Skip to main content
The Morning Star Shop
Babylon's burning cash
SOLOMON HUGHES reports on the healthcare privateers Babylon, their failed doctor-replacing app and their cosy relationship with Health Secretary Matt Hancock
Health Secretary Matt Hancock exiting 10 Downing Street (left) and (right) a screenshot of Babylon Health's app on the Apple App store

IN NOVEMBER an interview with Health Secretary Matt Hancock appeared in an Evening Standard article “sponsored” by NHS privatiser Babylon Health.

In the interview, which was paid for by Babylon Health, Hancock specifically praised the company’s app: Babylon run a system called “GP at Hand” which lets users consult a doctor by video on a smartphone or laptop. Hancock said he personally uses Babylon’s GP at Hand — the Evening Standard say he “chuckled” about it — and said the NHS should “embrace the technology” they offer.

After the BuzzFeed news website highlighted the interview, the Labour Party complained that Hancock seems to be breaking the Ministerial Code. Specifically the part that says ministers
“should not… normally accept invitations to act as patrons of, or otherwise offer support to… organisations dependent in whole or in part on government funding.”

With the Health Secretary promoting health privatiser Babylon in a Babylon-funded newspaper supplement, with his interview actually appearing under a “Babylon Health” logo, you can see why Labour is complaining. Look a bit closer and we can see two essential facts. Firstly, Babylon has a series of personal connections to the government — it looks like cronyism, not competition. Secondly, Babylon and its founder have been involved in serious failures in their NHS business.

The first, most obvious connection is the Evening Standard itself. The Standard is edited by former Tory chancellor George Osborne. Osborne agreed a controversial corporate sponsorship scheme called “Future London,” in which businesses pay the Evening Standard an estimated £500,000 in a “partnering” arrangement. Babylon Health are one of the six corporations paying the Standard. In return they get pages of coverage in the paper promoting the company with promo-style articles on their “apps.” In turn Hancock is close to Osborne. Hancock started in politics as one of Osborne’s special advisers. A profile on Tory website “ConservativeHome” described Hancock as a founder member of the “small, merry band” round Osborne.

Babylon has a history of hiring Tory or government-connected folk. When Babylon launched its NHS app in 2017, it hired Trafalgar Strategy to run the PR, a firm founded by former Cameron head of press Giles Kenningham.

Babylon’s “director of NHS services” is Paul Bate. He was David Cameron and Nick Clegg’s “health policy” adviser during the coalition.

Cameron hired Bate because he wanted to bring in former Blair advisers: Bate is not a Tory Party apparatchik. He was a “modernising” civil servant committed to privatisation by both parties. He was previously in Tony Blair’s “prime minister’s delivery unit” on Health Targets from 2003-6 — when the New Labour government met health targets by outsourcing NHS operations to private providers.

Babylon is run by health investor Ali Parsa. He and his firms have a history both of hiring political “insiders” and of poor performance. In 2017 the Care Quality Commission (CQC) examined Babylon’s online GP-by-video service and found it was “not providing safe care”. The CQC highlighted dangers that prescriptions could be misused and problems about what information was shared with GPs.

So Babylon went to court to stop the CQC publishing the report. The injunction failed and Babylon had to pay the CQC’s costs. You’d think Babylon trying to sue the main NHS regulator into silence would make the government give it a wide berth. Instead, Matt Hancock has repeatedly boosted the firm in his speeches, visited its HQ and seen the firm take up more NHS contracts.

Critics say Babylon’s online GP service will take NHS money, trick NHS patients away from their regular GPs and provide a potentially unsafe service. But it still gets government support.

Babylon is Ali Parsa’s second attempt to get NHS work. Parsa previously ran Circle Health, a private hospital firm he founded in 2004. Circle won a controversial 10-year contract to run an NHS hospital, Hinchingbrooke, in 2011. This ground-breaking privatisation project became a broken project: in 2015 inspectors from the CQC judged the hospital “inadequate” for patient safety. Circle gave up running the hospital, six years before the contract was supposed to end.

This doesn’t give confidence in Ali Parsa’s new business. But Circle also had Tory help. Mark Simmonds, a Tory MP who went on to be a minister, was paid £50,000 a year to be a “strategic adviser” to Circle.

Another of Cameron’s former health advisers, Nick Simmonds, worked as Circle’s top spin doctor. So Parsa’s previous health firm worked on a formula of cronyism, hiring “insiders,” winning NHS privatisation contracts, then taking cash for bad NHS services before crashing out.It’s a record that under any reasonable system should block him from future NHS work. The government backing for Babylon Health shows we do not live in a reasonable system.

Follow Solomon Hughes on Twitter @SolHughesWriter.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
More from this author
Prime Minister Keir Starmer speaks during a media conference at the end of the Nato Summit at the Hague, Netherlands, June 25, 2025
Features / 27 June 2025
27 June 2025

SOLOMON HUGHES explains how the PM is channelling the spirit of Reagan and Thatcher with a ‘two-tier’ nuclear deterrent, whose Greenham Common predecessor was eventually fought off by a bunch of ‘punks and crazies’

Palestinians receive donated food at a community kitchen in Gaza City, June 10, 2025
Features / 13 June 2025
13 June 2025

Israel’s combination of starvation, coercion and murder is part of a carefully concerted plan to ensure Palestinian compliance – as shown in leaked details about the sinister Gaza Humanitarian Foundation which reveal similarities to hunger manipulation projects in Vietnam, Malaya and Kenya, says SOLOMON HUGHES

Workers protest outside Google London HQ over the
Lobbying / 6 June 2025
6 June 2025

SOLOMON HUGHES reveals how six MPs enjoyed £400-£600 hospitality at Ditchley Park for Google’s ‘AI parliamentary scheme’ — supposedly to develop ‘effective scrutiny’ of artificial intelligence, but actually funded by the increasingly unsavoury tech giant itself

TREACHERY FORGOTTEN: John Woodcock, seen here in 2015, betrayed Labour under Corbyn. Now that the right is back in charge, he is welcome to schmooze Labour MPs for Ramsay Healthcare
Features / 23 May 2025
23 May 2025

SOLOMON HUGHES details how the firm has quickly moved on to buttering-up Labour MPs after the fall of the Tories so it can continue to ‘win both ways’ collecting public and private cash by undermining the NHS

Similar stories
DON’T BLAME CLAIMANTS: People take part in a protest outsi
Features / 28 March 2025
28 March 2025
Health Secretary Wes Streeting taking £53k from Tory-linked recruiter and outsourcer Peter Hearn’s OPD Group is a great example of how Labour’s rich donors shape policies targeting the poor – not their wealth, writes SOLOMON HUGHES
Alan Milburn speaks at the first national conference of the
Features / 20 December 2024
20 December 2024
Behind a facade of flimsy restrictions, the man who was Tony Blair’s privatisation champion is back in an advisory role, despite the fact he already works for firms that will profit from the selling off of the NHS, writes SOLOMON HUGHES
CAUGHT OUT AGAIN: 
The MP for Birmingham 
Yardley can’t re
Features / 4 December 2024
4 December 2024
Despite promises to clean up her act after previous violations, Home Office minister waited five months to declare a luxury Chelsea flower show dinner with Lloyds Bank, as Labour’s love of freebies continues, writes SOLOMON HUGHES
SITTING PRETTY: (Left to right) Baroness Liddell, Claire Kob
Features / 29 November 2024
29 November 2024
Let’s take a closer look at the sprawling network of former ministers, political insiders and officials who make money from the firms responsible for soldiers’ squalid accommodation, writes SOLOMON HUGHES