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The government dished out millions on highly questionable contracts while denying starving kids free school meals

Tom Coburg by Tom Coburg
31 October 2020
in Editorial, UK
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Evidence shows that the Conservative government has thrown hundreds of millions of pounds at companies for what could only be described as dubious or questionable contracts. In contrast, the government was happy to deny free school meals during the October half-term break, meaning many kids were left hungry.

Loads of money

In September, The Canary published a listing of known personal protective equipment (PPE) and coronavirus (Covid-19) contractors at that point in time. Some were identified as Tory Party donors; others were dormant or had no experience of producing or sourcing PPE.

Since then more evidence has emerged via Jo Maugham QC regarding some of those firms in relation to the provision of ‘coveralls’ (isolation suits):

We need to talk about isolation suits – also known as "coveralls". THREAD

— Jo Maugham (@JolyonMaugham) October 26, 2020

Maugham showed that the government spent £708m via the 11 biggest contractors, up to 18 October 2020, for the purchase of coveralls. Based on one set of figures, Maugham calculates that £708m is enough to buy around 29m coveralls. However, Maugham points out that so far only 533,000 coveralls have been used, thus leaving a massive shortfall in products or a massive overspend.

Contractors and their awards specifically referenced by Maugham in his evaluations include:

  • Unispace interior design specialists: £239.6m.
  • P14 Medical (“run by a Tory councillor”; according to last accounts (P14 Medical) was £485,886 in debt): £156.29m.
  • Cargo Services Far East Ltd (based in Hong Kong): £106.7m.
  • Medicine Box Ltd (has only £48,840 in “next assets”): £40m.
  • Crisp Websites Ltd, trading as Pestfix (assets worth £18,000): £32.4m.
  • SG Recruitment UK Ltd (via tax haven of Jersey): £23.89m.
  • “Tower Supplies”: one contract for £20.2m and another for the same amount.
  • Kau Media Group Ltd (a digital marketing agency): £19.5m.
  • Initia Ventures Ltd (“dormant”): £16.28m.

Maugham claims corruption at play:

Also, leaked documents seen by Maugham’s Good Law Project reveal that “Cabinet Office contacts and others were helping ‘VIPs’ sell PPE to Government outside normal procurement channels” at inflated prices.

More snouts in the trough

And this government largesse is not confined to PPE contracts.

Journalist Sam Bright, writing in Byline Times, shows that £180m has recently been handed out to major corporations Bain and Company, McKinsey, Deloitte, KPMG, Accenture, and PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC). Their contracts, each worth £30m, state they will “support the successful delivery of the UK’s economic and political independence” and that this will include “relationships with the EU and the rest of the world”.

Bright comments:

It seems ironic that Brexit was flogged on the notion that the UK would be regaining its democratic sovereignty from Brussels, yet the country’s “independence” will be delivered by a flock of highly-paid, grey-suited, unelected corporate consultants.

If it’s not government incompetency, it must be something far worse. No doubt in the New Year many more multi-million-pound Brexit-related contracts will also be awarded.

Hard times under Tories

Despite these huge awards, the Conservative government, backed by 320 Tory MPs, refused to provide free school meals in England during the Autumn half term. Instead, it was left to local initiatives – foodbanks, charities, local businesses, councils, and mutual aid groups – to step in and help. An interactive map showed the extent of these initiatives. A similar map was made available by #EndChildFoodPoverty. The Kids Meals Map by The Food Foundation was another resource.

It’s claimed by the Food Foundation that 1.4 million children age 8-17 experienced food shortages during the summer holidays. Examples given include:

  1. Having to eat less and make food last longer because of lack of money to buy more (6%)
  2. Parents not eating because there wasn’t enough food at home (5%)
  3. Children being hungry but not eating to avoid using up food at home (4%)
  4. Children being hungry but not eating because of lack of food at home (4%)
  5. Not eating a proper meal due to lack of money for food (4%)
  6. Eating at a friend’s house because there wasn’t enough food at home (3%).

But Tory meanness is no aberration:

Child poverty is a political choice:

-Social security cut by £34 billion since 2010
-Child benefit slashed in real terms since 2011
-Two-child limit introduced in 2017
-Longest peacetime pay squeeze in centuries

And now Tories refuse to extend free school meals.

Disgusting.

— Zarah Sultana MP (@zarahsultana) October 27, 2020

Meanwhile, Save The Children has produced a Winter Plan For Children proposal, which includes extending eligibility for free school meals in England.

Dickensian Britain updated

Those MPs who voted to reject free school meals for the Autumn half term are the modern equivalent of the beadle (workhouse overseer) in Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist: greedy, sneering, and indifferent to widespread poverty. For example, during the period 1 Jun 2019 to 31 May 2020 alone, MPs of all parties claimed more than £28m in expenses.

This is Britain today: divided by class, governed by the corrupt; where the rich get richer and the poor are treated with contempt.

Featured image via Flickr – Images Money

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