The government has agreed concessions - but some MPs still aren't happy
As of yesterday, 127 Labour MPs had signed a "reasoned amendment" to Sir Keir Starmer's welfare bill, which questioned the planned reform.
The bill was intended to restrict eligibility for the PIP - the main disability payment in England- and limit the sickness-related element of universal credit, to help shave 拢5bn off the welfare budget by 2030.
But overnight, the government agreed concessions to this group of rebels, offering adjustments to the "pace of change" to personal independent payments and universal credit.
This has appeased some MPs - including lead signatory Dame Meg Hillier - but not all.
Here's a round-up of Labour members who have publicly said they're still not happy:
Richard Burgon said on X that the changes simply make "a very bad bill less awful". He said it is "nowhere near good enough" and he will "vote against the bill".
Nadia Whittome agreed "these concessions aren't enough and they should worry us all". She will also vote again the bill on Tuesday.
Peter Lamb said the changes are "insufficient when better options have repeatedly been put forward and ignored".
Brian Leishman said the proposed reform amounts to a "two-tier welfare programme that would still put people into poverty".
Rachael Maskell said it is clear that the bill "cannot and must not be saved". She added: "The only option is to withdraw the bill, rethink and start to rebuild trust with disabled people".
Ian Byrne also urged the government to withdraw the bill. He said it is "an awful piece of legislation that will cause huge and lasting damage to my disabled constituents and those across the UK".
Diane Abbott agreed that "dropping it is the only way". She said: "Phoney 'concessions' will not fundamentally improve [the] disability benefit cuts bill".
Clive Lewis said he will be voting against the bill. He said: "This smacks of a face saving exercise more than it does doing right by my sick and disabled constituents".
Cat Eccles told the BBC's World at One programme that the changes to the welfare reforms are "too little, too late".