
Over sixty charities and community organisations have come together to challenge MPs across the country to act now and protect the poorest in society who are hardest hit by the recession.
After weeks of the expenses scandal and having elected a new Speaker for the House of Commons to clean up their own act, MPs returning to their constituencies at the weekend face calls to sign a Poverty Pledge (26-27 June). Local groups will meet with over 100 MPs in their constituencies, raising local issues and pressing the case for change nationally. Many more MPs are being lobbied across the UK.
Vanessa Stanislas, chair of Get Fair and Chief Executive of Disability Alliance said: “With the economy in recession and rapidly rising unemployment, it’s time to get fair – that’s why we are calling on MPs to sign the Get Fair poverty pledge. Once people find themselves living below the breadline, it is virtually impossible for them to pull themselves out of poverty. Things will only get worse, not better unless action is taken. All politicians and political parties should commit to make the UK a fairer place and help bring an end to poverty.”
Get Fair is calling for immediate action to:
· Put planned changes to welfare benefits on hold: with a rapid rise in unemployment, current government plans will result in severe hardship for many families
· Increase the number of social rented homes by 45,000: house building has almost stopped and repossession rates are rising as people lose their jobs
· Protect local services: additional funding focused on quality public services that reach those most in need
Poverty Pledge for MPs: "I undertake to use, or support the use, of all policy powers available to parliament to meet poverty targets and include concrete measures in my party manifesto to achieve a lasting reduction in poverty in the UK."
Get Fair members include: Oxfam; Shelter; Age Concern/Help The Aged; Disability Alliance; Refugee Council; Church Action on Poverty; YWCA; Church Urban Fund.



