfare

    You have allowed first-generation migrants to access taxpayer-funded benefits far too quickly — some within a single year of arrival. That is not fairness. That is exploitation of a system that was paid into by generations of British families — not just individuals, but entire bloodlines who contributed decade after decade.

  • A System Under Pressure

    Welfare spending is spiralling. Projections show a 26.3% increase in coming years, and over £9.5 billion is lost every year to fraud and overpayments. Meanwhile, those who paid in longest — pensioners, the disabled, the working poor — are told there’s not enough to support them. You are letting the roof collapse on the people who built the house.

  • Generational Inequality and Erosion of Trust

    British-born families are being placed at the back of the queue. Migrants with no historic contributions are granted faster access to housing, benefits, and services. This isn’t just a financial issue — it’s a violation of the moral contract that held this country together. You’ve taken what belonged to many and given it away without consent.

Solutions

  • 20-Year Contribution Requirement for Welfare Access

    You will implement a 20-year contribution requirement before first-generation migrants may access long-term welfare benefits. This reflects the generational contributions British families made on behalf of their children. A welfare net must be earned — not simply accessed on arrival.

  • Generational Responsibility for Housing and Social Services

    Access to housing, social care, and other taxpayer-funded services will prioritise those who have contributed — either personally or through intergenerational tax contributions. Britain must take care of those who built it before it can take care of those just arriving.

  • Full Transparency on Migrant Welfare Costs

    You will publish clear, public reports on how much the welfare system is spending on first-generation migrants. No more hidden figures. No more spin. If the system is sustainable, prove it. If it isn’t, fix it — before you ask struggling British citizens to sacrifice even more.

You were entrusted with managing this country’s safety net.

You turned it into a free-for-all.

You were expected to protect British taxpayers.

You made them subsidise a system that no longer protects them.

This is not radical. It is not extreme. It is the bare minimum required to restore fairness and prevent total collapse:

You broke the social contract. We’re putting it back together.

You can implement these changes — or you can stand aside and let someone who understands fairness do it for you.

But what you will not do — ever again — is force British families to fund their own exclusion