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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
World
Linda Howard & Ryan Paton

DWP claimants could be due £1,500 back payments following appeal hearing next week

People on legacy benefits could be due thousands of back payments following an appeal hearing next week.

The £20 weekly uplift was paid to millions of people claiming Universal Credit during the pandemic. However, the support was not offered to those on legacy benefits, such as Employment Support Allowance (ESA), Income Support and Jobseeker's Allowance (JSA) - which campaign groups said disproportionately affected disabled people.

Four claimants brought a challenge to the High Court in November 2021 in relation to the UK Government's failure to apply a similar increase to legacy benefits. Two of the claimants are in receipt of ESA and the third and fourth claimants are in receipt of Income Support and JSA respectively - as the Daily Record reports.

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The High Court ruled in February that legacy claimants should not be given the same £20 weekly uplift that was paid to millions of Universal Credit claimants during the coronavirus pandemic between April 2020 and October 2021 to help with additional costs.

However, an appeal hearing is set to take place next week, one of the litigants involved in the challenge confirmed on social media. The legal team representing the four benefit claimants will present their case to the Court of Appeal on Wednesday December 7, 2022

The post, shared on Twitter, said: “I can now confirm that I have had word from legal counsel today that the hearing in the appeal of the #LegacyBenefits case will be held on 7th December 2022.”

The claimants are being represented by William Ford KC of Osbornes Law, Jamie Burton KC of Doughty Street Chambers and Desmond Rutledge of Garden Court Chambers. In August, William Ford KC at Osbornes Law, shared the long-awaited update that two million people on older-style benefits had been waiting to hear, but no date for the appeal was given. The right to appeal the ruling could now result in the four claimants involved in the case being awarded more than £1,500 in backdated payments from the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) - and set a precedent for everyone who missed out on the uplift.

While there is no guarantee a ruling in the claimants’ favour would result in backdated payments for people across the UK also on legacy benefits who missed out on the extra support, it could trigger an avalanche of similar legal challenges.

At the time of the appeal announcement, Mr Ford KC wrote on the Osbornes Law website : “On 18 February 2022 the High Court dismissed the case brought by Osbornes on behalf of 4 claimants challenging the UK Government’s failure to apply the £20 per week uplift to legacy benefit recipients that had been provided to Universal Credit claimants during the Covid-19 pandemic.

“The claimants sought permission to appeal that decision from the High Court. We can now confirm that on 3 August 2022 the Court of Appeal has granted permission to appeal."

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