Hundreds of charities push for hardship to be top of Prime Minister’s priorities from day one
Over 200 organisations committed to ending poverty have called on Keir Starmer and Rishi Sunak to put tackling hardship at the top of their agenda.
Over 200 organisations committed to ending poverty have called on the people most likely to be the next Prime Minister to put tackling hardship at the top of their agenda from day one. Frustrated by the "stark lack of focus" from Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer during the campaign, the diverse network of organisations placed their message that hardship must be at the top of the Prime Minister's to-do list in national newspapers with one week to go until the election result.
The leaders of UK's political parties have faced questions from the public on the campaign trail about levels of hardship in the UK, as JRF reveals the relentless reality of years-long hardship. Our latest research found:
- 7 million low-income households (60%) were forced to go without essentials like food, adequate clothing and basic toiletries in the six months to May 2024.
- 5 million low-income households (42%) took fewer showers or baths due to cost during the cost-of-living crisis so far.
- 7 in 10 (71%) low-income households in the bottom 20% of incomes were going without essentials in May this year, the same as May last year.
The latest JRF cost of living tracker, completed in the same month the election was called, also found over a third of low-income families, 4.3m households are in arrears with at least one household bill or credit commitment. 1.2 million low-income households are in arrears with four or more bills.
In the past year, food banks in the Trussell Trust network distributed a record 3.1m emergency food parcels.
Over the past 5 years, the number of people experiencing destitution more than doubled. Four million experienced destitution in 2022 including one million children.
The letter signed by organisations including the Trussell Trust, Citizens Advice, Crisis, Age UK, Barnardo's, Mencap, Scope, Mental Health Foundation and many more, says, "it is clear [the public] want to see action and commitments to turn this situation around so that no one is forced to go without the essentials or need a food bank to survive."
Paul Kissack, Chief Executive of the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, said: “It is astonishing that with 7 million households going without essentials and record numbers of emergency food parcels being provided neither Rishi Sunak nor Keir Starmer are offering any practical measures to tackle this hardship with the urgency required. Addressing this emergency will need to be right at the top of the Prime Minister’s ‘to-do list’ after the election."
Helen Barnard, Director of Policy at Research and Impact at the Trussell Trust, said:
“For too many years now, food bank need has risen because people on the lowest incomes simply do not have the money to afford the essentials. Ensuring the UK’s social security system is fit for purpose and provides enough support for people to afford the essentials is vital for building a future without the need for food banks.
“We know that hardship is an issue the public are deeply concerned about and the next Government has a responsibility to lead us into a more hopeful future, one where people are supported and food banks can close their doors for good.”
Tom MacInnes, Interim Director of Policy at Citizens Advice, said:
“Citizens Advice is helping 6,000 people every day with cost-of-living issues. They can't pay rent. They can't buy food. Millions are just about surviving.
“Politicians have been skirting around the issue but have failed to offer real solutions. People want to know what will actually be done to help them. Party leaders still haven't shown what they’d do for households who have more going out than coming in.
“This is the living standards election and that's what voters will judge the next government on.”
James Taylor, Director of Strategy at Scope, said:
“Life has always cost more for disabled people. Buying essentials is swallowing up ever more cash, and prices – particularly of the basics - continue to rise.
“Our politicians need to hear this message loud and clear. We’re hearing from disabled people who are rationing how often they shower and use their powered wheelchair to get them to the toilet.
“The next government must tackle the unfair extra costs disabled people face, and break the link between disability and poverty.”
Mark Rowland, CEO of the Mental Health Foundation, said:
“Poverty and financial hardship are key drivers of poor mental health. Our research has shown that many people across the UK are feeling anxious, stressed, and hopeless due to increasing cost pressures and uncertainty surrounding their financial situation.”
“We need any future government to take more action to lessen the financial pressure people are experiencing, which is key to preventing poor mental health. This must involve a comprehensive plan to reduce poverty and economic inequality as well as taking a trauma-informed approach to reduce the poverty stigma associated with accessing public services. We need government to make sure all their decisions take into account the mental health impact on those affected, especially those most at risk of financial difficulty.”
Lynn Perry, CEO of Barnardo’s, said:
“Millions of families across the UK are struggling to afford basic necessities – be that food, toiletries or for many, even a bed to sleep in. Children growing up in poverty go to school hungry, they miss out on opportunities to learn and struggle with poor health long into adulthood.
“We call on the next UK government to tackle this issue head-on, including ending the two-child benefit cap – which would immediately lift 300,000 children out of poverty - and committing to an essentials guarantee in Universal Credit. This would be an investment in the health and future prospects of millions of children.”
The letter
Dear Rishi Sunak and Keir Starmer,
We are writing to you as a diverse network of organisations united by our shared desire to see an end to poverty and hardship in the UK.
This general election is taking place against a backdrop of deep and growing hardship. Just last month (May), 7 million low-income households were forced to go without essentials like food, adequate clothing and basic toiletries, and over the past year, food banks in the Trussell Trust network distributed a record 3.1 million emergency food parcels. Most shockingly of all, almost 4 million people, including 1 million children, experienced destitution in 2022, more than double the rate from five years previously.
Such levels of hardship are unacceptable in the UK and cannot be allowed to continue. The public are deeply concerned about the situation and believe it is the UK Government’s responsibility to right this wrong. It is clear they want to see action and commitments to turn this situation around so that no one is forced to go without essentials or to need a food bank to survive.
Yet right now there is a stark lack of focus from either of you on how you intend to tackle these issues if elected as Prime Minister next month. Families facing such levels of hardship cannot wait for the promise of growth, nor should they have to, the UK is one of the wealthiest countries in the world and has the resources to act now. Failing to do so is a political choice.
