Skip to main content
War veteran wins benefit appeal
Victory for Morning Star campaign as Amber Rudd’s miserly department loses in court
Ex-Royal Air Force man Jonathan Williams (second right)

A DISABLED war veteran is celebrating victory today after winning a David and Goliath battle with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) over cut benefits.

The Morning Star has followed the struggle of ex-Royal Air Force (RAF) man Jonathan Williams, who was stripped of his £100-a-week stipend just before Christmas.

Last week he took Amber Rudd’s department to court, demanding she reinstate his Employment Support Allowance (ESA).

We can now reveal that Mr Williams won his appeal — and thanked the Star for covering his case.

“I’m so happy,” he told the paper. “It’s been such a weight on me for over six months.

“It should never have come to this but I’m so glad I’ve highlighted it.”

A tribunal in Newport, south Wales, found he has “a limited capability for work-related activity” and warned there was a “substantial risk” to his physical and mental health.

Mr Williams, a regular reader of the Star, served with the UN in Bosnia where he was trapped under fire in the siege of Sarajevo.

The events left him with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).

He also served several tours of duty in Northern Ireland during the Troubles and was injured on exercise in the Arctic Circle when a helicopter landed on him.

The RAF veteran received incapacity benefits from 2001 until last year, when an agency worker declared him fit to work despite medical evidence to the contrary.

Mr Williams slammed Tory welfare cuts, saying the assessment process was “shocking” and lacked input from medically qualified staff. 

It was only at the tribunal stage that a doctor considered the evidence and immediately recognised Mr Williams’ disability. 

He commented: “This shows as clear as day that the assessment process is a way of trying to weed out people from claiming benefits.”

The DWP responded: “In most successful appeals decisions are overturned because people have submitted more evidence.

“Only a small proportion of all decisions are overturned, but our aim is for every person to feel they are treated fairly and we are improving how we support disabled people.”

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
SMILING ASSASSINS: Contra rebels in Nicaragua
Extract / 21 January 2020
21 January 2020
Investigative journalist PHIL MILLER'S new book exposes the activities of Keenie Meenie Services, a powerful and secretive mercenary company which, from Sri Lanka to Nicaragua, has been involved in war crimes around the world.
Captain Dean Sprouting
Britain / 10 October 2019
10 October 2019
US soldiers' 'entirely improper' driving of forklift truck crushed Captain Dean Sprouting
A US airman secures a fuel line on the flightline at Royal A
Britain / 26 September 2019
26 September 2019
Similar stories
Ellen Clifford (right) outside the High Court with her solic
Features / 13 February 2025
13 February 2025
EMMA COTTON explains the significance of a recent win at the High Court for a disability rights campaigner against the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions over a ‘misleading’ and ‘unfair’ consultation on social security cuts 
The door of 10 Downing Street, London, October 20, 2022
Britain / 2 January 2025
2 January 2025
Department for Work & Pensions in Westminster, London
Britain / 10 December 2024
10 December 2024