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David Cameron and Jeremy Corbyn childcare clash at PMQs | David Cameron and Jeremy Corbyn childcare clash at PMQs |
(35 minutes later) | |
Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn has accused the prime minister of breaking his promise to give families in England 30 hours free childcare a week. | |
Pointing to a National Audit Office report, he said a third of families would not now receive it. | Pointing to a National Audit Office report, he said a third of families would not now receive it. |
David Cameron said the report also said "significant progress" had been made. | David Cameron said the report also said "significant progress" had been made. |
He said tax-free childcare changes - also highlighted by Mr Corbyn - had been delayed by two court cases, at Prime Minister's Questions. | He said tax-free childcare changes - also highlighted by Mr Corbyn - had been delayed by two court cases, at Prime Minister's Questions. |
Mr Cameron said the new scheme - which was meant to be launched in Autumn 2015 - would now be introduced in 2017. | |
On the promise to deliver 30 hours of free childcare a week, Mr Cameron said pilot schemes would be launched this year, followed by "full implementation" in 2017. | |
Mr Corbyn said: "One third of families promised 30 hours of free childcare now won't receive it. This is a broken promise. | |
"The NAO report also warns that many childcare providers are not offering the new entitlement due to insufficient funding. | |
"There are 41,000 three-year-olds missing out on free early education as a result of this. Will the prime minister intervene and ensure those children get the start in life they deserve?" | |
Mr Cameron quoted the NAO report as saying the government had "successfully implemented" the entitlement with "almost universal" take-up of hours offered, with parents and children "clearly benefiting" and providers "positive" about increasing it to 30 hours. | |
He then made a jibe about Labour's new economic adviser "one Mr Yanis Varoufakis". | |
"He was the Greek finance minister who left his economy in ruins. | |
"That is Labour's policy in two words - 'Acropolis now'." | |
Mr Corbyn said that would not help the thousands of children who were missing out on the free childcare promised by the government. | |
He then accused the Mr Cameron of presiding over a "crisis" in teacher recruitment and classroom overcrowding - both points denied by Mr Cameron, who said there were "453 fewer schools that were full or over capacity compared to 2010". |
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