logo
Lib Dem leader Ed Davey comments on SEND services in Oxfordshire

Lib Dem leader Ed Davey comments on SEND services in Oxfordshire

BBC News16 hours ago
The leader of the Liberal Democrats has been defending his party's record on services for children with special educational needs (SEND) in Oxfordshire.Sir Ed Davey said families "should not worry" after the county council scrapped the dedicated cabinet member role for SEND.Sir Ed, who is the parent of a child with disabilities, is now urging the government to protect SEND children and their familiesA Department for Education spokesperson previously said the government "inherited a SEND system left on its knees".
The Liberal Democrats run Oxfordshire County Council, which had a damning Ofsted report two years ago.The authority has come under fire recently from SEND parents, after the dedicated cabinet role for SEND was merged with the cabinet role for children and young people in May.When asked about this, Sir Ed said: "I'm not familiar with the details, but I think what it was probably about was saving money and making sure we could take an integrated approach."I don't think SEND parents should necessarily worry about that."Speaking as a SEND parent myself, I have a lovely boy called John who has quite a profound disability, I'm not worried about names, I'm worried about [the local authority] actually doing the best they can and working with MPs to get the national government to do what it should have been doing years ago."
Both Sir Ed and Lib Dem education spokesperson Munira Wilson have written to Sir Keir Starmer setting out five fundamental principles for SEND reform.Sir Ed said if the reforms were adopted they could make "a massive difference" in Oxfordshire.Part of the proposal suggests spending less on special educational needs transport.Last year the county council spent more than £25m on home-to-school transport fees and private provision.The Department for Education spokesperson said the government was providing £740m "to encourage councils to create more specialist places in mainstream schools".
You can follow BBC Oxfordshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fears UK will be stuck with ‘known rapists' as one-in, one-out deal lets France decide which migrants it takes back
Fears UK will be stuck with ‘known rapists' as one-in, one-out deal lets France decide which migrants it takes back

The Sun

time24 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Fears UK will be stuck with ‘known rapists' as one-in, one-out deal lets France decide which migrants it takes back

