Therese Raphael
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Boris Johnson is Humbled by a 22-Year-Old Footballer

Some sports stars dazzle on the pitch or earn headlines for their afterhours antics. Others lend their names to good causes. But it’s unusual for a player in his early prime to take on a government as Manchester United striker Marcus Rashford has done.

In early summer, Rashford’s campaign to extend Britain’s free school-meal vouchers over the summer break got the cold shoulder from Boris Johnson’s government. But such was the underlying logic of his demand, and the public support for the footballer’s plea, that Johnson made a swift U-turn, allocating 120 million pounds ($156 million) for that period.

When the 22-year-old star argued that a further extension was needed to cover the autumn and winter school breaks, it should have been a simple matter of hitting the repeat button. The government, however, refused. The backlash has shown the fragility of Johnson’s new coalition of Conservative voters. It also suggests the public may be moving even further to the left of a government that has promised large amounts of spending.

Rashford is no ordinary sportsman. A hugely talented soccer player with one of Europe’s top clubs, he’s a goal scoring super-celebrity and a regular for the England team. But his personal narrative adds to his influencer status: Raised by a single mother along with five other children, Rashford knew food poverty firsthand. Well before the pandemic, in Oct. 2019, he set up a campaign with British department store Selfridges to provide essential items to the homeless over Christmas.

After Tory members of Parliament voted last week to defeat a motion from the opposition Labor Party to extend the voucher program over the holidays, Rashford took to social media to express his despair. Then something remarkable happened.

Restaurants, pubs and cafes around the country stepped in to offer free meals to needy children over this week’s autumn school break. Local authorities pledged help at Christmas, too. Nearly 900,000 people signed a petition calling for the government to extend the meals program, and Labor is threatening a new vote on the matter. Even the players of Leeds United, a bitter rival of Rashford’s team, donated to his campaign. It was as if David Cameron’s moribund 2010 idea of the Big Society — the notion that charities and civic groups could replace parts of state provision — had come to life. Only this time it was a rebuke to a Tory prime minister rather than a validation of a Conservative ideal.

That’s quite a blow to Johnson, whose biggest asset when he was elected in December was an uncanny ability to take the public’s pulse, read a room and reach out across boundaries of age, income and education. With one simple “no,” Johnson has managed to set himself against a popular, Black sports star, against the working-class northern English constituencies whose votes delivered his parliamentary majority — and seemingly against feeding hungry children at Christmas. It’s been a communications disaster.

Of course, it stretches cynicism beyond credulity to think that Johnson or his ministers really don’t care about children having enough to eat. They’re just conflicted about the right approach and seemingly loath to accept ideas they haven’t invented.

But why not engage with Rashford and the issues earlier? If there was justification for meal vouchers for deprived children over the summer lockdown, it looks like hairsplitting in the extreme to say it wouldn’t be needed over Christmas when some state support has been cut back and unemployment is ticking upward.

Largely this is a disagreement over how to manage this problem, not one about fundamental principle, as Johnson concedes. And yet, the government’s alternatives to the Rashford plan of just extending the meal vouchers are inferior. That just fuels the impression that the government hasn’t thought carefully about an issue that ought to be paramount.

Ministers’ claims that extra cash given to the councils this summer (63 million pounds) will cover the cost merely strengthen Rashford’s case. That money was only expected to last 12 weeks and wasn’t specifically earmarked for school dinners.

The government has increased the general UK welfare payment, known as Universal Credit, which will help. That’s also useful for getting money to families too proud to apply for free school meals. But the increased benefit is unlikely to be enough and isn’t targeted at children themselves. If the government is adamant it doesn’t want to extend the voucher program, it will have to find another way to do effectively the same thing.

The public response to Marcus Rashford’s campaign is, ironically, a confirmation that Johnson’s instincts for his party were correct. People are looking to government to level the playing field and provide some baseline protection right now. The open question, increasingly within his own party too, is whether he’s the leader to do it.

Bloomberg