Our Manifesto

Mencap’s goal is to make the UK the best place in the world for people with a learning disability to lead happy and healthy lives.

The next UK government must put people with a learning disability at the heart of their legislative programme. The inequalities are recognised, the barriers and problems have been identified, and many of the solutions are known. The next UK government must work with people with a learning disability, their supporters, and organisations, to deliver change.

The houses of parliament next to a pile of rule books with a care home on the front cover

What is a Manifesto?

A manifesto is when you list a set of ideas and aims. A manifesto is usually made before an election by a political party or candidate, but organisations make them too to set out their hopes for the next government.

*Welsh language Easy Read is on the way shortly

Download our Manifesto

You can download a full version of our manifesto here

Download
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Northern Ireland and Wales manifestos

We hope all political parties heed our call, so in addition to our manifesto for England, we have also outlined the actions that we want taken in manifesto Easy Reads for Northern Ireland and Wales.

What we're asking for

Follow the links for a summary of what we're asking for. 

Social Care

Homes not Hospitals

Healthcare

Employment

Cost of living

Bullying

Social Care

People with a learning disability rely on social care for personal care, to access the community , employment , and live their lives the way they want. However, the social care system is in crisis due to chronic underfunding, with a high vacancies workforce turnover. This is leaving people with a learning disability without support and needs unmet. The next UK government must commit to fixing social care as a priority.

Easy Read

£82.15

Is how much the Minimum Income Guarantee has been reduced to per week.

£66,000,000

Is how much care charges have increased between 2021-2023 

152,000

Vacancies in the Care Sector in England alone

Social care asks

  • Immediate additional funding to stabilise the social care sector and commit to a long-term funding settlement.
  • Remove social care charging for working-aged disabled adults (the Minimum Income Guarantee charging and Disability Related Expenditure).
  • A minimum salary for social care workers equivalent to band 3 of the NHS pay scale and a cap on agency spending.
  • A National Workforce Strategy for the social care sector.

Homes not hospitals

There are over 2,000 people with a learning disability and/ or autistic people currently locked away in mental health hospitals in England. Renewed commitment is needed to help stop the flow of people into these settings as well as ensure discharge. The NHS Long Term Plan target to reduce the number of people with a learning disability and/or autistic people in mental health hospitals by 50% by March 2024 has been missed.

Easy Read

He was held down on the floor and put into a straightjacket, for up to 14 hours a day. He had numerous broken bones, all over his body. They didn’t bath or shower him for 6 whole months. He went in at 14 stone, and he came out at 7.5 stone. 

- Leo, mother to Stephen

Homes Not Hospitals Asks

  • Reform the Mental Health Act including ensuring people cannot be detained in mental health hospitals solely on the basis of having a learning disability or autism without a co-occurring mental health condition.
  • Invest in the right community support to stop the inappropriate detention of people with a learning disability and autistic people.
  • Update and strengthen the Building the Right Support Action Plan and national target

Healthcare

People with a learning disability continue to face serious health inequalities, and issues accessing care. On average, males with a learning disability die 21 years younger than males from the general population, and females 23 years younger than females from the general population. The barriers people with a learning disability face when accessing healthcare include a lack of understanding of learning disability, poor access to specialist services such as dentists and eye care, a lack of learning disability nurses, and failing to be on their GP’s learning disability register .

Easy Read

21 years

Is how much younger males with a learning disability die than males from the general population

23 years

Is how much younger females with a learning disability die than females from the general population

Only 80%

of people on the learning disability register received an annual health check

Healthcare asks

  • Work with NHS England to increase the number of people with a learning disability on the learning disability register, ensuring more people receive an annual health check and a health action plan.
  • Ensure adequate resources at both national and local level for the successful roll out and desired impact of initiatives designed to combat health inequality for people with a learning disability, including the Reasonable Adjustment Flag and the revised Accessible Information Standard.
  • Implement recommendations of the Race Observatory, Health Services Safety Investigations Body (HSSIB) and Learning from Lives and Deaths of People with a Learning Disability (LeDeR) report to tackle avoidable deaths of people with a learning disability.
  • Increasing the number of learning disability nurses working across the NHS, ensuring access to specialist support when needed, particularly within secondary care.
  • Commit to funding the roll out of the Oliver McGowan Mandatory Learning Disability and Autism training across health and social care

Employment

Mencap wants to see a future where people with a learning disability receive the right support to access and stay in work. We want employers to understand that many people with a learning disability can make a valuable contribution to the workplace when supported properly

Easy Read

870,000

Working age adults in the UK with a learning disability 

26.7%

Of adults with a learning disability are employed

86%

Of people with a learning disability want a paid job

Employment asks

  • Launch a new supported employment programme for people with a learning disability, particularly for those over the age of 25, without an Education Health and Care Plan.
  • Provide long-term funding for the UK Shared Prosperity Fund.
  • Remove people with a learning disability from the benefit sanctions regime.
  • Undertake or commission a review of the adequacy of benefits.

Cost of Living

Around a third of disabled people live in poverty and disabled households already pay, on average, an additional £975 extra. Combined with fewer employment opportunities, increased risk of financial exclusion, and inadequate benefits, people with a learning disability have been disproportionately impacted by the cost of living crisis.

Easy Read

People with a learning disability and their families/carers will continue to be faced with making these desperate choices.

Annette, caseworker at the Mencap helpline

Cost of living asks

  • Provide targeted energy support through existing mechanisms by reversing changes to the Warm Home Discount so it includes people in receipt of disability benefits once more.
  • Commit to introducing a mandatory, progressively funded energy social tariff for disabled people and their carers.
  • Provide long-term funding for the Household Support Fund.
  • Coordinate and manage the introduction of a universal Priority Services Register across essential services.
  • Ensure people with a learning disability have equitable access to financial services.

Bullying

People with a learning disability should be able to live their lives without fear of being bullied or subject to hate crimes. More must be done to ensure people with a learning disability are safe when online or out in their community.

Easy Read

Afterwards they started to make threatening comments to me, saying they would send someone around to my house with a knife. 

- Vicky

Bullying asks

  • Support Ofcom on the implementation of the Online Safety Act and support an awareness campaign on the new regulations.
  • Implement recommendation 114(h) of the 2016 UN Convention on the Rights of Disabled People Committee Inquiry report on tackling prejudice and negative attitudes towards disabled people.
  • Reform hate crime laws in line with the Law Commission’s recommendations.

Devolution Statement

Whilst we recognise that many of the issues highlighted in our manifesto are devolved in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, we believe it is important for political parties across the whole of the UK to listen to the voices of people with a learning disability and their family carers.