Selasa, 16 Juni 2020

Marcus Rashford says Boris Johnson THANKED him for speaking up for the underprivileged - Daily Mail

Marcus Rashford says Boris Johnson THANKED him for speaking up for the underprivileged after the Man United star’s free school meals campaign forced the government to act

  • England star Rashford spoke on the phone with the Prime Minister after successful food vouchers campaign
  • The footballer urged the Government to continue food vouchers with Covid-19 scheme set to end 
  • Boris Johnson U-turned this afternoon by saying there will be vouchers available during the summer holidays 
  • Manchester United striker already raised £20million to provide 3million meals for children during lockdown
  • Mr Johnson had been facing a mounting Tory revolt over the refusal to extend free meals into the holidays 
  • Rashford clashed with Therese Coffey on Twitter for picking up on one of his posts about having water cut off
  • Rashford tweeted: 'I don't even know what to say. Just look at what we can do when we come together'
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England striker Marcus Rashford has revealed Boris Johnson thanked him for using his status as a world class footballer to speak on behalf of underprivileged families.

Manchester United star Rashford spoke with the Prime Minister on Tuesday, after the government agreed to continue handing out food vouchers during the summer holidays.

Speaking to the BBC, the 22-year-old said: 'I was obviously shocked it's a big decision for someone to make. I'm just grateful the Prime Minister did change his decision and he understood.'

While the Premier League has been on hold due to the Covid-19 crisis, the footballer's attention has shifted to helping those in need. 

On his conversation with the Prime Minister, he said: 'He was just saying thank you for using what I've built in a positive manner, we was sort of thanking each other because he didn't have to do what he done and neither did I.

'He was grateful that someone had an opinion and shared it with people and had been that voice for people who didn't have the platform to speak out as much as they'd like too.'

Speaking at yesterday's daily coronavirus briefing, Mr Johnson denied he was shamed into the dramatic climbdown. He also raised eyebrows by claiming he only became aware of the push by Rashford - inspired by his own tough upbringing - earlier on Tuesday.  

Downing Street declared earlier that around 1.3million children currently eligible for free lunches in England will get vouchers worth £15 a week that can be spent in supermarkets.

The £120million Covid Summer Food Fund is a 'one-off' recognition of the struggles families faced as the coronavirus lockdown sends the economy into a tailspin.  

A spokesman for 22-year-old Rashford said he had 'thanked the Prime Minister for U-turning on a decision that could have been detrimental to the stability of families across the country'. 

The government move followed a growing Tory revolt urging him to think again after initially rejecting the appeal from Rashford. 

Boris Johnson, pictured leaving Downing Street on Tuesday, thanked Marcus Rashford in a private phone call on Tuesday

Boris Johnson, pictured leaving Downing Street on Tuesday, thanked Marcus Rashford in a private phone call on Tuesday

A banner has been raised in Wythenshawe, where Marcus Rashford grew up, celebrating his successful campaign

A banner has been raised in Wythenshawe, where Marcus Rashford grew up, celebrating his successful campaign

Former health secretary Jeremy Hunt was among those saying that the position would have to change, while education select committee chair Robert Halfon threatened to vote against the government in a Commons debate later. 

Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey risked inflaming the situation by engaging in a Twitter spat with Rashford after he said children did not have access to showers. 

Rashford hailed the news, tweeting: 'I don't even know what to say. Just look at what we can do when we come together, THIS is England in 2020.' 

He added: 'There is still a long way to go but I am thankful to you all that we have given these families just one less thing to worry about tonight.' 

Labour leader Keir Starmer said: 'This is another welcome u-turn from Boris Johnson. The thought of 1.3 million children going hungry this summer was unimaginable. Well done to @MarcusRashford and many others who spoke out so powerfully about this issue.'

At the daily coronavirus briefing, Boris Johnson denied he was shamed into the dramatic climbdown, and claimed he only became aware of the push by Marcus Rashford earlier on Tuesday

At the daily coronavirus briefing, Boris Johnson denied he was shamed into the dramatic climbdown, and claimed he only became aware of the push by Marcus Rashford earlier on Tuesday

Marcus Rashford arrives for training at Manchester United's Carrington training ground yesterday in his Mercedes G-Wagon amid growing pressure on Boris Johnson to u-turn on free school meals for children over the summer

Marcus Rashford arrives for training at Manchester United's Carrington training ground yesterday in his Mercedes G-Wagon amid growing pressure on Boris Johnson to u-turn on free school meals for children over the summer

Rashford hailed the news this afternoon, tweeting that it showed what could be done when 'we come together'

Rashford hailed the news this afternoon, tweeting that it showed what could be done when 'we come together'

The council house kid who made PM back down 

Marcus, pictured as a little boy, and his four siblings were all on free school meals while growing up

Marcus, pictured as a little boy, and his four siblings were all on free school meals while growing up

Marcus Rashford is being hailed as the hero of lockdown as his successful free school meals campaign became yet another unlikely victory for a young footballer who has already defied the odds to become one of England's top sportsmen. 

