Politics

Tory candidate says people with learning disabilities should be paid less than minimum wage

A Conservative candidate was met with boos and jeers from a horrified audience last night after saying people with learning disabilities should be paid less than minimum wage as “they don’t understand money”.

Sally-Ann Hart, the Conservative candidate for Hastings and Rye, defended sharing an article that argued in favour of paying disabled people less.

She was asked by a member of the audience about the article which was posted on her Facebook page.

She said:

“They should be given the opportunity to work because it’s to do with the happiness they have about working.”  

Shameful

As the audience shouted ‘shameful’ and ‘they deserve a salary’, she responded:

“Some people with learning disabilities, they don’t understand about money.”

During her response she repeated: “It’s about the happiness to work.”

Adding: “It’s about having a therapeutic exemption and the article was in support of employing people with learning disabilities, that is what it was.”

“How patronising, how dare you”

A member of the audience was heard shouting: “I’m autistic, and I want to get paid for the work I do” while another man shouted “how patronising, how dare you”.

It is understood the article being referred to was published by The Spectator in 2017 and written by Rosa Monckton, whose daughter has Downs Syndrome.

She founded a charity, Team Domenica, calling for a ‘therapeutic exemption’ to the minimum wage, to help people with learning disabilities find and maintain work.

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Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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