The pandemic drove down life opportunities for young and already disadvantaged people, say 70 per cent of Brits, as experts warned poverty puts the public’s faith in Boris Johnson at “serious risk”.
More than six of every 10 people (63 per cent) said the Covid-19 crisis widened the gap between rich and poor people, according to a study by charity Turn2us, with redundancies, lost work hours and increased living costs pushing people deeper into hardship.
“The prime minister can be in absolutely no doubt about the momentous task he faces in ‘levelling-up’ left behind areas of the UK,” said Sara Willcocks, head of external affairs for the charity.
“The faith many voters placed in him to deliver improved regional equality seems to be at serious risk.”
Young people are among those hit hardest by pandemic redundancies and income cuts. The Turn2us figures — collected in a YouGov survey of 2,000 adults — highlighted the knock-on effects Covid-19 poverty, with more than a third (36 per cent) of 18 to 24-year-olds having their plans to save up for a house deposit dashed during lockdown.
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