The 22-year-old star says leaving home aged 11 to join Manchester United's academy when his single mother Melanie struggled to feed the family has driven his campaign to ensure other children in the UK do not go hungry.  

This week the England striker forced Boris Johnson into an extraordinary U-turn less than 24 hours after the Prime Minister refused to budge on finding £110million to give free school meals to £1.3million vulnerable children for six weeks over the summer. Rashford hailed the news this afternoon, tweeting: 'I don't even know what to say. Just look at what we can do when we come together, THIS is England in 2020.'

It caps an incredible lockdown for Marcus, who has used the past three months to recover from a double back fracture while also helping to supply three million meals for children out of school, raising around £20million along with charity FareShare. He is now joint-favourite to become BBC Sports Personality of the Year.

Marcus, who earns £200,000-a-week at Man United and lives in a £1.8million mansion with a fleet of luxury cars, has not said how exactly much he has donated himself but admitted he started the fund with '£50,000 to £60,000' of his own money with Tesco, Sainsbury's, Asda and wealthy individuals handing over millions more.

He grew up in a £150,000 terraced council house on the tough Northern Moor estate in Wythenshawe, where the hit series Shameless was filmed in an area of Manchester that has suffered badly from high crime rates, poverty and drug problems.

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At Tuesday evening's press conference, Mr Johnson was repeatedly pressed about why it took Rashford's campaign to change the policy on free school meals. 

'I talked to Marcus Rashford today to congratulate him on his campaigning, which to be honest I only became aware of very recently - today,' he said.

'I thank him for what he has done. I think he is right to draw attention to this issue, and basically we've got large numbers of kids who haven't been able to get back into school.

'We've got a problem about getting kids back into school in the way that we would want, for the reasons that people understand, though actually there are lots of kids who could go back to school now who aren't going back to school and I'd like to see that happen.

'I do think it's right that we should be looking after families of the most vulnerable and the neediest right now and that's why we have got the Covid summer food plan, which we've announced today, and I hope it will make a big difference to those kids and those families.'

The PM acted as he faced being left isolated with Governments in Scotland and Wales agreeing to extend the school meals scheme.

Nicola Sturgeon confirmed at her daily coronavirus press conference that local councils in Scotland will be given a further £12.6million to extend provision until schools reopen from August 11.

The Scottish government has been funding lunches for around 175,000 children during the lockdown using hubs, supermarket vouchers and cash payments. 

Mr Johnson's spokesman said: 'The PM welcomes his contribution to the debate around poverty and respects the fact that he has been using his profile as a leading sportsman to highlight important issues.' 

Former Scottish Tory leader Ruth Davidson, a vocal critic of Mr Johnson's approach to Brexit who quit when he prorogued Parliament in 2019, earlier urged him to change his mind and 'feed the kids' as the devolved 

She said: 'Am baffled why [Westminster] colleagues are picking this hill to die on. I didn't have or need free school meals, but I went to a school where a huge % did. Food security during the holidays so important. It's basic. Feed the kids.' 

Conservative chairman of the Education Select Committee Robert Halfon MP has described Mr Rashford as 'an inspiration and a hero of our time' and said finding the £110million to extend the scheme 'is the right thing to do'.   

Fellow Tory MP George Freeman also tweeted: 'Free School Meals are a lifeline for many v low income families. Let's do the right thing: extend FSM thru summer.' While former Tory adviser to Theresa  May, Nick Timothy, said:  'Congratulations to Marcus Rashford, who I expect will be able to declare victory some time before this afternoon's opposition day debate'.

Mr Johnson was previously forced to carry out another U-turn on making migrant health workers pay the NHS levy, after resisting for days. 

Ms Coffey was blasted as 'cold' and 'uncaring' after her blunt response to Mr Rashford's claims about poorer families being deprived of running water. 

In a string of tweets yesterday repeating his call for Mr Johnson to change his mind, the 22-year-old star wrote: 'When you wake up this morning and run your shower, take a second to think about parents who have had their water turned off during lockdown #maketheuturn.' 

However, Ms Coffey then replied: 'Water cannot be disconnected though'. 

Piers Morgan told Good Morning Britain viewers the tweet was 'shameful and disgusting', while Rashford took exception to the minister picking out one of his posts from dozens about the campaign. 

He then tweeted in reply to Ms Coffey: 'I'm concerned this is the only tweet of mine you acknowledged. Please, put rivalries aside for a second, and make a difference.' 

The Manchester United star and England star, 22, who has been backed by a string of Tory and Labour MPs and Gary Lineker, said that changing the Prime Minister's mind is the 'trophy' he wants this summer with the hashtag #maketheuturn trending on Twitter this morning. 

