Thanks to a Hampstead and Kilburn constituent for forwarding this. Cameron's Tories haven't got a huge majority, we are supposed to have a Left leadership in the Labour Party, but their MPs won't turn up on a vital issue. What would Bevan say?
Has anyone got a message from Dawn Butler?
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Has anyone got a message from Dawn Butler?
Good evening,
I am writing in
response to your email, in which you asked whether I would attend the Second
Reading of the National Health Service Bill on Friday 11th March. Thank you
very much for taking the time to write to me about this.
I could not agree
with you more that the Health and Social Care Act, which was passed by the Tory
and Lib Dem Government in 2012, needs to be repealed urgently. Spending on
private and other providers has gone through the £10 billion barrier for the
first time in the history of our health system, and unnecessary costs to our
NHS have skyrocketed: the implementation of the Act itself has cost the
taxpayer some £3 billion. When the Prime Minister took office in 2010 he
inherited a health system where patient satisfaction was at all-time high, but
as today's newspaper headlines starkly show, he has squandered this legacy: the
NHS recorded its worst ever performance figures in January of this year.
Quite rightly,
ever since this Act was passed there have been a number of attempts, mostly by
Labour MPs, to repeal the harmful elements of this legislation. The NHS
Reinstatement Bill is another such attempt, and many Parliamentarians have
tried to get it passed into law. This is the second such attempt to secure its
passage, and I regret given there is a Tory majority in the Commons, it will be
voted down by Conservative MPs.
I would have
attended the debate at Second Reading tomorrow, but I am afraid that I have a
number of prior commitments in the diary which mean that regrettably, I will
not be able to make it. I am holding my constituency surgery at JW3 Community
Centre tomorrow morning – this surgery has been scheduled for more than a month.
In the afternoon, I will be speaking at an event to encourage more women into
politics at the Women of the World Festival (see: wow.southbankcentre.co.uk/whats-on/how-get-elected-1785).
Were it not for these diary commitments, I would certainly have stood up to be
counted on the day of the vote.
In any event,
however, the only way we can secure the reforms our NHS needs is by unseating
this Tory Majority Government. Last May, I stood on a Labour Manifesto which
promised to repeal the Health and Social Care Act and to abolish the rules
which force NHS commissioners to put contracts out to private tender. We would
also have reversed the provisions which permit hospitals to earn up to 49% of
their income from private patients. I still remain firmly committed to these
principles, and I will take every opportunity as your MP to implement the
change we need to save our health system.
Nevertheless, I
do appreciate you drawing this debate to my attention, and I can only reiterate
my full agreement with your concerns about the Health and Social Care Act.
Thank you again
for getting in touch, and please do write back if you have any further queries.
Best wishes,
Tulip Siddiq MP
Labour Member of
Parliament for Hampstead and Kilburn
To receive
updates on my work in Parliament and across Hampstead and Kilburn, please click here
to sign up to my eNewsletter.
Twitter:
@tulipsiddiq
Website: tulipsiddiq.com
No worries, Tulip, I'm sure you'll sort the whole thing out when you're health secretary.
ReplyDeleteIn her message above, Tulip Siddiq says: '... I will take every opportunity as your MP to implement the change we need to save our health system.'
ReplyDeleteWell, Ms Siddiq, why didn't you take the opportunity TODAY to support the second reading of Caroline Lucas's NHS Bill, which did seek to implement that change? Of course '... it will be voted down by Conservative MPs', if Labour MPs don't bother to attend the House of Commons and vote in favour of principles which they claim to hold.
Philip.