Together, we call on you to urgently set out a plan to help provide immediate relief to families struggling with hardship, as well as commit to developing a serious and ambitious strategy to build a future where everyone can afford the essentials, and no one needs a food bank to survive.
Yours sincerely,
Joseph Rowntree Foundation
Over 200 organisations committed to ending poverty
The Trussell Trust
Joseph Rowntree Foundation
38 Degrees
Acts 435
Advice NI
AdviceUK
AdvoCard
Age UK
Alexandra Rose Charity
Amnesty International UK
APLE Collective
Asylum Matters
Aylesham Community Trust
Baptists Together
Barnardo's
Belfast Unemployed Resource Centre
Bevan Foundation
Big Issue
Black Country Foodbank
Borders Community Action
Brandon Trust
British Association of Social Workers
British Psychological Society
Buttle UK
Cambridge Housing Society
Carers Trust
Carers UK
Caritas Diocese of Northampton
Caritas Diocese of Salford
Caritas Shrewsbury
Carnegie UK
Catch22
Catholics for AIDS Prevention & Support (CAPS) C.I.O.
Centre for Mental Health
Centre for Progressive Policy
Charity Finance Group
Children in Northern Ireland (CiNI)
Children North East
Children1st
Christians Against Poverty
Citizens Advice
Clarion Housing Group
Coeliac UK
Communities that Work
Community Advice Lisburn & Castlereagh
Community Housing Cymru
Community Money Advice
Community Ventures Middlesbrough Ltd
Compassion in Politics
County Durham Community Foundation
Crisis
Diabetes UK
Difference NE
Directory of Social Change
Disability Action
Disability Benefits Consortium
Disability North
Durham Christian Partnership
East Belfast Community Development Agency
East Durham Trust
Eastern Synod of the United Reformed Church
Elicit Theatre Company
End Fuel Poverty Coalition
End Furniture Poverty
Fair by Design
Falls Community Council
Families Outside
Family Fund
Feeding Families
Food Plymouth CIC
Foothold, The Institution of Engineering & Technology Benevolent Fund
Gingerbread
Glasgow Council for the Voluntary Sector
Glass Door Homeless Charity
Good Things Foundation
Greater Manchester Poverty Action
Green Alliance
Growing Rights Instead of Poverty Partnership (GRIPP)
Happy Days UK
Hartlepool Baby Bank
Hastings Food Network
Health and Social Care Alliance Scotland (the ALLIANCE)
Homeless Link
Hospitality and Hope
Humanists UK
In Kind Direct
Includem
Inclusion Barnet
Independent Food Aid Network
Inspire Wellbeing
Jubilee+
Just Fair
Kidney Care UK
Law Centre NI
LIFE CHANGE CHANGES LIVES
Little Village
Lloyds Bank Foundation for England & Wales
Locality
Love, Amelia
Macc
Macmillan Cancer Support
Marie Curie
Mencap
Mental Health Foundation
Methodist Central Hall Manchester
Mind
Money Advice Trust
Motor Neurone Disease Association
MS Society
Mums On a mission
Nacro
National AIDS Trust
National Association for Voluntary and Community Action (NAVCA)
National Education Union
National Housing Federation
National Justice and Peace Network
NCVO
NE Youth
Neighbourly
New Economics Foundation
NewstrAid Benevolent Fund
NICVA
North East Child Poverty Commission
North Western Synod of the United Reformed Church
Northern Ireland Anti-Poverty Network
Northern Ireland Council for Racial Equality
Northern Ireland Federation of Housing Associations (NIFHA)
Northern Ireland Women's Budget Group
Northern Synod of the United Reformed Church
Nourish Scotland
One Parent Families Scotland
Oxfam GB
Parenting across Scotland
Parenting Focus
Parkinson's UK
PlaceShapers
Poverty Truth Network
Q&D Productions
Quaker Social Action
Reclaim the Agenda NI
Refuge
Rethink Mental Illness
Reuse Network
Riverside Community Health Project
Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health
Royal Society for Public Health UK RSPH
Rural Community Network
Save the Children UK
Scope
Scottish Federation of Housing Associations (SFHA)
Scottish Out of School Care Network
Scottish Refugee Council
Scottish Women's Budget Group
Share The World's Resources (STWR)
Single Parent Rights
Society of St Vincent de Paul North Region (NI)
Southern Synod of the United Reformed Church
St Andrew's Community Network
St John of God Hospitaller Services (SJOG)
St Vincent de Paul Society
St. John's-Renfield Church
Support and Grow North East
Sustain: the alliance for better food and farming
The Association of Charitable Organisations (ACO)
The Cherry Tree Project
The Children's Society
The Dandelion Community, Wythenshawe
The Equality Trust
The Food Foundation
The Hygiene Bank
The Larder Belfast
The Methodist Church in Britain
The Mighty Creatives
The Parish of St Cuthbert's and St Joseph's North Shields
The Poverty Alliance
The Poverty Truth Community
The Printing Charity
The Resource Centre Derry
The Robertson Trust
The Rope Trust
The Salvation Army in the UK and Ireland
The Stockport Food Network
The Teesside Charity
The United Reformed Church
The United Reformed Church National Synod of Wales
Trinity Centre
Trowbridge Pantry
Turn2us
UCL Institute of Health Equity
United Reformed Church East Midlands Synod
United Reformed Church National Synod of Scotland
USPCA
VOICES ADFOCAD
Voluntary Organisations Disability Group (VODG)
Volunteer Glasgow
VONNE (Voluntary Organisations Network North East)
Wallsend Children's Community
Waltham Forest Community Hub
We Care Campaign
Women's Budget Group
Women's Enterprising Breakthrough
Women's Platform
Women's Regional Consortium, Northern Ireland
Women's Support Network
Xaverian Missionaries UK Province
Z2K