Headteacher at Rashford's former school says he is a 'hero' 

The headteacher of Marcus Rashford's former primary school has spoken of the community's pride as he persuaded the Government to extend a 'lifeline' free school meal service

Headteacher Emma Roberts said the Manchester United footballer was already a 'hero' to children at Button Lane Primary School in Wythenshawe, which has twice the national average number of pupils eligible for the free school meal scheme.

Following the Government's U-turn on Tuesday, when it announced a £120 million fund to feed children in England over the six-week summer period, Ms Roberts said staff had been sending messages to each other saying they were 'really proud' of the England international.

She told the PA news agency the 22-year-old striker continued to be part of the community where he grew up and often visited the school.

'He is like a hero to the children,' she said. 'I think they all feel like he's their friend.'

In a string of tweets yesterday repeating his call for Mr Johnson to change his mind, he wrote: 'When you wake up this morning and run your shower, take a second to think about parents who have had their water turned off during lockdown #maketheuturn.' 

And amid a gale of criticism the Tory MP for Suffolk Coastal tweeted Marcus directly saying: 'Hi @MarcusRashford, I welcome your passion for supporting children and the most vulnerable in society - a passion we share. We are working to the same aim'. 

She added: 'We are working to the same aim. I & this Govt will continue to actively help and support families and businesses through this emergency and beyond.' 

Piers Morgan blasted Mr Coffey for her 'tone deaf' and 'heartless' response.

'People wonder why we shout at these people. I would probably shout at her right now, if she was on, Therese Coffey - wouldn't you?' he said.

'That's her response. One line. Unbelievable. The tone-deafness of that response just about epitomises this government - devoid of empathy.' 

Yesterday, Rashford continued his campaign for free school meals over the summer with a blizzard of tweets and a newspaper article demanding the Government carry out a u-turn. 

Rallying his supporters, he tweeted this morning: 'We are trending no 1 and 2 in England. I need everyone's help to keep this noise going as I head to training but before I go, to ALL MPs in Parliament, this is not about politics. The same way us players put rivalry aside when we put the England shirt on, please #maketheuturn.'

Earlier, he had written in The Times: 'Today I focus on a trophy that stands for something much bigger than football.

'A U-turn on the decision to stop the free food voucher scheme continuing over the summer holidays could help us reach the next round but we still have a very long way to go as a country to eventually lift the trophy. In this case, the trophy is combating child poverty.'  

But the Government is refusing to budge with Transport Secretary Grant Shapps insisting they have been 'wrapping its arms around the community' via the furlough scheme and payments to local government bodies instead. But there are growing numbers of backbench Tories who believe Boris Johnson should change the policy immediately. 

Speaking on BBC Breakfast this morning, he said: 'It is usually the case that over the summer holidays, free school meals are not available, schools are not there'.

Speaking to BBC Breakfast, Conservative chairman of the Education Select Committee Robert Halfon said he was worried that Britain is facing 'an ice age for vulnerable children' as the latest figures show '2.5 million children are not learning' while away from school and food insecurity has 'nearly doubled'.

The Tory MP said extending the free school meals programme 'would be the right thing to do' but 'there are mixed views' among Conservative politicians.

He said: 'Families have not only faced health worries but enormous financial anxieties and enormous stress, many of them being made redundant.'

Mr Halfon added: 'There are lots of food programmes across different Government departments. If they just consolidated those programmes, they would almost have the money for the free school meals programme over the summer, which would cost roughly £110 million' 

Match of the Day host Gary Lineker was among the famous figures congratulating Rashford on changing the policy yesterday

Match of the Day host Gary Lineker was among the famous figures congratulating Rashford on changing the policy yesterday

Rashford's mother Melanie persuaded United to allow him into their academy a year early because she was struggling to feed her five children

Rashford's mother Melanie persuaded United to allow him into their academy a year early because she was struggling to feed her five children

Gary Lineker appeared on BBC Newsnight last night and he urged the Government to consider the struggles of impoverished families during the coronavirus crisis.

'Obviously these are strange times. Kids wouldn't ordinarily be fed during the summer holidays, I understand that. But you've got to look at it and go ''These are very, very difficult times for a lot of people and a lot of families'',' the former England striker and Match of the Day presenter said.

'There are a lot of young people, young children, in this country that are going hungry. And in a country like ours, a country of quite substantial wealth, that seems to be largely unacceptable.

'Hopefully the powers that be will listen. It seems strange that we have to be in a position where we are desperately arguing to try to get young people fed, and stop them being hungry.'

Lineker also praised Rashford, saying: 'When you look at it, though, he's a 22 year old footballer. He shouldn't be the one having to do this. But the fact that he is, is important. It's impressive. He's a very fine young man, and he's a credit to his sport and his family.'

Rashford wrote a column in The Times newspaper on Tuesday addressing the meal voucher issue and the broader subject of childhood poverty.

'I don't claim to have the education of an MP in parliament, but I do have a social education,' Rashford wrote.

