The Guardian Australia

Boris Johnson’s attacks behind fall in support for overseas aid, says minister

- Michael Savage Policy editor

The failure of Boris Johnson and successive Tory government­s to defend overseas aid has led to a fall in public support for it, the new internatio­nal developmen­t minister has warned.

In revealing comments made just days before he was appointed to the role, Andrew Mitchell, a veteran defender of overseas aid, said that a fall in support for the first time in 18 months had been accompanie­d by a political failure to make the case for its benefits for the UK.

“The drop in support is not just cost of living, but because – unlike in the past under Blair, Brown, Cameron and May – the aid budget has not been defended,” Mitchell said. “When you have the PM describing UK overseas aid as ‘some giant cashpoint in the sky’ it’s not just wrong, but when the public faces hard times it damages support.”

Johnson used those words to describe the aid budget when he folded the Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t into the Foreign Office in 2020.

Mitchell was responding to new data from the Developmen­t Engagement Lab (Del), based at University College London and the University of Birmingham. Its latest regular survey found that public support for maintainin­g or increasing the overseas aid budget fell to 50% at the end of October – down from 56% in June. Support had been at a record high since Johnson cut the aid budget from 0.7% of gross national income to 0.5% in the spring of 2021.

While the cost of living crisis has been blamed for falling public support for overseas aid, Mitchell said that earlier government­s had been willing to make the case for the aid programme in periods of economic turbulence. “In 2010-12, in a time of austerity after the global financial crisis, we made the case for aid as strongly as we could and we saw public approval go up,” he said. “The difference is that we defended UK aid.”

Mitchell is now facing two major challenges to the aid budget in government. It is almost certain to be held down to 0.5% of gross national income for longer than planned as the new prime minister, Rishi Sunak, and the chancellor, Jeremy Hunt, search for savings before the autumn.

However, Mitchell’s biggest challenge is piecing together how the aid money is being spent, as billions are now used to meet costs related to asylum seekers and refugees, including the Afghanista­n and Ukraine programmes. The costs mean there is little ability to plan spending inside developing countries, with concerns some programmes will have to be cut.

The UK is also under immediate pressure to make an increased contributi­on to a major global fund to tackle deadly diseases. Canada and the US are understood to be among those pressuring Britain to increase its £1.4bn contributi­on in 2019. However, the government is understood to be considerin­g a contributi­on in the region of £800m – less than half the requested amount.

Researcher­s at Del said the drop in public enthusiasm for UK overseas aid ended an 18-month streak of rising support. It fell particular­ly among younger, lower-income non-degree holders who voted for the Conservati­ve or Brexit parties in the 2019 general election.

“The story of lost support is largely political,” said David Hudson, Del co-director. “But support is still higher than it was before the 2021 aid cuts. The four-year low was 44%, in January 2021, a few months before the cuts.

“Following record-breaking generosity toward victims of the war in Ukraine, the British public might be feeling the squeeze of rising energy costs and food prices, which seems in turn to be affecting the sense of collective responsibi­lity we witnessed with the beginning of the Ukraine war and the Covid-19 pandemic,” he said.

The data showed that support for overseas aid also dropped in Germany and France.

A Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t Office spokespers­on said: “We remain committed to internatio­nal developmen­t and our lifesaving work continues to help those in need around the world. We are one of the largest global aid donors, spending more than £11bn in aid in 2021.”

 ?? Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images ?? Andrew Mitchell, the new minister for developmen­t at the Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t Office, last week.
Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images Andrew Mitchell, the new minister for developmen­t at the Foreign, Commonweal­th and Developmen­t Office, last week.

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