FRANCE will be able to choose which migrants to take back in the one-in, one-out deal - prompting fears that the UK will be stuck with dangerous criminals. The details of each migrant selected for return will be given to France, allowing it to reject those with a criminal record or deemed a security risk. 7 7 Both France and the UK will have a veto over which of the small boat migrants they take in. Britain will take into account if the migrants have a connection to the country and if they have lived here before. Lucy Moreton from the Immigration Service Union, one of two unions that represent Border Force staff, slammed the plan. She told The Times: "If we encounter someone we know from the databases we have access to is a known rapist, why would France have them back? He's our problem.' While saying it is a "good start" to tackling the small boats crisis, she warned that migrants will likely become more sneaky in their methods. Revealed in the Plan: Migrants arriving via small boat will be detained and returned to France in short order A one-in, one-out system will operate with migrants sent back to France in exchange for asylum seekers The plan is merely a pilot scheme - which could be canned if it doesn't work Only 50 a week will be sent packing - a fraction of the thousands crossing into the UK There may be an uptick in migrants stowing away in cars and lorries, or taking more dangerous routes into the country. Sir Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron confirmed a one-in-one-out deal will return small boat migrants to France - but only 50 a week will be sent packing. The PM hailed the "groundbreaking" returns' scheme as "aggressive" - but admitted it was merely a pilot plan that would deal with just a fraction of the migrants trying to cross the Channel every day. Furious Farage blasts 'It's a national EMERGENCY' as Starmer reveals 'ridiculous' migrant deal In a joint press conference with the French President, Sir Keir confirmed that in exchange for sending unlawful migrants back, the UK will accept asylum seekers from Calais who have "legitimate claims" and family in Britain. Only those who haven't tried to enter the country illegally before will be eligible for the scheme, which will come into force "in weeks". The PM hailed the plan as "hard-headed, aggressive action" and boasted that "previous governments tried and failed to secure results like this". But the agreement is the equivalent of just 2,600 returns annually (50 a week), compared with the 44,000 who have arrived since Labour took power a year ago. And this year alone more than 21,117 migrants have crossed the Channel - a 56 per cent rise on the same period in 2024. The announcement was also made on the same day as hundreds more migrants crossed the Channel - with photos showing them waving from packed boats. And at the same time as The Sun's political correspondent watched in horror with Nigel Farage as the French handed 78 migrants to UK Border Force. At the Northwood Military Headquarters in Hertfordshire Sir Keir and Mr Macron insisted the deal would help break the business model of the smuggling gangs, with migrants unwilling to pay thousands for a crossing if they could be sent straight back. 7 7 But Sir Keir admitted the new deal won't necessarily end the crisis, saying: 'There is no silver bullet here". And it was revealed the plan could descend into a legal wrangle - with "returned" migrants able to launch lengthy battles through the courts. It means the system could get bogged down with ongoing legal cases - and the whole plan thwarted in the same way that Rwanda flights were grounded by lefty lawyers. Responding to the deal, Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp blasted: 'Labour's deal will only return one in every 17 illegal immigrants arriving. "Allowing 94% of illegal immigrants to stay will make no difference whatsoever and have no deterrent effect. 'This is the latest catastrophic example that when Labour negotiates, the UK loses. 'Starmer's first move in power was to rip up the Illegal Migration Act, scrap the Rwanda deterrent plan, weaken age checks and reopen the path to citizenship for illegal migrants. This is a green light to people smugglers. 'We've had enough of Starmer's weak and ineffective gimmicks.' Under the "returns pilot", for the very first time, small boat migrants will be "detained and returned to France in short order". The selected migrants - all adults - will be handed notices informing them that they are due to be sent back to France. Money for the returns will come from existing Home Office budgets. In exchange for every return, a different asylum seeker will be allowed into Britain through a "safe route, controlled and legal, subject to strict security checks". Sir Keir said: 'This will show others trying to make the same journey that it will be in vain and the jobs they've been promised in the UK will no longer exist because of the nationwide crackdown we're delivering on illegal working, which is on a completely unprecedented scale.' Addressing the press conference, Mr Macron couldn't help a dig at Brexit, blaming the divorce from Europe, rather than lazy French cops, for the surge in channel crossings. Despite Britain having paid £770 million to border patrol officers in Calais, the French President whinged: 'We must above all adapt the response to Brexit. 'It's that we sold a lie to the British people which is the problem with Europe... The problems become Brexit with your government and for the first time in nine years we're providing a response.' The announcement of the deal concluded a three-day State Visit to the UK by Mr Macron, who also dined with King Charles and members of the royal family. 7 7

Unite could cut ties with Labour over bin strikes row, boss claims
Unite could cut ties with Labour over bin strikes row, boss claims

Times

timean hour ago

  • Times

Unite could cut ties with Labour over bin strikes row, boss claims

The head of one of Labour's biggest union backers has raised the possibility of cutting ties with the party. Sharon Graham, the general secretary of Unite, criticised ministers' 'disgraceful' actions in attempting to bring the Birmingham bin strike to a close. Unite could cut millions of pounds of funding for the party. Graham said on Saturday she was under 'pressure to have an emergency rules conference, which would mean we would disaffiliate' from Labour. 'At this present moment in time, [affiliation] is hard to justify', she told BBC Radio 4's Today programme. She also hit out at Angela Rayner, the deputy prime minister, claiming she had acted in a 'despicable way' and had been 'missing in action' over the Birmingham dispute. Graham told Times Radio that Rayner was 'literally nowhere to be seen because she is trying to avoid this'.

