When my dad died, my mum was left with three boys under the age of ten. At age four, I remember her going to pick up her widow’s pension every other week. It was a lifeline for her and for us. It helped her adjust, and to take good care of my brothers and I.
For any family, losing a parent can be devastating not just emotionally, but financially too. My family weren’t particularly poor, but I still don’t know what we’d have done without that support.
Bereavement Support Payments are supposed to help families adjust to life after the tragedy of losing a parent.
From my own experience, and from working with my constituents and nationwide bereavement charities, I know how overwhelming it can be to suddenly find yourself a single parent. You have sole responsibility of putting food on the table and paying for childcare while dealing with your own grief. Add to this the needs of grieving children, such as specialist counselling, and an overwhelming financial burden is placed on families needing breathing room to heal.
.@EdwardJDavey secures Boris Johnson’s commitment to look into the injustice surrounding Bereavement Support Payments, where grieving children are not entitled to support if their parents are unmarried. #PMQspic.twitter.com/8yBNJIgKUz
— Liberal Democrats (@LibDems) February 12, 2020
Bereavement Support Payments are supposed to help families adjust to life after the tragedy of losing a parent. Yet for 2,000 families a year, the law says they aren’t entitled to this support, because the parents weren’t married.
With cohabiting couples being the fastest growing family type in the UK, how many more children need to suffer before the Government takes action?
Last week the High Court ruled that the difference in Bereavement Support Payments between married and cohabiting couples is a breach of children’s human rights. In 2018, the Supreme Court made a similar ruling.
Today, I asked the Prime Minister to make sure that all grieving children are supported, whether their parents were married or not.
Enough is enough. Today, I asked the Prime Minister to legislate to respond to both rulings, and make sure that all grieving children are supported, whether their parents were married or not.
I am pleased that Boris Johnson has agreed to look into the issue, and I hope that his Government will legislate to make sure that no child is left without the support they need.