12 things you should know about the Tory NHS “reforms” – Another Angry Voice

Reposted from Another Angry Voice (the AAV juggernaut doesn’t need any help from VP but this will hopefully lead in to an article that should make interesting teatime reading):

In this article I’m going to explain twelve things that you should know about the Tories and the NHS.

David Cameron Lied about the NHS

Before the 2010 general election David Cameron promised “no more top-down reorganisations of the NHS”, then within months of coming to power his Health secretary Andrew Lansley launched the biggest top-down reorganisation in the history of the NHS (the Health and Social Care Act). Cameron also made the pre-election promise that the Tories would “cut the deficit, not the NHS”, before launching £20 billion worth of NHS cuts.

Michael Portillo admitted the truth

In 2011 the former Tory leadership candidate Michael Portillo admitted that David Cameron and the Tories had lied to the public about their intentions towards the NHS before the 2010 General Election: “They did not believe they could win an election if they told you what they were going to do because people are so wedded to the NHS.”

Portillo was right, the privatisation of the NHS is a very unpopular idea

Support for nationalisation yougov 2

According to a 2013 YouGov poll, 84% of the public would prefer to see the NHS run as a not-for-profit public service, whilst just 7% favour privatisation. [source]

Even though they were facing a Labour party led by an incredibly unpopular and blunder prone leader in Gordon Brown, and in the wake of the biggest economic meltdown in generations, the Tories were still incapable of even winning a majority government. Had they admitted their intentions to carve up the NHS and hand out the pieces to their corporate mates, this would surely have cost them hundreds of thousands of votes, and potentially left Labour to form a coalition government with the Liberal Democrats.

Loads of Tory politicians have vested interests in the privatisation of the NHS

Dozens and dozens of the Tory MPs and Lords who voted in favour of the privatisation of the NHS had clear vested financial interests in private health corporations. Here is a detailed list of some of those politicians who look set to benefit from the NHS privatisation bill they voted for.

One of the most notable examples is Lazy Lord Coe, who barely ever turns up to vote in the House of Lords (he voted in just 7.9% of debates between 2000 and 2013). However when the opportunity to benefit his numerous private health interests (PruHealth, AMT Sybex, Chime Communications) presented itself, he was amongst many Tory lords with financial interests in the private health sector to make rare appearances in the House of Lords and vote in favour of greater NHS privatisation.

The Tories have been carving up the NHS and giving away the pieces to their donors
Circle Health, which is 29.2% owned by a hedge fund run by major Tory party donor Paul Ruddock has been handed over £1.3 billion in NHS contracts. Other Tory party donors with major investments in Circle Health include Martyn Arbib, Crispin Odey and Michael Platt.

Care UK has received over £100 million in NHS contracts. Their chairman is John Nash who has made £247,250 worth of donations to the Tory party. Aside from his company picking up huge NHS contract as a result of Tory party legislation, he has also been handed a seat in the unelected House of Lords.

[source]

The NHS is one of the best health services in the world

A recent study by the Washington based Commonwealth Fund has shown that the NHS is one of the best, cheapest and most efficient health services in the world, whilst the private sector dominated US health system is the worst, most expensive and least efficient of the eleven different health care systems that they looked at. The NHS reforms introduced by the Tory party are designed to make the NHS much more like the US system by bringing in ever more private health corporations to take over NHS services. The Tory mantra about bringing in the private sector to “make the NHS more efficient” is just a smokescreen. The real reason for bringing in the private sector is to soak as much profit out of the system as possible, with no regards for the quality or efficiency of the service.

Jeremy Hunt

In 2009 the Tory MP Jeremy Hunt co-authored a book which called for the NHS to be dismantled and called it “no longer relevant”. In 2012 David Cameron appointed Jeremy Hunt as Health Secretary, meaning that the man who is now responsible for the NHS is a man who has called for it to be completely abolished.

The fact that David Cameron would appoint a Health Secretary who is on record saying that the NHS should be abolished illustrates exactly how gullible he imagined the general public to be when he made the pre-election promise that “the NHS will be safe in my hands“.

For the other six, see the article on Another Angry Voice.

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4 Comments

  1. philipburdekin October 26, 2014 at 3:42 pm - Reply

    Nationalise them all so that other countries cannot hold us to ransome.

  2. delboydave October 26, 2014 at 4:53 pm - Reply

    The Tories cannot be trusted on ANYTHING! They (and their socialist counterparts on the opposite benches) are THE main reason people don’t vote any more, vested interests and corruption.

    • Mike Sivier October 26, 2014 at 5:02 pm - Reply

      I would argue that their *socialist* counterparts on the opposite benches are a very good reason for people to vote in their masses.
      It’s the neoliberal interlopers in the Labour Party that have caused the problems, ever since they started infiltrating in the 1980s/90s.

  3. Jeffrey Davies October 26, 2014 at 5:01 pm - Reply

    SADLY all true that the 99percent who aint rich wake up to the fact we been lied to sold down the river many into slavery stacking shelves jeff3

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