'I am clued up on the difference a U-turn decision would make on the 1.3 million vulnerable children across the UK who are registered for free school meals because ten years ago I was one of them.'  

'Thousands of children will also receive additional support through our Holiday Activities and Food programme, which offers activities and free meals throughout the summer holidays,' they added.

Yesterday No10 said the PM would reply to the footballer by letter. 

The Prime Minister's official spokesman said: 'The PM will respond to Marcus Rashford's letter as soon as he can - he has been using his profile in a positive way to highlight some very important issues.'

A food voucher scheme was set up to make sure children on free school meals would be fed during lockdown after schools shut in March.

Vouchers worth £15 were given to families each week in supermarkets.

But the scheme was set to end next month. 

In a letter to the House of Commons, the Manchester United forward wrote: 'Political affiliations aside, can we not all agree that no child should be going to bed hungry?

'The Government has taken a 'Whatever it takes' approach to the economy – I'm asking you today to extend that same thinking to protecting all vulnerable children across England.

'I encourage you to hear their pleas and find your humanity. Please reconsider your decision to cancel the food voucher scheme over the summer holiday period and guarantee the extension. This is England in 2020, and this is an issue that needs urgent assistance.

'Please, while the eyes of the nation are on you, make the U-turn and make protecting the lives of some of our most vulnerable a top priority.'

In a string of tweets this morning, Rashford mentioned in one 'parents who have had their water turned off during lockdown', to which Ms Coffey replied 'Water cannot be disconnected though'. The footballer said he was 'concerned' Ms Coffey had only acknowledged that particular tweet
Boris Johnson leaves Downing Street on Tuesday

Boris Johnson (right) made the U-turn after Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey was caught up in a spat with Rashford on Twitter (left). The footballer mentioned that 'parents who have had their water turned off during lockdown', to which Ms Coffey replied 'Water cannot be disconnected though'. The footballer said he was 'concerned' Ms Coffey had only acknowledged that particular tweet 

As the coronavirus crisis hit, Marcus Rashford felt obligated to do something to help the young and potentially vulnerable children who may begin to suffer without free school meals

As the coronavirus crisis hit, Marcus Rashford felt obligated to do something to help the young and potentially vulnerable children who may begin to suffer without free school meals

England international Rashford penned a powerful letter to the Government on Sunday

England international Rashford penned a powerful letter to the Government on Sunday

He urged the Government to provide free meals for vulnerable children during school holidays

He urged the Government to provide free meals for vulnerable children during school holidays

PM's third major climbdown in a month 

Boris Johnson's change of heart on free school meals is the latest of three significant turnarounds in the past month.

He bowed to massive pressure to drop the NHS surcharge for foreign health and care workers last month. 

And on May 21 the PM declared that the £400-a-year levy would be dropped after senior Conservatives complained it was 'immoral' and 'mean-spirited' that those on the frontline of the coronavirus battle were being forced to pay. 

Hassan Akkad, a BAFTA award winning filmmaker who has been working as an NHS cleaner during the outbreak, had campaigned for the change.  

That shift came 24 hours after another climbdown, on excluding foreign NHS porters and cleaners from the coronavirus bereavement scheme.

That meant relatives of those who died might be kicked out of the country.

The families of all staff who die from coronavirus are now being granted indefinite leave to remain.

Rashford relied on breakfast clubs and free school meals while growing up in Manchester. He wrote: 'As a black man from a low-income family... I could have been just another statistic.

'I would be doing myself, my family and my community an injustice if I didn't stand here today with my voice and my platform and ask you for help.'

The 22-year-old's open letter has received support from education leaders and teachers' unions

Kevin Courtney, joint general secretary of the National Education Union, the country's biggest teachers' union, said the union 'fully supports' Rashford's demand to provide free school meals over the summer.

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, said: 'If the Government is genuinely committed to social equity, it must extend the provision of free school meals to continue during the summer holidays.

'Disadvantaged families are likely to have been hardest hit by the coronavirus crisis, and the very least we can do as a society is ensure that children from these backgrounds have something to eat.'

Former education secretary Justine Greening also backed the footballer's demands. She said: 'I know from my experience that there are lots of difficult decisions for ministers to take - this is an easy one.'

Rashford, who has raised £20 million to boost food distribution with the charity FareShare, has admitted to using food banks and receiving free meals as a child.

He said he wants to help the families that need it the most, knowing how it felt to go hungry.

Paul Whiteman, general secretary of school leaders' union NAHT, added: 'Holiday hunger has always been a great concern for school leaders and this summer is likely to be especially challenging for many low-income families given the impact of lockdown on finances.

'We agree with Marcus Rashford that the Government must not let children go hungry over the summer and should provide funding to extend free school meals.'

Rashford benefited from the free school meals system while growing up, dreaming of football. Here he is pictured posing in a Manchester United shirt, the club he has always supported

Rashford benefited from the free school meals system while growing up, dreaming of football. Here he is pictured posing in a Manchester United shirt, the club he has always supported

The Labour Party had called an opposition day debate in Parliament later to call on the Government to continue to directly fund the provision of free school meals over the holidays.

