
David Cameron, Conservative Party leader has delivered a keynote speech on the importance of family life today.
Key points:

Tax Credits
Gordon Brown's solution to helping families has been to target support - providing specific amounts of money to specific groups of people for specific purposes, all worked out from his office in Whitehall. Although well-intentioned, tax credits are now a major source of financial distress - payments are often clawed back at the end of the year when the family has already spent the money, and there are the huge costs in running such a complex, bureaucratic system.
We will work with the tax credits system we inherit, but our first aim should be to make the system simpler and fairer. In the longer term, we should think about how to apply our Conservative belief in trusting people to the challenge of easing the financial pressures on families. One option would be to give transferable tax allowances to married couples - and couples in civil partnerships - with young children. Transferable allowances would be expensive, and they would not benefit families on low incomes or out of work, where family poverty is most endemic. So we will need to consider other policy options to help poorer families. In particular, we will need to find ways to help lone parents.

Childcare
We must be pragmatic too about childcare: this is the biggest issue for many families and looking for, and paying for, childcare is now breath-takingly complex. We believe that government has a duty to make good childcare affordable. Sadly, our childcare costs are now among the highest in Europe. Gordon Brown's solution is again symptomatic of a top-down approach: the childcare tax credit is complicated to claim and eligibility is restrictive - for example, it can't be spent on informal care like that provided by friends and relatives. Perhaps that's why less than a quarter of low-income families claiming both the child tax credit and the working tax credit claim the childcare tax credit element too.
We are looking at ways of making the support provided by the childcare tax credit simpler and more user-friendly. Making sure that working parents get the money irrespective of the childcare they use is one simple way of improving the current system. But in the longer term, a more Conservative approach is to trust people to make their own decisions about their family lives. Tax relief on childcare for working parents is one option being investigated by our policy review - alongside transferable tax allowances, it would put real choice in the hands of parents.
Cllr Justin Tomlinson, North Swindon Conservative Parliamentary Candidate, "I fully support David Cameron's emphasis on supporting family life.
"The Labour Party make much of 'tax credits' yet despite the good intentions the system has simply caused misery and distress caused by such an unworkable bureaucratic system - action is needed to make the system simplier and fairer.
"As a future parent myself, I fully understand the implications of expensive child care. We have to trust and help people choose what is best for their family, not creating barriers to a common sense solution. Each and every family has to be put first."
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Justin Tomlinson Conservative MP for North Swindon |
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Robert Buckland Conservative MP for South Swindon |
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