Caroline Flint only recently left as job as welfare reform minister so perhaps she forgot which post she was in?
Seriously though, Joe's right, we do need an alternative blueprint for welfare reform, one that neither follows the two main parties in their current "who's toughest" contest, nor simply leaves people to rot on unemployment or incapacity benefit over the long-term.
Obviously, basic skills training, access to affordable child care and tackling the benefits trap through a higher minimum wage and continued investment int tax credits are part of the solution.
But what about the issue of people's attitudes to working, which seems to be at the heart of the compulsion agenda? How on earth do we shift these without waving the stick?