Daily Mail

Stop enhancing models’ photos, MPs tell brands

- By Harriet Line Chief Political Correspond­ent

A CAMPAIGN calling on big brands to stop digitally manipulati­ng models’ bodies in adverts has been backed by dozens of MPs.

In a bid to tackle body-confidence issues, they are urging companies not to ‘photoshop’ people’s figures.

Several major brands have already signed up to the Body Image Pledge – including Boots, Dove and PureGym.

More than 70 cross-party MPs signed a letter calling for other companies, charities and organisati­ons to follow suit.

The campaign is led by Tory MP Dr Luke Evans, who said he saw ‘first-hand’ the negative effects of social media and ‘false advertisin­g’ when he was a GP.

He said: ‘When the name of photo-editing software becomes a verb with a negative connotatio­n, we know that as a society we need to correct things.

‘Digitally manipulati­ng body proportion­s to fit someone else’s ideal has become normalised, creating a warped sense of reality.’ He said the Body Image Pledge is ‘about honesty, transparen­cy and ensuring we aren’t creating unrealisti­c and unachievab­le standards’.

‘I hope this call from fellow Parliament­arians will raise awareness and cause other companies to follow suit,’ he added.

A recent Girlguidin­g survey found that 94 per cent of girls and women aged 11-21 think more should be done to protect young people from such pressures online.

Those that sign the pledge commit to not ‘digitally alter the proportion­s of body parts or shapes which appear in any of our branded imagery’, including social media.

It is backed by Tory former health secretary Jeremy Hunt, as well as Women and Equalities Committee chairman Caroline Nokes. Senior Labour, Liberal Democrat, SNP and DUP figures have also signed a letter urging companies to sign.

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