Daily Mail

Labour: We will use foreign aid billions to spread feminism

- By Daniel Martin Policy Editor

JEREMY Corbyn will use billions of pounds of foreign aid to spread Left-wing and feminist ideals across the world, Labour said last night.

He would also abandon the Tory principle of spending the aid budget in the British national interest.

Labour has pledged to bring in the UK’s first ‘explicitly feminist’ internatio­nal developmen­t policy to ‘challenge patriarchy’ by tripling funding for women’s groups. Mr Corbyn said he would challenge ‘global elites’ and ‘redistribu­te power’. The Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t has been criticised in the past for supporting certain projects intended to empower women.

This included spending £9million on Ethiopia’s version of the Spice Girls, Yegna, which the DfID has now stopped funding, admitting the money could be better spent elsewhere.

Mr Corbyn would oppose privatisat­ion, push for a global wealth tax and ‘tackle the root causes of inequality’. Labour said taxpayers’ money would be spent on a new Social Justice Fund to support political activists in the developing world.

Funding for schemes involving fossil fuels would be scrapped to promote a climate change agenda. And DfID would be represente­d on the government body responsibl­e for sanctionin­g arms sales. Following abuses of power and sexual exploitati­on in the aid sector, Labour’s new aid plan – A World For The Many Not The Few – promised to transfer power away from the aid industry and into the hands of people and communitie­s. ‘We must find ways to unite across borders in solidarity against elite control of our global economy,’ it says. Regarding its support of women, the party said it would ensure all foreign and trade policy had ‘positive gender impacts’. ‘A Labour government will implement the UK’s first explicitly feminist internatio­nal developmen­t policy,’ it said. The report pledged a ‘gender transforma­tive approach’ across all of DfID’s work as well as ‘gender budgeting’.

It called for an internatio­nal commission to explore the possibilit­y of a global wealth tax, as proposed by Left-wing economist Thomas Piketty.

Aid money would be channelled towards helping countries tackle tax avoidance, and low income countries would be given preferenti­al trade access.

Labour would end British support for public-private partnershi­ps overseas and privatelyf­unded aid firms. There would be no more cash for fee- paying schools and private finance initiative healthcare schemes. The party accused the Conservati­ves of ‘simplistic charity’ rather than promoting social justice – and criticised Tories for ‘shifting the focus of the aid budget from poverty reduction alone to what it called the national interest’.

Aligning the DfID’s funding to the ‘short-term’ national interest would end and Labour would focus on the ‘moral purpose of poverty reduction’.

The report also claimed Britain should be happy to continue giving financial support to India, even though it is now rich enough to afford its own space programme, because aid cash can help tackle inequality.

Mr Corbyn said in the foreword to Labour’s report: ‘The Conservati­ves won’t challenge the rigged system that has created global crisis because they are at the heart of that system.

‘They reduce aid to a matter of charity, rather than one of power and social justice. Worse, they seem ever too ready to abandon our developmen­t commitment­s to the world’s poorest. We don’t have to accept the world that global elites are building for us. Let’s take on the root causes of poverty, inequality and climate change, and not just their symptoms.’

David Cameron enshrined in law the pledge that the UK spends 0.7 per cent of national income on foreign aid. British aid spending now far exceeds the average among other developed economies.

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