The British government on Tuesday bowed to demands by Manchester United footballer Marcus Rashford to change its policy on free school meals for the poorest children, amid growing concerns about the impact of the coronavirus lockdown on low-income families.
The England international drew on his own experience of growing up in poverty to lead an impassioned campaign for the programme to be extended through the summer holidays. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government had initially resisted making the change, which would see 1.3 million children in England receive vouchers for an extra six weeks.
But as the story dominated the headlines and opposition MPs and members of his own Conservative party came out behind Rashford, he gave in. “Owing to the coronavirus pandemic, the prime minister fully understands that children and parents face an entirely unprecedented situation over the summer,” his spokesman said.
“To reflect this we will be providing a Covid summer food fund. This will provide food vouchers covering the six-week holiday period.”
Rashford, 22, responded on Twitter: “I don’t even know what to say. Just look at what we can do when we come together. This is England in 2020.”
The striker had written to Johnson and MPs and on Tuesday wrote in The Times newspaper that he understood personally how much free school meals mattered to children receiving them. “Ten years ago, I was one of them. I know what it feels like to be hungry,” he wrote.
“I’m well aware that at times my friends only invited me to eat at their houses for their parents’ reassurance that I was eating that evening.”
Ahead of a parliamentary debate called by the main opposition Labour party, Rashford urged MPs to put aside their political differences and back his campaign. Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon also announced Tuesday that she would extend the meals scheme to the summer holidays in Scotland, following a move already made by the devolved government in Wales.
Educational poverty
Johnson had highlighted how much his government has already done to help people hit by nationwide stay-at-home orders imposed in March to stem the spread of Covid-19.
When schools were shut, pupils eligible for free meals were offered vouchers instead, and the government has boosted welfare payments and provided targeted funds for the most vulnerable.
It has also paid the salaries of 9.1 million people in its furlough scheme as of June 14, although new figures show a surge in claims for out-of-work benefits to 2.8 million people in the three months to May. But fears are growing for how many people will cope when the furlough scheme ends in October, with a deep recession looming.
Several Conservative MPs had called on Johnson to “do the right thing” and extend the school meal programme. Commentators also questioned why the prime minister was picking such a fight when he was already on the back foot over his response to the coronavirus outbreak, which has seen more than 41,000 deaths.
“Marcus Rashford is right. Public know it. Politicians know it,” tweeted Conservative MP Robert Halfon, the chairman of the Commons education committee. “He’s lived food hunger and helps food charities,” he said, referring to Rashford’s help in raising £20 million ($25 million) for FareShare, a charity that fights hunger and food waste.
BREAKING: No10 announces U-turn on free school meals over summer holidays for 1.3m vulnerable children.
— Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) June 16, 2020
A magnificent victory for @MarcusRashford. 👏👏👏
Marcus Rashford. More than a footballing hero.
— ᴛʜᴇꜱᴀᴜʀᴜꜱ (@inahazmada) June 16, 2020
Using his platform influencing bigger needs. https://t.co/kQEIFUVL9x
Marcus Rashford is the absolute definition of never forgetting where you come from. He’s done more for Manchester and this country (through schemes, and charity work) than MP’s. He’s been a shining light during these hard times. An incredible person.
— The Man Utd Way (@TheManUtdWay) June 14, 2020
Need a statue of Sir Marcus Rashford in Manchester asap
— pr (@prabhakarsr_) June 16, 2020
Never ask someone to keep politics out of sports. https://t.co/cEEIWlq4j0
— Lewis (@LGAmbrose) June 16, 2020
Well done Marcus Rashford 👏
— arseblog (@arseblog) June 16, 2020
Good job he didn’t just ‘stick to football’.
Amazing! Thank you @MarcusRashford for continuing to push on this issue. Makes this father and teacher very proud to see so many people come together to support those in need. Let’s continue this ongoing collaboration. https://t.co/fTSRVxweqy
— Matthew Wallington (@Wallingtron) June 16, 2020
Once fans are back; Marcus Rashford should be given a hero’s welcome at every Premier League ground, from now on... especially at Anfield. He’s a very good man.
— Adam Rowe (@adamrowecomedy) June 16, 2020
— Jasmine Baba 🇨🇾🇹🇿🇮🇳 (@_jasminebaba) June 16, 2020
Wow. If @MarcusRashford were to retire now he'd go down as one of the most influential footballers in recent times. He has shamed his government into feeding hungry children. Incredible. I'm so proud and a bit emotional https://t.co/OdVyfDy0nZ
— Nooruddean (@BeardedGenius) June 16, 2020
Great to see @ManUtd’s number 10 changing policy at number 10. Extraordinary campaign and win for the brilliant @MarcusRashford
— Gary Lineker (@GaryLineker) June 16, 2020
The phrase ‘it is impossible to hate this man’ is thrown around a lot in football, but Marcus Rashford is one of very few players who have earned such praise. An absolute inspiration.
— Patrick Timmons (@PatrickTimmons1) June 16, 2020
(With inputs from AFP)