logo
Starmer doesn't rule out scrapping two-child benefit cap after free school meals expansion

Starmer doesn't rule out scrapping two-child benefit cap after free school meals expansion

Sky Newsa day ago

The expansion of free school meals is a "down payment" on the plan to lift children out of poverty, Sir Keir Starmer has said, as he did not rule out scrapping the two-child benefit cap.
The prime minister hinted that he wants to go further after opening up free school dinners to half a million more pupils.
Currently only those whose parents or guardians have an income of less than £7,400 a year are eligible, but from 2026 it will include children in households on universal credit - a move welcomed by child poverty campaigners.
Asked if the change is a substitute or a starter for lifting the two-child benefit cap, Sir Keir said: "This is a statement of intent. It's something that we've been wanting to do for a long time."
Pressed if intent meant going further and lifting the cap, he said: "I would say this is a down payment on child poverty. We've got a taskforce that will come out with a strategy.
"I want to get to the root causes of child poverty. One of the greatest things the last Labour government did was to drive down child poverty. I am determined we will do that."
Sir Keir has been under pressure to lift the cap from the moment he entered Downing Street, with seven Labour MPs suspended within weeks of last year's general election for voting with the SNP to scrap the cap.
The cap was announced by the then Conservative chancellor George Osborne before coming into force in 2017 and prevents parents from claiming universal credit or child tax credits from the third child onwards, except in very limited circumstances.
It was supposed to incentivise parents to work, but has plunged a rising number of children into poverty, multiple studies have shown.
This includes 10,000 more children in the first three months of the Labour government, the Child Poverty Action Group found, adding to the 4.3 million children already living in relative poverty across the UK.
Poverty taskforce delayed
The government has resisted calls to scrap the cap, instead announcing a child poverty taskforce last July to look at tackling the "root causes" of child poverty, which essentially kicked the issue into the long grass.
It was due to report its findings this spring but publication has been pushed back to later this year, fuelling speculation the government wants to use the next budget in the autumn to fund the policy.
According to the Resolution Foundation, axing the cap would lift 500,000 children out of poverty by the end of the parliament at a cost of £4.5bn.
0:56
The thinktank said the government's child poverty strategy won't be credible without a commitment to scrap the limit, as other welfare cuts mean child poverty is projected to rise to an all-time high of 4.6 million by 2029.
Pressure is mounting on the government following a drubbing at last month's local elections fuelled by the rise in Reform UK's popularity.
Reform leader Nigel Farage has committed his party to scrapping the two-child cap, as well as reinstating the winter fuel benefit in full.
Sir Keir has recently U-turned on his unpopular cuts to the winter fuel allowance, though the government has ruled out a return to all pensioners receiving it.
Chancellor Rachel Reeves has said more people will get the payment this winter, but it will likely still be means tested in some form.
Calls to bring back Sure Start
As well as being urged to scrap the two-child benefit cap, there are growing calls for ministers to revive Sure Start centres, seen by many in the party as one of the crowning achievements of New Labour.
The early years service had a "remarkably long-lasting" positive impact on the health and education outcomes of children, a report by the Institute for Fiscal Studies last month found.
They were disbanded by the coalition government, but the Child Task Force is expected to recommend their return, according to The Guardian.
At a Westminster Hall debate on Wednesday, Labour MP for Bournemouth East Tom Hayes said stamping out child poverty required "nothing less than the resurrection of Sure Start".
Meanwhile, writing in Labour List this week, Rother Valley MP Jake Richards suggested investing in Sure Start would be a better long-term approach to child poverty than removing the two-child benefit cap, saying family centres could deliver "tangible change" across the country on the government's key missions.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rayner faces Labour backbench call to ‘smash' existing housebuilding model
Rayner faces Labour backbench call to ‘smash' existing housebuilding model

The Independent

time28 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Rayner faces Labour backbench call to ‘smash' existing housebuilding model

