
Reeves to launch £500m fund to help vulnerable children
The Government says the Better Futures Fund will be the largest of its kind in the world.
It will be used to help struggling and vulnerable children and their families with a variety of problems they face.
This could include early support to tackle challenges such as school absence, mental health issues, addiction and falling into a life of crime.
The fund will run for 10 years, and ministers plan to raise a further £500 million from councils, investors and philanthropists to top up the Government's cash.
The Chancellor will launch the initiative on Monday, as she visits a school in Wigan.
Ahead of the visit, Ms Reeves said: 'I got into politics to help children facing the toughest challenges.
'This fund will give hundreds of thousands of children, young people and their families a better chance.
'For too long, these children have been overlooked.'
The fund will be overseen by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, and more details about how it will work will be released in the near future, according to the Government.
Culture Secretary Lisa Nandy said: 'This groundbreaking Better Futures Fund represents a major step in partnering with the impact economy, which has long played an important role in strengthening communities and driving inclusive growth.
'As part of the plan for change, we're bringing together Government, local authorities, charities, social enterprises and philanthropists to create a powerful alliance that will transform the lives of vulnerable children and young people.
'We owe them the best start in life.
'Together we will break down barriers to opportunity, ensuring those who need support most aren't left behind and have the chance to reach their potential.'
The launch is backed by groups including Save the Children UK, The King's Trust, and Oxford University's Blavatnik School of Government.
Elsewhere, ministers will host the first civil society summit this week, which aims to hammer out a plan for how Government will better work alongside charities and other organisations outside of the world of Westminster to the benefit of the public.
Sir Mel Stride, the Conservatives' shadow chancellor, said the Government's plans would 'build on the Life Chances Fund – a Conservative policy that supports families and vulnerable children'.
He added: 'But Labour's jobs tax has pushed up unemployment and prices, trapping more children in workless, struggling homes.
'Labour are taxing work, choking growth, and driving families into hardship.
'Under Kemi Badenoch, the Conservatives back the makers – protecting public finances, supporting working parents, and making sure hard work pays.
'Britain deserves a government that rewards effort, not one that penalises success.'
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Spectator
6 minutes ago
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Why I left the Conservatives
There comes a moment for many soldiers – and most politicians – when you realise the battle you think you're fighting isn't the one your leaders are waging. That moment came for me watching Kemi Badenoch tell Sky News's Trevor Phillips there are real differences between Reform UK and the Conservatives. She was right. The difference is the Reform leadership – voters grasp the scale of our national peril and back a party serious about addressing it. Many in Britain feel we may already have passed the point of no return. Our cities grow less cohesive, the country effectively bankrupt. For over a year, Conservative colleagues have insisted Reform was just a noisy protest vehicle. 'We're all saying the same things,' they claimed. But we're not. Kemi was correct: the differences are real – and it's those differences that brought me, with regret but clarity, to conclude I am no longer a Conservative. I remain a conservative – as do millions of voters – but our values now align more with Reform. This isn't hard when the government I supported presided over the arrival of well over four million mostly unskilled migrants and their dependents. You can't blame people for wanting better for their families – but you can blame a government, my government, for allowing 728,000 net arrivals in a single year. The army has 33 infantry battalions; since 2018, we've let in nearly 250 battalions' worth of undocumented young men of military age. And it was the Conservatives who launched the well-meant but job-exporting Net Zero agenda, pushing UK energy prices to four times those in the US. Now the Conservatives offer cautious reform: modest tax cuts, a managed Net Zero transition, an inquiry into the ECHR (European Convention on Human Rights). Reform offers a sharper reset: immediate tax cuts, hard borders, and a clear-out of ideologically captured institutions. One wants course correction. The other believes only bold change can restore public trust. The Conservative party I thought I joined believed in sovereignty, secure borders, low taxes, personal responsibility, and cultural confidence. That party is no longer in government – and no longer deserves to be. It wasn't just defeated at the ballot box – it was hollowed out by careerists masquerading as conservatives. They got there thanks to CCHQ's obsession with the divisive dogma of 'diversity, equality, and inclusion' (DEI) over merit and sense. A government elected on promises of control and competence delivered drift, disillusionment, and denial. Reform's policies are not extreme. Some of my former media colleagues smear them as such. They should look to themselves. As a Sikh friend said: Reform is refreshingly colour-blind. Its platform is what the Conservative manifesto should have been: tax and regulatory reform, full border control, energy sovereignty, making Brexit work, restoring national pride, and the first duty of government – protecting the public. When I talk to people in Gravesham in Kent, the seat I served for 19 years, they don't bring up DEI or Net Zero. They talk about the boats. About crime, housing, doctors, bills, and broken services. And the quiet anger at seeing economic migrants in hotels seemingly prioritised over British citizens — including homeless veterans. They see a system that punishes effort and rewards dependency. This is not ideology. It is betrayal. A former cabinet minister friend recently said: 'Reform may win many more seats — and just split the vote again.' But that misses the point. The vote is already split. For millions, the Conservative party stopped being a conservative vehicle long before it was thrown out of office. Reform has taken up that mantle – and wears it with pride. 'They're the only party speaking common sense,' a local Reform supporter told me. 'The Tories became Labour-lite.' He's not wrong: think Chagos, woke policy drift, tax hikes, and the slow purge of the wealth creators who fund the system. From the refusal to cut migration, to cowardice in confronting public-sector radicals, to the erosion of free speech, the Conservatives chose to manage decline, not resist it. Labour, of course, is worse – not just timid but dangerous. Their instinct is always for more state, more spending, more control. The Conservatives at least hesitated before doing harm. Labour doesn't even pause. We cannot hand them another blank cheque in 2029 because the so-called Right remains divided. This is no time for technocrats or those who simply fancy being Prime Minister. It requires conviction. Kemi is a fighter – but she's surrounded by too many who'd be Lib Dems if the Lib Dems were winning. She can't charge from a trench full of MPs who won't follow her. I joined the Army to serve the country, not the institution. The same applies now. If we want to rescue Britain, we must be honest about who's still willing to fight for her. Reform is not perfect – but it is serious. I didn't leave the Conservative party, it left me. It used good people's votes to govern as Labour-lite and squabble over promotions. In doing so, it handed Britain to an ignorant and disastrous Labour government. Some may say I've moved to Reform because it may win my old seat. Of course, that's a consideration. But it's not the reason. I know the road from protest to power is long. Reform may flare bright and fade. It must grow beyond its extraordinary founder, lose some of its more combative edges, continue to attract serious talent, further professionalise, and develop to become a credible government-in-waiting. That will require discipline, time, and luck to challenge the deep vested interests in Parliament, the civil service, the unions, and the wider public sector. No: I've made this choice not because it's easy or inevitable, but because right-thinking people need to come together. As Ronald Reagan said, 'You gotta dance with the one that brung ya.' The Conservative party forgot to dance with the people who brought it to power. The challenge for Reform – and any future allies – is to become fully fit and credible for the rescue mission of 2029, which may well be the United Kingdom's last best chance.


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