Labour launched a Holidays Without Hunger campaign on Sunday.

Shadow education secretary Rebecca Long Bailey will say: 'Any government that is willing to let the poorest children in the country go hungry needs to take a long hard look at its priorities.

'Shamefully, children go hungry every year, but this summer will be especially difficult for many families as job losses and reduced incomes hit household budgets.

'It would be deeply callous of the government not to take this small step to ease the financial pressure on households and ensure children can eat during the summer holidays.'

Former Ofsted chief Sir Michael Wilshaw added his name to the cause, saying the Government 'should be bending on this one' and that Mr Rashford was 'absolutely right to draw attention to this'.

'I know lots of head teachers who are so worried about their children who are on free school meals, their poorest children, who have lost out the most during this crisis,' Sir Michael told Newsnight.

'Those head teachers are going to bringing those children in over the summer break, they're going to be inviting their staff into school over the summer break to teach them, to make sure they don't lose out any more.

'Now if they're going to be doing that, and those children are going to be coming into school over the summer break, to catch up, they need food.'

MPs reveal own personal struggles with poverty growing up - and how free school meals helped them

Several MPs backed the continued use of free school meals - by revealing how the scheme helped them whilst they were growing up.   

Three Labour representatives gave honest accounts of how the scheme aided them and their families during difficult scenarios.  

Nick Smith, MP for Blaenau Gwent, revealed the meals were a 'godsend' as his mother struggled with mental health when he was 14, meaning his father and other relatives had to pull together to support him and his two siblings. 

Shadow equalities minister Naz Shah told the Commons that she benefited from free school meals as a child
Florence Eshalomi, Labour MP for Vauxhall, revealed she was the subject of bullying at school for receiving school meals

Three Labour MPs, including  Naz Shah (left) and Florence Eshalomi (right), revealed they benefited from free school meals while growing up

He said: 'We were children in a single parent home in the South Wales valleys. We benefited from free school meals and clothing grants through our early years. At those times, those meals were a godsend.' 

Shadow equalities minister Naz Shah, MP for Bradford West, also benefited from free school meals when she was younger. 

She added: 'What it's like to live in poverty is when you're palmed off, like I was as a child, to social services to go away for a whole week at a time to Scarborough, like I did.' 

'That's what poverty is. It's not memories you want to recall as an adult even in mid-forties.' 

Florence Eshalomi, Labour MP for Vauxhall, even admitted that she was the subject of bullying due to her free school meals.  

'I remember having to go to reception on a daily basis in the morning to collect my voucher and hand it over to the dinner ladies.

'And I remember the bullying and the stigma I faced as a child because of that. But that was in the late 80s and early 90s, and it's shocking that we still need free school meals today.'

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2020-06-17 00:24:19Z
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HENRY DEEDES watches the Opposition leader taking Boris Johnson to task for dumping Dfid - Daily Mail

Hair neatly preened, Sir Keir Starmer's outrage seemed cosmetic: HENRY DEEDES watches the Opposition leader taking Boris Johnson to task for dumping Dfid

Teeth flashing, eyebrows arched stiffly like two bows stretched at full twang, in a hot and humid House of Commons Labour's Sarah Champion was not happy.

She was unleashing a torrent of anger over the Prime Minister's decision to merge the Department for International Development (Dfid) with the Foreign Office.

It was 'incredulous' that the Government was going down this route, she said. The merger was a 'hostile takeover' ridding us of our 'soft power and international standing'.

The PM, who had been scribbling away distractedly, suddenly became alert to the fury pouring down his ear lugs. 

He screwed up his eyes into piggy peepholes and fixed his assailant with a baffled stare. Turning to his Chief Whip, Mark Spencer, he muttered languidly: 'Who is this?'

Starmer has form in being shocked and appalled, but was there something cosmetic about his anger yesterday?

Starmer has form in being shocked and appalled, but was there something cosmetic about his anger yesterday?

The fact Boris couldn't recognise the chairman of the international development committee confirmed Dfid has never featured much on his radar. There was an undisguised glee yesterday with which he announced its effective abolishment. It was as though he'd finally flogged an overly thirsty motor car.

The PM said it was time to merge Dfid and the Foreign Office's ambitions, which for too long have pursued different paths. He pointed out the absurdity of us giving the same aid to Ghana as to Ukraine, an important European security ally.

It was time to stop our aid budget being treated like a 'giant cashpoint in the sky'. It was important we got 'maximum value for the taxpayer', he intoned with a meaty thwack on the dispatch box.

The news certainly caught MPs on the hop. That morning they'd assumed Boris was coming to the Commons to prattle on about trade. Sir Keir Starmer, hair neatly preened and oiled, shook his head.