Angela Rayner could face a backbench rebellion from MPs demanding a 'progressive alternative to our planning system'. Labour's Chris Hinchliff has proposed a suite of changes to the Government's flagship Planning and Infrastructure Bill, part of his party's drive to build 1.5 million homes in England by 2029. Mr Hinchliff has proposed arming town halls with the power to block developers' housebuilding plans, if they have failed to finish their previous projects. He has also suggested housebuilding objectors should be able to appeal against green-lit large developments, if they are not on sites which a council has set aside for building, and put forward a new duty for authorities to protect chalk streams from 'pollution, abstraction, encroachment and other forms of environmental damage'. Mr Hinchliff has told the PA news agency he does not 'want to rebel' but said he would be prepared to trigger a vote over his proposals. He added his ambition was for 'a progressive alternative to our planning system and the developer-led profit-motivated model that we have at the moment'. The North East Hertfordshire MP said: 'Frankly, to deliver the genuinely affordable housing that we need for communities like those I represent, we just have to smash that model. 'So, what I'm setting out is a set of proposals that would focus on delivering the genuinely affordable homes that we need, empowering local communities and councils to have a driving say over what happens in the local area, and also securing genuine protection for the environment going forwards.' Mr Hinchliff warned that the current system results in 'speculative' applications on land which falls outside of councils' local housebuilding strategies, 'putting significant pressure on inadequate local infrastructure'. In his constituency, which lies between London and Cambridge, 'the properties that are being built are not there to meet local need', Mr Hinchliff said, but were instead 'there to be sold for the maximum profit the developer can make'. Asked whether his proposals chimed with the first of Labour's five 'missions' at last year's general election – 'growth' – he replied: 'If we want to have the key workers that our communities need – the nurses, the social care workers, the bus drivers, the posties – they need to have genuinely affordable homes. 'You can't have that thriving economy without the workforce there, but at the moment, the housing that we are delivering is not likely to be affordable for those sorts of roles. 'It's effectively turning the towns into commuter dormitories rather than having thriving local economies, so for me, yes, it is about supporting the local economy.' Mr Hinchliff warned that the 'bottleneck' which slows housebuilding 'is not process, it's profit'. Ms Rayner, the Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary, is fronting the Government's plans for 1.5 million new homes by 2029. Among the proposed reforms is a power for ministers to decide which schemes should come before councillors, and which should be delegated to local authority staff, so that committees can 'focus their resources on complex or contentious development where local democratic oversight is required'. Natural England will also be able to draft 'environmental delivery plans (EDPs)' and acquire land compulsorily to bolster conservation efforts. Mr Hinchliff has suggested these EDPs must come with a timeline for their implementation, and that developers should improve the conservation status of any environmental features before causing 'damage' – a proposal which has support from at least 43 cross-party MP backers. MPs will spend two days debating the Bill on Monday and Tuesday. Chris Curtis, the Labour MP for Milton Keynes North, warned that some of Mr Hinchliff's proposals 'if enacted, would deepen our housing crisis and push more families into poverty'. He said: 'I won't stand by and watch more children in the country end up struggling in temporary accommodation to appease pressure groups. No Labour MP should. 'It's morally reprehensible to play games with this issue. 'These amendments should be withdrawn.'

Millions to receive NHS screening invitations and appointment reminders on their phones
Millions to receive NHS screening invitations and appointment reminders on their phones

Sky News

time30 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Millions to receive NHS screening invitations and appointment reminders on their phones

