More than 110 charities and parent groups have come together to support the Disabled Children’s Partnership (DCP) Manifesto and campaign for better support for disabled children and their families.

The manifesto has already been shown informally to MPs and policy developers in meetings since party conference season. Since then it has officially launched, calling for all political parties to prioritise disabled children and their families in their own manifestos.

The DCP Manifesto is made up of three asks for all of the major political parties, which we would like to see reflected in their plans for the next government.

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The manifesto asks major political parties to make disabled children a priority. Those at the heart of politics need to prioritise the needs of disabled children and their families and to acknowledge disabled children and their families as equal, valued members of society. It asks all parties to commit to the appointment of a Minister for Disabled Children and to producing a cross-party disabled children’s strategy.

Secondly, the manifesto asks the parties to clarify and enforce rights, and review the law. It says the next Government must commit to stronger accountability within the SEND system; to making the education system inclusive; and to ensuring that disabled children and young people receive the support they need across the education, health and social care systems.

The manifesto welcomes the current Law Commission review of the law on disabled children’s social care. It says that it is imperative that the next Government takes forward this work and, more generally, that reforms to children’s social care recognise and prioritise disabled children and their families.

Finally, DCP says there is an urgent need to address funding shortfalls and create a dedicated fund for disabled children. It says making disabled children the priority and having a system that is fit for purpose with effective accountability will help make this happen; but the right level of funding is also vital.

Analysis commissioned by Scope and the DCP in 2021 found a £573 million funding gap in disabled children’s social care, and a £1.5 billion gap in disabled children’s NHS spending. This gap is growing, as failure to intervene early leads to higher costs in the longer term, as well as increased costs in other areas of public expenditure.

Disability charity Leonard Cheshire recently stated that there is now a “window of opportunity” for the UK Government to provide urgent funding solutions for social care after a report revealed workforce shortages, rising demand and rising costs in the sector.

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