He described the move as 'the tactics of pure distraction' as the economic and social horrors of coronavirus pile up on the Government's doorstep. 'It. Will. Not. Work,' Sir Keir warned, his staccato voice laced with concocted concern.

Starmer has form in being shocked and appalled, but was there something cosmetic about his anger yesterday?

International development, after all, is hardly an issue they fret over on Labour's Red Wall. 

The PM, who had been scribbling away distractedly, suddenly became alert to the fury pouring down his ear lugs

The PM, who had been scribbling away distractedly, suddenly became alert to the fury pouring down his ear lugs

Teeth flashing, eyebrows arched stiffly like two bows stretched at full twang, in a hot and humid House of Commons Labour's Sarah Champion was not happy

Teeth flashing, eyebrows arched stiffly like two bows stretched at full twang, in a hot and humid House of Commons Labour's Sarah Champion was not happy

He'd certainly entered the chamber in decent enough spirits. After catching Dominic Raab's eye across the chamber, he and the Foreign Secretary were soon chortling away like old university chums.

Other leaders took turns to show off their spray-on indignation. The SNP's Ian Blackford accused the Government of 'using a terrible pandemic to rip up UK infrastructure.' From someone who wants to rip up the UK entirely!

The chamber was reduced to titters when he accused Boris of bluster. Blackford is in no more position to lecture about bluster than he is doling out dietary advice.

Meanwhile, acting Lib Dem leader Sir Ed Davey, who had sat through Boris's statement as though chewing on stinging nettles, described the merger as a 'massive step backwards'.

Boris will have been relieved that support from his own side was total. Tom Tugendhat (Con, Tonbridge and Malling), who is no Boris fan, said he was glad the PM 'had been listening to a few of the things I have said over the last three years'.

Brimming with self-importance, he said that he had spoken to his 'opposite numbers' in Australia and Canada who both warmly endorsed the merger.

Tugendhat is chairman of the intelligence and security committee. One might have been forgiven for thinking he was the top ranking spook at MI6.

Former foreign secretary Jeremy Hunt said the merger was 'the right thing to do'. Paul Holmes (Con, Eastleigh) who looks barely out of short trousers, said the PM had done 'absolutely the right thing'.

'Give him a job!' Someone heckled. Labour's Chris Bryant, I think. Bryant had already got in a decent barb when Boris inelegantly explained how it was no good the Foreign Office going to a foreign leader 'urging him not to cut the head off an opponent' if Dfid was then going to arrive with a cheque for £250million.

'Is that what we do now?' Bryant inquired.

The big loser in all this of course is international development minister Anne Marie Trevelyan, who will now be junior to Dominic Raab in the merged department.

She spent the session perched next to her new boss, laughing and joshing merrily. All smiles, you might say. Wonder how long that'll last?

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2020-06-17 00:20:38Z
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Boris Johnson congratulated Marcus Rashford on phone over free school meals campaign - The Sun

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  1. Boris Johnson congratulated Marcus Rashford on phone over free school meals campaign  The Sun
  2. Marcus Rashford: Food voucher U-turn after footballer's campaign  BBC News
  3. Marcus Rashford opens up about childhood poverty in campaign for free school meals  Guardian Football
  4. Marcus Rashford is showing our failing politicians how to do their jobs  The Guardian
  5. Bravo Marcus Rashford. But it shouldn’t have taken a footballer to show the serious food poverty in this country  The Independent
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-16 22:32:16Z
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Dexamethasone: Man says it was 'touch and go' before he got trial drug to treat COVID-19 - Sky News

A man who was part of the trial that discovered a steroid could treat coronavirus patients has said his survival was "touch and go" before getting the drug.

Pete Herring was one of thousands who took part in the trials of dexamethasone, which has been shown to reduce deaths among people seriously ill with COVID-19.

The development has been hailed as a significant breakthrough, with the University of Oxford academic who led the trial saying "what we saw was really quite remarkable".

Mr Herring back home after recovering from coronavirus
Image: Mr Herring is now back home after recovering from coronavirus

Mr Herring, 69, told Sky News his condition got so bad that doctors at Addenbrooke's Hospital had been discussing placing him into an induced coma if the trial drug had not been effective.

He said: "It was touch and go at one point. I was really quite ill.

"I had various flu-like symptoms, but it was the difficulty breathing that was the worst.

"I was admitted to hospital on 28 April and moved to intensive care within an hour.

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"I was on oxygen all the time I was there and it got to the point where they were talking about putting me into an induced coma.

"I knew I was on the trial, but didn't know at the time if I'd been given the drug or just the placebo.

"My recovery was really a gradual thing. It wasn't just like someone flicked a switch and I was okay."

He said doctors had also given him a CPAP breathing mask, a device normally used as therapy for sleep apnea syndrome.

"It may be that it was some combination of that and the drug," he said.

"I'm not sure how much of an idea anyone really had as to how much effect each had."

After being discharged from hospital on 6 May, he said he only learned he had been given the trial drug weeks later.

