The Spectator suggests that David Cameron is being radical in a surprising direction. He is signalling a resumption of Blair’s soon stalled effort to implement Wisconsin style welfare reforms. They’ve been copied in various ways across the US, with stunning success – to the furious chagrin of the welfare industry academics.
If Cameron carries on as indicated he must have decided that the tolerance of the UK middle voters to the welfare scandal has at last worn out. Given the apparent parallels in the paths John Key and Cameron must trace, dare we hope for a similar exception to blandness here?
In my opinion welfare reform need not be scary to middle voters, provided it targets clear bludgers, not people who can not help themselves.
Similarly, a criminal justice reform along the lines of President Clinton’s 1996 triumph should be as saleable as Clinton made it.
The US reforms tackled families, mainly mother-led single parent families, on welfare. While the UK has a problem with their ‘lone parent’ benefit it is nowhere near the problem they have with their incapacity benefits. There are around three times more people on those benefits. (Here the ration is around 1.2 to 1) Reading the article, I am not sure David Cameron appreciates this.
The Tories copying the US is just like National copying Australia. Easy to talk about.