Following the
2010 general election, Duncan Smith was appointed by Prime Minister
David Cameron as
Secretary of State for Work and Pensions in the
Cameron–Clegg coalition. Under his leadership, the
Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) rolled out
Universal Credit and a new
Work Programme, as well as implemented a real terms cut in benefits. He also looked at "how to make it harder for sick and disabled people to claim
benefits" by giving DWP staff more powers to conduct benefit eligibility tests and to strip benefits from claimants with serious but time-limited health conditions. Duncan Smith was advised it would be illegal to introduce
legislation not requiring parliamentary approval. The DWP was criticised by
Oxfam and
Justin Welby for rises in food poverty. Duncan Smith himself was criticised by the
UK Statistics Authority and
National Institute of Economic and Social Research for breaking the Code of Practice for Official Statistics.
Cameron–Clegg coalition Shortly after being appointed, Duncan Smith said the government would encourage people to work for longer by making it illegal for companies to force staff to give up work at 65 and bringing forward the planned rises in the state pension age. He announced reforms to simplify
benefits and
tax credits into a single
Universal Credit payment, arguing welfare reform would make low earners better off in employment. He promised targeted work activity, sanctions and possible removal of benefits for up to three years for those who refused to work. Benefits claimants with part-time incomes below a certain threshold would become required to search for additional work or risk losing access to their benefits. He said benefits were not a route out of
child poverty but hundreds of thousands of children could be lifted out of child poverty if one of their parents were to work at least a 35-hour week at the
national minimum wage. In June 2011, Duncan Smith announced welfare-to-work programmes would be replaced with a single
Work Programme, which included incentives for
private sector service providers to help the unemployed find long term employment. The DWP announced on the 2012
United Nations' International Day of Persons with Disabilities that there would be forced work for disabled people who received welfare benefits, in order to "improve disabled people's chances of getting work by mandatory employment". In the
2012 Cabinet reshuffle, Duncan Smith was offered the job at the
Ministry of Justice replacing
Kenneth Clarke, but declined, and remained in his post at the DWP. In April 2013, Duncan Smith said he could live on £53 per week as Work and Pensions Secretary, after a benefits claimant told the BBC he had £53 per week after housing costs. Also in April, he called for wealthier people to voluntarily return universal winter fuel payments to help reduce the strain on public finances, prompting some wealthier pensioners to state they had already tried this but had their offers refused because there was no mechanism for returning payments. In the same month, the DWP was subject to an "excoriating" National Audit Office report, accusing the DWP of having "weak management, ineffective control and poor governance" and of wasting £34 million on inadequate computer systems. Duncan Smith dismissed allegations in
Matthew d'Ancona's 2013 book
In It Together that the Chancellor
George Osborne had referred to him as "just not clever enough". The allegations were also denied by Osborne. In May 2014, it was reported the DWP was employing debt collectors to retrieve overpaid benefits, the overpayment purely down to calculation mistakes by
HM Revenue and Customs. After the "workfare" element of the Work Programme was
successfully challenged in the courts in 2013, Duncan Smith sought to re-establish the legality of the scheme through
retrospective legislation but, in July 2014, the
High Court ruled the retrospective nature of the legislation interfered with the "right to a fair trial" under
Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. The DWP had said 1 million people would be placed on the new Universal Credit benefits system by April 2014, yet by October 2014 only 15,000 were assigned to UC. Duncan Smith said a final delivery date would not be set for this, declaring "Arbitrary dates and deadlines are the enemy of secure delivery."
Cameron majority government In August 2015, Duncan Smith was criticised after the DWP admitted publishing fake testimonies of claimants enjoying their benefits cuts. Later the same month, publication of statistics showed 2,380 people died in a 3-year period shortly after a work capability assessment declared them fit for work. This led to
Jeremy Corbyn calling for Duncan Smith's resignation. At the 2015 Conservative Party conference, Duncan Smith said to the sick and disabled "With our help, you'll work your way out of poverty" while criticising the current system, which he said "makes doctors ask a simplistic question: are you too sick to work at all? If the answer is yes, they're signed off work – perhaps for ever." In March 2016, Duncan Smith unexpectedly resigned from the
Cabinet. He stated that he was unable to accept the government's planned cuts to
disability benefits. He later launched an attack on the "government's
austerity programme for balancing the books on the backs of the poor and vulnerable", describing this as divisive and "deeply unfair", and adding: "It is in danger of drifting in a direction that divides society rather than unites it." == Later backbench career ==