The Carpathia isn’t coming to rescue this government still swimming in the mire, writes LINDA PENTZ GUNTER
Not safe in ‘centre-ground’ hands
A cross-party approach to tacking the NHS crisis can only lead to one thing — the disaster of more disruption and privatisation, says SOLOMON HUGHES
THERE ARE growing demands for bipartisan approaches to the NHS — a cross-party review perhaps or maybe a Royal Commission.
Sounds sensible.
But the NHS has been hacked by the “sensible centre” for years, that centre being where Tony Blair, David Cameron and Nick Clegg agree. For the NHS that means privatisation, fees and even dismantling the whole thing.
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Born from my communist social worker mother’s efforts to bridge healthcare gaps, Labour’s push for home-based care now risks becoming another avenue for the US corporate takeover of the NHS, writes RICHARD CLARKE
Behind Starmer’s headline-grabbing abolition of NHS England lies a ruthless drive to centralise control so that cuts of £6.6 billion can be made — even if it means reducing cancer services and clinical staff, writes JOHN LISTER
Diverting public funding to grow private-sector ‘spare capacity,’ actively undermines the funding and staff available to the NHS and results in a worse service, write JOHN PUNTIS and TONY O’SULLIVAN



