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Theresa May says 0.7% foreign aid funding commitment 'will remain' Theresa May says 0.7% foreign aid funding commitment 'will remain'
(35 minutes later)
Theresa May has said that the UK's commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of GDP on foreign aid spending "will remain", amid concerted pressure from right-wing ministers and newspapers to cut the aid budget. Theresa May has said that the UK's commitment to spend 0.7 per cent of its gross national income (GNI) on foreign aid spending "will remain", amid concerted pressure from right-wing ministers and newspapers to cut the aid budget.
More follows Speaking to reporters after visiting a toothpaste factory in her Maidenhead constituency, the Prime Minister said: "The 0.7 per cent commitment remains and will remain [in the Conservative's election manifesto]".
"What we need to look at is how that money is spent", she added.
The pledge is the second that Ms May has confirmed will be a Conservative election promise after she announced that the Tories will also stand by their promise to reduce immigration to less than 100,000 a year.
It comes after Bill Gates urged Ms May to keep up the 0.7% target, telling The Independent in an interview that the British people should be "very proud" of what their money is achieving around the world.
Mr Gates said he expected the Prime Minister was “looking at her priorities” as a result of Brexit but added: “We are hopeful that the commitment to 0.7 per cent – and things like neglected diseases – stays strong.”
A number of Conservative MPs, including current cabinet ministers Liam Fox and David Davis, have previously called for the target to be dropped, claiming it is inflexible and unnecessary. Right-wing newspapers such as The Sun and the Daily Mail have also called for the pledge to be scrapped. 
The UK's commitment to meeting the UN target of 0.7 per cent of GNI being spent on foreign aid was enshrined in law by the Coalition government in March 2015. The previous year, 2014, was the first time Britain had met the target, when it spent £11.4 billion on overseas aid.