The Sunday Telegraph

Hammond Budget pay boost for nurses

- By Edward Malnick WHITEHALL EDITOR

PHILIP HAMMOND is preparing to announce a cash boost for the NHS as part of a bid to take on Labour and face down his critics, The Sunday Telegraph understand­s.

The Chancellor will use this week’s Budget to offer a pay rise to nurses, following pressure from Cabinet colleagues and Conservati­ve MPs, and the threat of winter strikes if he fails to issue a “positive signal” to NHS staff.

The policy will be part of a set of announceme­nts, also including a broad sweep of measures to increase house building, which Mr Hammond hopes will meet Jeremy Corbyn’s party on key battlegrou­nds and head off growing disquiet in the Cabinet and No10 over his chancellor­ship.

The disclosure comes as Cabinet sources warned last night that the Chancellor had to address the key areas of education and the NHS in order to address public concerns that MPs have already made clear to Mr Hammond were fatal to the party in many constituen­cies in June’s election.

Separately, in her first media interventi­on since stepping down from the Cabinet, Priti Patel today voices a view shared by a series of senior Euroscepti­cs that the Chancellor should use the Budget to set out a “clear” and “positive” plan for post-Brexit Britain.

Writing in The Sunday Telegraph, the former internatio­nal developmen­t secretary states that making the most of the opportunit­ies provided by the vote mean “being positive, bold and dynamic, with a clear plan for a clear vision of a successful country and economy – an approach I hope will underpin this week’s Budget”.

Lord Lamont, the former chancellor, also said it was important to “be positive about Brexit”.

He said: “Whether Brexit is a success doesn’t depend on Brexit, it depends on what we do with it.”

Today Mr Hammond also announces reforms for on-road testing of driverless cars to put the vehicles on UK roads by 2021, as part of plans to “build an economy fit for the future”.

Furthermor­e, there will be funding for new 5G mobile networks, artificial intelligen­ce, and a “retraining partnershi­p” between trade unions and the CBI.

Mr Hammond is also expected to announce a reduction in the waiting period for Universal Credit payments from six weeks to around four.

Last night, a Cabinet source said of this weekend’s announceme­nts: “Plastics taxes and driverless cars are great but people care about the NHS and education. That’s where Labour will attack us and we need to show we know those are two of the things that are most important to people’s lives.”

The Chancellor is understood to be preparing to announce that new funds to boost nurses’ pay will be put aside

in order to meet the recommenda­tions of a formal review body that will report next year. The Royal College of Nursing is demanding a 3.9 per cent rise. A rise of 3 per cent is likely to cost an extra billion pounds.

Mr Hammond’s plan to announce a pay increase for NHS nurses follows intense pressure from Jeremy Hunt, the Health Secretary, and Tory MPs including Sarah Wollaston, the chairman of the health select committee, and Maria Caulfield, a practicing nurse. MPs have warned that in some areas the sevenyear public sector pay freeze was a significan­t factor in the party’s general election failure. An increase was announced for police and prison officers in September and the Royal College of Nursing has threatened to hold strike ballot discussion­s “within days” of the Budget if Mr Hammond does not issue

‘That’s where Labour will attack us … we need to show we know those things are important to people’s lives’

a “positive signal” about raising their pay above the rate of inflation when the NHS Pay Review Body issues recommenda­tions. Mr Hunt said in October that the freeze “wasn’t sustainabl­e”.

Dr Wollaston and Simon Stevens, the chief executive of NHS England, have warned that an increase must be paid for by the Treasury, rather than attempt to find it from within stretched health service budgets. Other Budget measures are expected to include a package on house building, which could benefit from a £5billion boost to the Government’s balance sheet afforded by a change in the accounting status of housing associatio­ns. Last night, the Sunday Times reported that the Chancellor was aiming to build up to 300,000 homes a year.

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