Matt Hancock was left squirming during an excruciating appearance on Good Morning Britain on Wednesday, when Piers Morgan pressed him on whether he regretted voting against extending free school meals.
The health secretary repeatedly dodged questions from the presenter as he was interviewed on the ITV breakfast show.
Amid the urgent investigation into the state of some meagre food parcels struggling families have been receiving, Piers used the interview to quiz Hancock on why, earlier in the pandemic, he had voted against extending the free school meals policy while schools were closed.
āDo you regret voting against it?ā Piers asked.
āWell Iām really glad we were able to put it into place,ā Hancock answered.
āIf youāre that glad about being able to put it into place again, why did you as health secretary vote against this?ā Piers said.
āBecause,ā Hancock continued, āthe reason Iām glad now is because weāve been able to sort that out and put it in place.ā
āNo thanks to you,ā Piersā co-host Susanna Reid said.
Referring to Marcus Rashfordās campaign urging the government to provide free meals for the poorest children during school holidays, Piers continued: āLetās be honest, you got shamed into it by a young football player with a conscience, who managed to prick the conscience of you and the government.
āGiven how glad you are now that itās happening, do you regret voting against it?ā
Still refusing to directly answer the question, Hancock said: āWell, of course Iām pleased weāre making sure that...ā
Interrupting, Piers said: āThat wasnāt the question... Itās a very important question because you wouldnāt have done it without Marcus Rashford campaigning.ā
As the pair continued to go round in circles, an exasperated Piers said: āHealth secretary, you only have to say yes or no. You either regret it or you donāt.ā
āIām really glad the situation has been resolved,ā Hancock repeated. āWeāve sorted it out and Iām going to use my own words to describe my own feelings on this one.ā
āSo you wonāt answer the question?ā Piers asked.
āIām answering the question and Iām really glad weāve sorted it,ā Hancock said.
The health secretaryās appearance on GMB came after Boris Johnsonās official spokesperson commented after parents posted images of parcels expected to last a child 10 days. One picture was estimated to contain just over Ā£5 worth of food.
The packages are expected to contain Ā£30 worth of food.
Downing Street said the Department for Education is investigating, with childrenās minister Vicky Ford speaking to the company responsible and āmaking clear that boxes like this shouldnāt be given to familiesā.
The prime ministerās spokesperson said: āWe are aware of those images circulating on social media and it is clear that the contents of those food parcels are completely unacceptable.
āThe Department for Education is looking into this urgently and the minister for children, Vicky Ford, is speaking to the company responsible and they will be making it clear that boxes like this should not be given to families.ā
Good Morning Britain airs weekdays at 6am on ITV.