‘There’s not this massive use for food banks in this country. People just can’t cook or budget’: Tory MP faces fury after blaming cost-of-living struggles on families not being able to prepare ‘a meal from scratch’
A Tory MP today faced a furious backlash after he suggested struggling Britons are only using food banks because they ‘can’t cook a meal from scratch’ and ‘can’t budget’.
Ashfield MP Lee Anderson caused the uproar as he claimed there was ‘not this massive use for food banks’ in Brittanje.
He also offered an invitation for Opposition MPs to visit a scheme in his own constituency that represented ‘a real food bank’ and allowed people to ‘make a meal for about 30p a day’.
Mr Anderson, 'n voormalige Arbeid councillor who defected to the Konserwatiewes prior to his election to Parliament in 2019, faced immediate anger in the House of Commons.
He was berated for his ‘crass and cruel’ comments as Britons up and down the country face a cost-of-living crisis due to soaring prices.
Mr Anderson, who earns £84,144 a year as an MP, provoked the row as he spoke in a Commons debate on the Queen’s Speech.

Ashfield MP Lee Anderson caused the uproar as he claimed there was ‘not this massive use for food banks’ in Brittanje

The former Labour councillor defected to the Tories before his election to Parliament in 2019 as part of Boris Johnson’s 80-seat majority
Addressing MPs on the Opposition benches, he urged them to ‘come to Ashfield and work with me for a day in my food bank and see the brilliant scheme we have got in place where when people come now for a food parcel, they have to register for a budgeting course and a cooking course’.
‘What we do in the food bank, we show them how to cook cheap and nutritious meals on a budget,’ hy het bygevoeg.
‘We can make a meal for about 30 pence a day. And this is cooking from scratch.’
Labour MP Alex Cunningham intervened to ask Mr Anderson whether he thought it ‘necessary to have food banks in 21st century Britain’.
Mr Anderson replied: ‘He makes a great point and this is exactly my point.
‘So, I invite you personally to come to Ashfield, look at our food bank, how it works and I think you will see first hand that there’s not this massive use for food banks in this country.
‘But generation after generation who cannot cook properly, they can’t cook a meal from scratch. They cannot budget. The challenge is there.
‘Come, kom. I’ll offer anybody.’

SNP MP Joanna Cherry told Mr Anderson food banks were needed ‘because we have poverty in this country at a scale that should shame his Government’
Noting the reaction of other MPs to his remarks, Mr Anderson added: ‘You’re sat there with glazed expressions on your faces looking like I’ve landed from a different planet.
‘Come, come to Ashfield, come next week, come the week after, come to a real food bank that’s making a real difference to people’s lives.’
The Trussell Trust charity runs more than 1,400 food bank centres across the UK.
There are also estimated to be 1,200 independent food banks in addition to those run by the Trussell Trust, Salvation Army and those based in schools.
Responding directly to Mr Anderson’s comments in the Commons, the SNP’s Joanna Cherry said: ‘All of us have food banks in our constituency.
‘We don’t really need to visit his because we’re perfectly well aware of the requirement for them.
‘But the requirement for them is not because people don’t know how to cook, it’s because we have poverty in this country at a scale that should shame his Government.’
Karen Buck, Labour’s shadow work and pensions minister, gesê: ‘In the world where people actually live we now hear daily stories of families going without food and others unable to turn their ovens on in fear of rising energy bills.
‘The idea that the problem is cooking skills and not 12 years of government decisions that are pushing people into extreme poverty is beyond belief.
‘Out of touch doesn’t even cover it.’
Labour MP Yasmin Qureshi also attacked Mr Anderson’s ‘astonishing’ wat voorgestel het dat die 'vermeende vlak van persoonlike bedreiging verhoog moet word onder diegene wat selfvoldaan is.
She posted on Twitter: ‘A genuinely astonishing comment from someone who represents an area with almost 30% of children living in poverty.
‘It would appear he has no clue of what life is like on the ground for so many of his constituents.’
Fellow Labour MP Angela Eagle said Mr Anderson’s comments were ‘crass and cruel in equal measure’.
Egter, fellow Conservative MP Brendan Clarke-Smith defended his party colleague, insisting Mr Anderson was ‘absolutely spot on’.
Mr Clarke-Smith also highlighted a newspaper article from last year detailing how he and Mr Anderson had previously promoted a food bank’s efforts to show how it was possible to feed a family of five for seven days for £50.24.
The Sunday Express article quoted Mr Anderson as saying he had no pretensions to being a ‘great cook’ but that he does not mind ‘having a dabble’.
Hy het bygevoeg: ‘I was a single parent for about 17 years – two boys living with me, so you learn how to cook cheaply, learn how to cook nice meals and I enjoyed doing it.
‘This is all about tackling food poverty. It’s about people having nutritious meals.
‘It’s about tackling obesity as well. If you’re going to eat nutritious meals, the chance are you’re not going to be overweight.’
Verlede somer, Mr Anderson refused to watch England’s games at Euro 2020 in protest at the men’s national football team taking the knee before matches in an anti-racism stance.
The MP criticised the gesture’s association with the Black Lives Matter political movement.