A record 4.5 million children currently live in poverty in the UK today. It’s an extraordinary figure, one almost too vast to properly comprehend.
Opportunities for those 4.5 million children and their families to be heard directly are limited, but thankfully groups like Changing Realities – a participatory online project involving nearly 200 carers and parents living on a low income across the UK – do provide a platform for parents like myself to speak out.
This week the Child Poverty Action Group has invited me to do just that by attending the Labour Party’s annual conference in Liverpool and providing my insight, a first hand experience of raising children on universal credit.
- DWP plans could see more than 50,000 disabled people lose access to vital work support
- What could – and should – be in Labour’s long-awaited child poverty strategy?
- I couldn’t afford to fix my broken bed. People in poverty like me need help with the essentials
Yet the party of government arrives on Merseyside in a bad state. Despite its giant majority in the House of Commons, Labour appears in something of a perma-crisis consisting of U-turns, resignations and dire poll ratings.
The conference falls during both a formal contest to decide the next deputy leader and a seemingly open debate about whether Andy Burnham or Keir Starmer should be the prime minister. Amid this noise, if the government wants to get back on track, it should focus its mind on the 4.5 million children in poverty.
Both deputy leader candidates appear to have previously endorsed the abolition of the two-child limit on benefits. This move would lift hundreds of thousands of children out of poverty – the single quickest way to target investment into the poorest families.