Home / Education & Learning Schools & Curriculum / SEND & Inclusion / Campaign urges Starmer not to weaken legal rights for SEND children

Campaign urges Starmer not to weaken legal rights for SEND children

Campaign urges Starmer not to weaken legal rights for SEND children

A new national campaign is calling on Prime Minister Keir Starmer not to weaken the legal rights of children with special educational needs and disabilities (SEND) in England, ahead of expected reforms in the government’s schools white paper. The group, Save Our Children’s Rights, backed by actor Sally Phillips and a cross-party group of MPs, fears that changes could roll back statutory protections that families currently rely on to secure support for their children. 

Campaigners have released a video message addressed to Starmer and delivered a petition with more than 130,000 signatures to Downing Street, urging ministers to retain legally enforceable Education, Health and Care Plans (EHCPs) and the right to appeal decisions. They argue that undermining these legal safeguards would leave many families without an effective way to ensure access to necessary educational support. 

Proponents say that statutory rights are vital to holding authorities to account and preventing arbitrary cutbacks in support, especially in a SEND system already under strain. Government officials have previously indicated reforms aim to improve inclusion, but campaigners want explicit guarantees that existing legal protections will be preserved. 

Original article: New campaign urges Starmer not to diminish legal rights of SEND children — The Guardian, 12 January 2026: https://www.theguardian.com/education/2026/jan/12/new-campaign-urges-starmer-not-to-diminish-legal-rights-of-send-children 

0 0 votes
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Sign up to keep up to date

Sign up to receive awesome content in your inbox, every month.

Category List

accountability and oversight adaptation policy AI oversight model AI safety vs innovation algorithmic transparency bias and discrimination community services cost of living policy cyber resilience data governance data protection and AI digital public services equality impact evidence-based policy government consultations human rights implications ICO AI guidance impact assessment implementation timeline inequalities UK inflation and households interoperability labour market changes legal & rights local government funding ministerial announcement model governance notherelong news parliamentary update productivity policy public policy analysis public sector reform public services reform regulator guidance SME regulation spending review stakeholder response statutory duties technology trust in institutions UK AI regulation UK policy explained Westminster briefing what it means for you workforce shortages

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x