"I'm 100% grateful that I was part of the trial and it's wonderful news that this drug seems to work," he said.

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"I've since learned it's actually quite cheap as drugs go, meaning it will be available to developing countries too, which is also great to know."

Mr Herring, from Ely, Cambridgeshire, said his time in hospital had been challenging for his family, including his son, daughter, two grandchildren and a partner he lives with.

"My partner has been a rock but it was horrendous for all my family," he said.

The drug was found to reduce death rates by around 35% for patients on ventilators, and by about 20% for those needing oxygen.

Professor Peter Horby, who led the trial of the drug, told Tuesday's Downing Street briefing it saves "one in 8" patients in intensive care with COVID-19.

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2020-06-16 22:14:25Z
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Marcus Rashford campaign wins children right to free school meals during summer holidays - BBC News - BBC News

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  1. Marcus Rashford campaign wins children right to free school meals during summer holidays - BBC News  BBC News
  2. Huge victory for Marcus Rashford as Boris Johnson u-turns over free school meals for poor families  The Sun
  3. Marcus Rashford: Food voucher U-turn after footballer's campaign  BBC News
  4. Marcus Rashford is showing our failing politicians how to do their jobs  The Guardian
  5. The Guardian view on Marcus Rashford's triumph: a political masterclass  The Guardian
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2020-06-16 21:33:08Z
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Coronavirus treatment breakthrough “will save thousands of lives”- BBC News - BBC News

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Coronavirus treatment breakthrough “will save thousands of lives”- BBC News  BBC News
  2. Coronavirus: Dexamethasone proves first life-saving drug  BBC News
  3. Celebrate Oxford Covid Drug News, But Not With Travel Stocks  Bloomberg
  4. BREAKING: 'Major breakthrough' as UK scientists find cheap steroid cuts COVID-19 deaths  Sky News
  5. Coronavirus: Evening update as Boris Johnson hails life-saving drug  BBC News
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2020-06-16 21:17:57Z
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Coronavirus UK: Racism could be behind higher BAME death rate - Metro.co.uk

Pictures of BAME (black, Asian and minority ethnic) people and  Labour’s Shadow Women and Equalities Secretary Marsha de Cordova as Public Health England (PHE) has released a report claiming social inequality and historic racism has contributed to the higher risk of ethnic minorities catching and dying from coronavirus
Public Health England say the Covid-19 crisis has ‘exacerbated’ race health inequalities (Picture: PA)

Social inequality and racism have put black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) communities at greater risk of catching and dying from coronavirus, a new study claims.

Public Health England’s (PHE) report found historic racism may mean people are discriminated against when it comes to personal protective equipment (PPE), potentially discouraging non-white people from seeking care or demanding better protection. While health and wellbeing inequalities have existed in the UK long before Covid-19, the study suggests they have ‘made these disparities more apparent and undoubtedly exacerbated them’.

The findings point to a raft of recommendations including the need to develop ‘risk assessment tools that can be employed in a variety of occupational settings and used to reduce the risk of employee’s exposure to and acquisition of Covid-19’. This is especially true for those in ethnic minority groups working frontline jobs including health and social care roles, putting them at higher risk of contracting coronavirus, said the report based on stakeholder engagement with 4,000 people.

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It added: ‘The unequal impact of Covid-19 on BAME communities may be explained by a number of factors ranging from social and economic inequalities, racism, discrimination and stigma, occupational risk, inequalities in the prevalence of conditions that increase the severity of disease including obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and asthma.

‘Unpacking the relative contributions made by different factors is challenging as they do not all act independently. The engagement sessions highlighted the BAME group’s deep concern and anxiety that, if lessons are not learnt from this initial phase of the epidemic, future waves of the disease could again have severe and disproportionate impacts.’

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At the weekend, Shadow Justice Secretary David Lammy said it was a ‘scandal’ that the recommendations in the study had been ‘buried’, as the Government was accused of holding back this second PHE report when a first study on the issue was published at the start of June.

BAME members of the community in Leicester City Centre wearing masks
Historic racism means some BAME people may be discriminated against when it comes to personal protective equipment, the report says (Picture: EMPICS Entertainment)
A member of the public wears a face mask in, Bradford in Yorkshire, after Health Secretary Matt Hancock published a new review which found black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) people are at significantly higher risk of dying from Covid-19. PA Photo. Picture date: Wednesday June 3, 2020. The study, from Public Health England (PHE), looked at the risk factors for coronavirus and found BAME individuals have a much higher risk of death than white people, as do those from poorer backgrounds, men and anyone who is obese or suffering from diabetes. See PA story HEALTH POLITICS Coronavirus. Photo credit should read:Danny Lawson/PA Wire
Figures show BAME people are far more likely to catch Covid-19 than their white counterparts (Picture: PA)

The original report looked at why people from BAME communities may be at higher risk from Covid-19 but made no recommendations and made no reference to the 17 sessions held with stakeholders.

