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School meal on a tray
The free school meals for all bill would extend school meals to all primary school pupils. Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA
The free school meals for all bill would extend school meals to all primary school pupils. Photograph: Ben Birchall/PA

MPs call on Jeremy Hunt to extend free school meals to all primary pupils

This article is more than 1 year old

Campaign coordinated by Labour MP Zarah Sultana calls for every child to have access to a daily hot meal

The chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, has been urged to use his spring budget to extend free school meals for all primary pupils.

The Scottish government has committed to providing free school meals for all primary schoolchildren, while in Wales the rollout of universal primary free school meals began in September.

But in England, only in London will all primary pupils get access to free hot meals for a year starting in September. All children in England can get free school meals until the end of year 2.

At least 55 MPs from various parties have signed the letter to Hunt, which was coordinated by the Labour backbencher Zarah Sultana, calling for every child to have access to a hot healthy meal each day.

The letter has also been signed by the London mayor, Sadiq Khan; the Labour chair of the DWP select committee, Stephen Timms; the backbench Labour MP Hilary Benn; the Liberal Democrat MP Tim Farron; the independent MP Jeremy Corbyn; the Greens’ Caroline Lucas; and the North of Tyne mayor, Jamie Driscoll.

It says: “The spiralling [cost of living] crisis is seen in our schools, with heartbreaking accounts of seven-year-olds stashing food from breakfast clubs for later in the day and children pretending to eat from empty lunchboxes.”

Last month, Khan announced plans to offer all London primary schoolchildren free meals for one year, to tackle what he said was a failure by ministers to step up support during the cost of living crisis.

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He said he knew “from personal experience that free school meals are a lifeline”, as his parents relied on them to give his family “a little extra breathing room financially”, and free meals could be “gamechanging” for others struggling to make ends meet.

Households in England receiving universal credit and earning below £7,400 a year before benefits and after tax qualify for free school meals. In Northern Ireland, the family earnings threshold is £14,000 after tax and before benefits.

Sultana, the MP for Coventry South, is taking her private member’s bill through parliament. The free school meals for all bill will have its second reading in parliament on Friday 24 March.

She said: “Only the Westminster government can end this postcode lottery, but instead the Conservatives are focused on whipping up fear and scapegoating refugees. I am calling on the government to embrace this opportunity to extend free school meals to all primary school pupils and address the injustice of child poverty.”

A Department for Education spokesperson said: “Since 2010, the number of children receiving a free meal at school has increased by more than 2 million, thanks to the introduction of universal infant free school meals plus generous protections put in place as benefit recipients move across to universal credit.

“Over a third of pupils in England now receive free school meals in education settings, compared with one in six in 2010, and we have made a further investment in the national school breakfast programme to extend the programme for another year, backed by up to £30m.

“We have also acted on energy costs through the energy price guarantee, saving a typical household over £900 this winter. The energy bills support scheme is also providing a £400 discount to millions of households this winter, and further support is available for the most vulnerable who will receive up to £1,350 in 2023-24.”

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