logo
#

Latest news with #backbenchMPs

Parents and teachers: tell us your views on changes to special education needs support in England
Parents and teachers: tell us your views on changes to special education needs support in England

The Guardian

time17-07-2025

  • Health
  • The Guardian

Parents and teachers: tell us your views on changes to special education needs support in England

The government is facing another political battle as backbench MPs, campaigners and parents have voiced concern at plans to overhaul support in England for children and young people with special educational needs or disabilities (Send). The education secretary, Bridget Phillipson, aims to remodel special needs provision, as the numbers of children and young people requiring Send support is reaching record levels and exhausting school and council budgets. Government proposals are expected as part of a schools white paper due in October. Parents, campaigners, councils and politicians are broadly in agreement that the current system is failing children and has been for years. But many fear changes will restrict or phase out the use of education, health and care plans (EHCPs) – potentially affecting 638,700 children and young people – which give statutory force to support for children and young people assessed as having special needs or disabilities. We want to hear from you. Are you a parent or teacher of a child with special educational needs or disabilities? What are your views on potential changes to the system? For parents, what impact might restricting the use of EHCPs have on your family? For parents and teachers, how would you like to see the system improved? You can tell us about being a parent to a child with special education needs using this form. Please include as much detail as possible. Please include as much detail as possible. Please include as much detail as possible. Please include as much detail as possible. Please note, the maximum file size is 5.7 MB. Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian. Your contact details are helpful so we can contact you for more information. They will only be seen by the Guardian. If you include other people's names please ask them first. Contact us on WhatsApp at +447766780300. For more information, please see our guidance on contacting us via WhatsApp. For true anonymity please use our SecureDrop service instead. If you're having trouble using the form click here. Read terms of service here and privacy policy here.

Welfare reform bill fiasco re-empowers parliament
Welfare reform bill fiasco re-empowers parliament

The Guardian

time03-07-2025

  • Politics
  • The Guardian

Welfare reform bill fiasco re-empowers parliament

The one upside that the government can draw from the welfare reform bill debacle is that it demonstrates the genuine tension between the different roles of parliament and government (Keir Starmer forced into dramatic climbdown to pass welfare reform bill, 1 July). It can be presented as chiming in with the view of many voters that politics today does not work and that all governments simply do what benefits themselves. The government's failure to forge a constructive relationship with its backbench Labour MPs lies at the heart of its need for the last-minute revisions of its proposals, but a recharging of that relationship could well resonate with the electorate. For voters, it is the way that they see their representative that has the most significance. Each MP has the difficult task of balancing their responsibilities to their constituents, their party and their consciences. To accept all this publicly is part and parcel of a democracy and can help rekindle a healthy interest and involvement in the political MeadowcroftLeeds Your article refers to a 'week of chaos'. While you are right that the progress of the welfare bill has been a 'bruising affair', it is also the very essence of parliamentary democracy that an assertive legislature should amend government proposals for legislation. Rather than deriding the weakness of the government, as with the Brexit saga and the assisted dying bill, should we perhaps be applauding the strength of a parliament which has for too long been controlled by an overpowerful executive?Michael Bartlet Frome, Somerset You quote Keir Starmer's gratitude to 'our chief of staff, without whom none of us would be sitting around this cabinet table'. May I, through your pages, remind the prime minister that it wasn't Morgan McSweeney who put Labour in power, it was the millions of people who voted for Labour candidates last year, and that none of us voted to make the sick and vulnerable worse off. Shareen CampbellSwindon, Wiltshire Your editorial (2 July) warns that 'the rebellion over Pip is unlikely to be the last such confrontation, especially if Downing Street doesn't learn the right lessons'. In reality, the government failed to learn the lesson from the smaller rebellion over keeping the Tories' two-child benefit cap. Seven Labour MPs had the whip removed as a result – including the former shadow chancellor John McDonnell – which suited Keir Starmer's ongoing assault on leftwing Labour MPs. This time round, however, the rebellion was too big to use the same threat, even though it was rumoured that Morgan McSweeney wanted to make examples of increasing numbers of MPs until the rebellion backed down. When all Keir Starmer and McSweeney have is a hammer to smash the left, every rebel MP looks like Jeremy CameronStoke-on-Trent John Crace may be right in describing Marie Tidball MP as making the speech of the day in the welfare debate (The politics sketch, 1 July). But he is wrong in suggesting that she was the only visibly disabled MP in the house. The Liberal Democrat spokesperson's guide dog was a bit of a ReidWorsbrough, South Yorkshire So Pat McFadden says there will be financial consequences after the last-minute welfare concessions. Labour's strategy revealed, thanks to Oscar Wilde, a belief in the price of everything and the value of MainwoodWivenhoe, Essex Have an opinion on anything you've read in the Guardian today? Please email us your letter and it will be considered for publication in our letters section.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store