Big Issue founder Lord John Bird brought his landmark bill for a ‘Ministry of Poverty Prevention‘ back to the House of Lords today – despite his own admission that it doesn’t have a “snowbell in hell’s chance” of being adopted by the government.
Lord Bird said that the bill is his way “banging the drum” for the government to shift its focus to preventative activities, rather than solely “firefighting” crises in homelessness, prisons, benefits and other areas of poverty.
This is the second parliamentary term in which Lord Bird’s private members’ bill for the establishment of a Ministry of Poverty Prevention has been put to the House of Lords. He is campaigning for a single government department to be made responsibility for reducing – and ultimately eradicating – poverty in the UK. But it will not proceed without government support.
Among the measures laid out in his bill, Lord Bird stipulates that the government must set out legally binding poverty reduction targets.
With Joseph Roundtree Foundation’s newly published UK poverty report for 2025 predicting that the number of people in extreme poverty is unlikely to fall across England in the next four years, Big Issue wants to force the government to take greater action by implementing ‘Poverty Zero’ targets which they are legally bound to meet.
John Bird said: “No teacher, no doctor, no prison or police officer is trained to get rid of poverty, but they have to deal with the results thrown up by poverty. It is an unhappy truth that our public servants are in the poverty firing line but are capable only of responding to poverty’s toxic outcomes.