Political editor, Wales News
The Welsh government says it will not publish a letter to the first minister from the UK government’s work and pensions secretary about the impact of welfare reform in Wales, a day after confirming they had received it.
Eluned Morgan had written to Liz Kendall on 11 March requesting a Wales-specific assessment, but it is not known whether any such work has been done.
On Friday, the first minister refused to back the reforms until she knew more.
Last week the chancellor confirmed a tightening of eligibility for personal independence payments and a freeze on some Universal Credit payments.
Plaid Cymru wrote to the FM on Sunday, with its leader Rhun ap Iorwerth demanding that Kendall’s response “be published in full, without delay.”
Morgan has previously said that the changes would have a greater impact in Wales because of the relatively high level of claimant rates.
The welfare reforms come as the Chancellor, Rachel Reeves, looks to boost defence funding and tries to meet her own self-imposed fiscal rules, including not borrowing to pay for day-to-day spending.
In her Spring Statement on Wednesday she announced a number of benefit changes, including tightening qualification rules for Personal Independence Payments (Pips) – the main disability benefit – claimed by more than 250,000 working aged people in Wales.
In her address to MPs, Reeves said “it can’t be right” to “write off” an entire generation who are out of work and improperly using Pips.
Reeves also confirmed health-related universal credit for new claimants, which was already due to be halved from April 2026 under a package announced last week, would be frozen at its new lower level of £50 per week until 2030.
Health-related payments will be frozen for existing claimants.
A DWP assessment found 3.2m families across England and Wales would be worse off as a result of the changes, with 250,000 more people pushed into relative poverty.
‘Personally spoke to No.10’
The issue has become politically-charged in Wales, because of the country’s relatively high level of benefits claims and after Morgan revealed a fortnight ago that she “personally spoke to number ten” about her concerns.
A copy of Morgan’s letter to Kendall, dated 11 March, was then released to the media.
But in a session of the Senedd’s Scrutiny of the First Minister Committee last Friday the first minister confirmed that she had not spoken to the Prime Minister Keir Starmer and could not remember who she had spoken to.
In the same session Morgan said she was reserving her position until she had more information.
Other Labour politicians have been openly critical of the planned reforms.
The Blaenau Gwent MS Alun Davies warned that some of his constituents were “terrified”.
The Labour MP for Montgomeryshire and Glyndwr, Steve Witherden, repeated his calls for a wealth tax, and in a post on X warned that “lives would be shortened” by the changes.
The Welsh government said it would be up to the sender to release the letter.
Wales has asked the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) if it intends to.