Appointment reminders, invitations to health screenings and test results will now be received by patients on their phones. The government says moving to a more digital-focused NHS will mean 50 million fewer letters need to be sent out by the health service, saving an estimated £200m over the next three years. Instead, under the new plans, millions of people will be notified about appointments and other important notices via the NHS app on their phone or digital device. The app is set to become the go-to method for the NHS to communicate with people, the Department of Health and Social Care said. The changes will be backed by more than £50m investment. It will see a predicted 270 million messages sent through the app this year, an increase of around 70 million on the last financial year, the government announced. Wes Streeting has said this is all about modernising, as the NHS "feels so 20th century". The health secretary said: "The fact that people still get letters through the front door, sometimes multiple letters about the same appointment... The NHS has been stuck in the mud when it comes to the everyday technology we use to organise our lives. And that's why what we're doing with the NHS app is really exciting." Mr Streeting said the app will make using the NHS more convenient, and give patients more control, while saving money. He said these funds can then be invested back into the health service, to bolster things such as frontline care. Using the NHS app should be 'as joyful as Netflix' The modernisation of the NHS will also lead to fewer missed appointments, and therefore save money that way too, it is hoped. In 2023/24, there were around eight million missed appointments in elective care and almost one in three people missed a screening appointment. Currently, around 20 million people have opted in to receive messages from the NHS app. 4:01 Pushed on how the government will ensure that nobody is left behind, Mr Streeting said: "If someone like me is booking my appointment through the app because that's what I prefer to do, [then] that's freeing up a phone line for someone who wants to get through and talk to a person." He added that greater use of the app will give people more choice in "how you want to organise your care". The cabinet minister also made a bold comparison, saying he wishes that the NHS app is as enjoyable as using streaming giant Netflix. He said: "The NHS app actually has more subscribers than Netflix. It would be a really wonderful thing if using the NHS app felt - if not as joyful - almost as joyful as using Netflix." Other features in the pipeline - though not yet available - include being able to add appointments to phone calendars and request help from local GPs on the app. Faster log in methods, such as using Face ID, are also planned.

Statins almost halve the risk of death in patients critically ill with sepsis
Statins almost halve the risk of death in patients critically ill with sepsis

Daily Mail​

time41 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Statins almost halve the risk of death in patients critically ill with sepsis

Taking statins can improve the chances of surviving sepsis by 40 per cent, a trial has found. Sepsis can occur when the body's immune system overreacts to an infection and attacks its own organs. It is notoriously difficult to spot because the telltale symptoms, such as a fever and muscle pain, can be easily mistaken for signs of a common cold or other infection. Statins lower cholesterol to prevent heart attacks and strokes and are taken by around 5 million adults in the UK. But experts say they have other benefits, including reducing inflammation and fighting bacteria that can ultimately lead to sepsis. The study compared survival rates of sepsis patients given statins and those who were not during a hospital stay. It found the pills reduced the risk of death for those critically ill with the condition by 39 per cent. The study compared survival rates of sepsis patients given statins and those who were not during a hospital stay. It found the pills reduced the risk of death for those critically ill with the condition by 39 per cent (file image) In intensive care, 14.3 per cent of 6,000 sepsis patients given statins died within 28 days, compared with 23.4 per cent of 6,000 patients who were not. For those no longer in a critical condition, 11 per cent given statins died compared to 19 per cent who were not. Dr Caifeng Li, of Tianjin Medical University General Hospital in China and the study's author said: 'These results suggest that statins may provide a protective effect and improve clinical outcomes for patients with sepsis.' Researchers believe the drugs may help with sepsis by helping to combat bacteria directly, reducing the toll infection takes on the body. Earlier this year another study found the pills could also slash dementia risk – even in patients who don't have high cholesterol. The sepsis study, published in the journal Frontiers in Immunology, was based on data from thousands of patients at an Israeli hospital over a decade. Dr Ron Daniels, founder and chief executive of the UK Sepsis Trust, said: 'This study supports calls for a large, multi-country, randomised control trial. 'Anything which might reduce the burden of a condition which claims one in five lives worldwide needs to be rigorously explored.' Sepsis is known as the 'silent killer'. For every hour of delay in treatment, a patient's chance of dying increases 8 per cent. If caught early, it can be treated with antibiotics and fluids. Symptoms include slurred speech or confusion, shivering or muscle pain, passing no urine in a day, severe breathlessness and mottled or discoloured skin. Blood test to spot Alzheimer's early A Blood test for Alzheimer's can accurately detect the disease early, a study suggests. The test was 95 per cent accurate in identifying people with memory problems. It also scored 82 per cent for specificity, which means it was highly accurate in ruling out people without dementia. The study, published in the journal Alzheimer's and Dementia, found proteins amyloid beta 42/40 and p-tau217 in blood plasma can be examined to diagnose the condition. The study was carried out on more than 500 people in an outpatient memory clinic. The blood test has already been approved by the Food and Drug Administration regulator in the US.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store