The high street looks Victoria Starmer wore to meet the Macrons
The high street looks Victoria Starmer wore to meet the Macrons

Telegraph

timean hour ago

  • Telegraph

The high street looks Victoria Starmer wore to meet the Macrons

This week, British politicians and royals dusted off their glad rags for the state visit of France's Emmanuel Macron and his wife, Brigitte. While the Princess of Wales wore Dior and Sarah Burton for Givenchy, and Mrs Macron favoured her beloved Louis Vuitton, Sir Keir Starmer's wife, Victoria, and the leader of the opposition, Kemi Badenoch, chose instead to champion the great British high street. On the first day of the visit, Lady Starmer wore a £228 pleated navy and white dress by Reiss, an appropriately understated choice for a visit to Parliament Square to mark 20 years since the 7/7 bombings. As has increasingly become the case with her outfits, the dress has now almost completely sold out online. The following day, she opted for a long-sleeved floral maxi dress by Karen Millen for a visit to the British Museum, suitably breezy for the heatwave yet still elegant enough for the occasion. The Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch also chose a high street label for her meeting with the Macrons, opting for a vivid orange dress by LK Bennett. For a special service at St Paul's Cathedral to honour and remember the 7/7 attacks, Badenoch turned to the high street again, wearing a blue skirt suit by The Fold. Lady Starmer is known for championing the British high street, previously showing a fondness for the mid-market brand Me+Em, which she wore almost exclusively during her husband's campaign run and in the days afterwards last summer. Of course, it wasn't without controversy when it emerged that a political donor had paid for her wardrobe, but you can't criticise her good taste, or the sentiment behind it, which is to support the British fashion industry. And while the Princess of Wales's decision to nod to French fashion throughout the visit, with a touch of Englishness via Sarah Burton, is one way of exercising sartorial diplomacy, these women's choice of homegrown high street fashion brands is another. After all, the fashion industry is the largest of the creative industries in the UK, contributing approximately £60 billion per year to the economy and employing 1.3 million people. Yet despite having some of the world's most recognisable heritage brands, like Marks & Spencer, the high street has undoubtedly suffered over the past five years, hit hard by Covid lockdowns and the cost of living crisis. Of course, there are signs of hope. Topshop, once a juggernaut of millennial style, is returning with a pop-up next month, and new brands like Me+Em, Aligne and Nobody's Child are going from strength to strength. Yet more still needs to be done to ensure that our beloved British high street continues to bounce back, especially given competition from the likes of Spain with Zara and Mango, Scandinavia with H&M, Arket and Cos, and France with Sézane, Sandro, Maje and The Kooples. And for those who might think that what Lady Starmer or Kemi Badenoch wears doesn't matter, remember this: the luxury label Edeline Lee was very much a fashion editor's recommendation prior to when Victoria put it on the map last year, and there is consistent evidence that women copy what these high-profile figures choose to wear. 'When people in the public eye support British brands – whether mid range or top end – it sends a message to consumers that you can be at work, out for dinner, or even at a significant state visit and what our high street has to offer covers it all,' says Clare Bailey, founder of The Retail Champion. 'Shopping in our high streets and especially with our independent retailers is so important to keep those businesses alive and our high streets vibrant. We all know the 'Kate effect' – when she wears high street or more affordable branded items they sell out in record time – so for others in the public eye, whilst not quite the style icon that Kate has become, it certainly helps put high street fashion more front of mind with those following the news. With low cost online retailers like Shein and Temu eating away at sales traditionally diverted to our high street stores, now, more than ever, it is worth reminding ourselves that there's excellent choice, quality and style on the doorstep.' 'It's glorious to see Lady Starmer and Kemi Badenoch championing the stalwarts of the British High street,' agrees stylist Alexandra Fullerton. 'The UK has a heritage of excellent outerwear and country brands along with a reputation for nurturing the edgiest high fashion talent, but sometimes you just need a jolly good dress that doesn't cost an arm and a leg. Karen Millen, Reiss and LK Bennett are the places to go for elegant dresses that work for formal occasions but still have a dash of individuality about them, allowing the wearer's personal style to shine through. Lady Starmer and Badenoch's outfits are certain to trigger a flurry of sales from women wanting to look professional and polished. Lady Starmer has already proved herself adept at inspiring a sell-out after she wore scarlet Me+Em to join her husband at Downing Street last year.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store