The British Medical Association (BMA) sent a letter to Health Secretary Matt Hancock on Saturday asking why the pages with recommendations had been ‘omitted’ from the first publication.

The latest report says that stakeholders ‘expressed deep dismay, anger, loss and fear in their communities about the emerging data and realities of BAME groups being harder hit by the Covid-19.’

They pointed to the racism and discrimination experienced by non-white key workers ‘as a root cause affecting health, and exposure risk and disease progression risk’.

The study said there are issues in some ethnic communities of stigma and fears of being diagnosed with coronavirus.

It added: ‘For many BAME groups, lack of trust of NHS services and healthcare treatment resulted in their reluctance to seek care on a timely basis, and late presentation with disease.’

Stakeholders called for immediate improvement in housing to reduce inequalities, and ‘targeted messaging on smoking, obesity and improving management of common conditions including hypertension and diabetes’.

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Other recommendations included better data collection about ethnicity and religion – including these details on death certificates and making health risk assessments for BAME workers mandatory.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Ray Tang/REX/Shutterstock (8971672u) Labour party MP for Battersea Marsha De Cordova takes part in a meeting at Hillingdon Civic Centre to unseat Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson from his Uxbridge and South Ruislip seat. Unseat Boris Johnson Campaign Meeting, London, UK - 23 Jul 2017
Labour’s Shadow Women and Equalities Secretary Marsha de Cordova has called for ‘urgent, collaborative and decisive action’ (Picture: REX/Shutterstock)
A member of the public wears a face mask in, Bradford in Yorkshire, after Health Secretary Matt Hancock published a new review which found black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) people are at significantly higher risk of dying from Covid-19. PA Photo. Picture date: Wednesday June 3, 2020. The study, from Public Health England (PHE), looked at the risk factors for coronavirus and found BAME individuals have a much higher risk of death than white people, as do those from poorer backgrounds, men and anyone who is obese or suffering from diabetes. See PA story HEALTH POLITICS Coronavirus. Photo credit should read:Danny Lawson/PA Wire
Experts are puzzled over why recommendations weren’t made in the first review (Credits: PA)

They also suggested culturally sensitive public health messaging so more people, particularly those who may not speak English as a first language, can follow advice on how to protect themselves from Covid-19.

The report did not look at whether genetics plays a role in BAME risk.

Responding to the publication Labour’s Shadow Women and Equalities Secretary Marsha de Cordova said: ‘This report provides even more evidence of the structural and racial inequalities which have led to the Covid-19 pandemic hitting BAME communities across the UK so very hard. And these recommendations should never have been blocked in the first place.

‘Thousands of people and organisations have made it clear that urgent, collaborative and decisive action is needed. The Government cannot make the same mistakes if there is a second wave of coronavirus.’

Commenting on the report president of the Royal College of Physicians professor Andrew Goddard said: ‘The second part of PHE’s review once again shows how Covid-19 has disproportionately impacted those from BAME communities and widened health inequalities even further.

‘It remains unclear to us why this element of the report did not accompany the earlier PHE review.

‘Now that we have these recommendations, they must be placed at the core of both the NHS and the Government’s plans to restart services, as well as plans for further Covid-19 outbreaks.

‘There is no time for complacency, and leaders at all levels should be made accountable for delivering these recommendations and regularly reporting on progress.’

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Associate Professor in Clinical Data Science and Honorary Consultant Cardiologist at UCL’s Institute of Health Informatics Dr Amitava Banerjee said the study ‘confirms the observation of excess mortality in BAME people, especially in black communities’.

He pointed to a range of pre-existing data including Office for National Statistics figures suggesting Black African and Black Afro-Caribbean people are ‘at least 50-100% more likely to die from Covid-19 than their white counterparts, depending on ethnicity and ‘other factors.

BAME members of the community in Leicester City Centre wearing masks
‘There is no time for complacency, and leaders at all levels should be made accountable’ (Picture: EMPICS Entertainment)
BAME members of the community in Leicester City Centre wearing masks
Data suggests Black African and Black Afro-Caribbean people are ‘at least 50-100% more likely to die from Covid-19 (Picture: EMPICS Entertainment)

Dr Banerjee added: ‘The stakeholder engagement suggests that pre-existing social and economic inequalities are being exacerbated and are likely to be more important in the excess COVID-19 deaths in BAME individuals than pre-existing health inequalities.

‘Importantly, there are structural barriers which BAME communities have faced, including access to protective equipment and less ability to complain about it. Trust and fairness were seen by many to be the most important levers to improve the status quo.

‘Overall the excess deaths in BAME people due to COVID-19 are due not only to racism, but much more to do with ethnic inequalities in the social and economic determinants of health, which require urgent action.

‘Therefore the solutions have to be both short- and long-term. I do not see what further reports and commissions can add beyond these detailed data.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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2020-06-16 20:00:54Z
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