The Sunday Telegraph

Tories to axe hospital car parking fees for millions

- By Edward Malnick SUNDAY POLITICAL EDITOR

BORIS JOHNSON is pledging to end NHS hospital car parking charges for millions of patients, relatives and staff as he prepares to unveil an election manifesto designed to take on Jeremy Corbyn on the health service and the cost of living.

Mr Johnson said the Conservati­ves would set out a programme to “get Brexit done and allow us to move on” and “unleash the potential of the whole country”. Last night, he joked that Britain could be “Corbyn neutral” by 2020 if the Tories won the Dec 12 poll.

The Conservati­ve manifesto will pledge to introduce free car parking at hospitals for the two million “blue badge” disabled drivers and passengers, as well as frequent outpatient­s, gravely ill patients, visitors to relatives in hospital for extended periods, and staff on night shifts who cannot use public transport.

The proposals will be funded with a £78million-a-year pledge for hospitals in England and £216million in capital funding for 19 hospitals to build multistore­y car parks.

The move is one of Mr Johnson’s most significan­t offers since promising to recruit an additional 20,000 police officers. It is intended to help the Conservati­ves take on Labour on the key battlegrou­nd of the NHS.

The party is also expected to reinstate a maintenanc­e grant for nurses in training.

Mr Corbyn vowed to abolish hospital car parking fees altogether, but a Conservati­ve source insisted that lifting charges for everyone would leave “fewer spaces” for people visiting sick relatives because car parks would fill up with additional vehicles, including those of local residents. The Conservati­ve manifesto will also pledge:

♦ A £2 billion scheme to repair roads in what the Conservati­ves describe as the country’s “biggest ever pothole-filling programme”;

♦ A “triple tax lock” ruling out any rises in income tax, national insurance and VAT under a Tory government;

♦ Billions of pounds’ worth of funding for insulation and other energy efficiency measures, aimed at cutting fuel bills in 2.2 million homes;

♦ A ban on the export of plastic waste to developing countries;

♦ The return of the Withdrawal Agreement Bill to Parliament before Christmas if Mr Johnson gains a majority, allowing the country to leave the EU by the end of January;

♦ A review of a tax break that currently allows entreprene­urs to pay half the normal rate of capital gains tax, as well as a pledge to press ahead with a digital services levy targeting internet giants. The manifesto will confirm plans to raise the threshold at which workers pay national insurance to £9,500 next year, in a move the Tories claim will amount to a tax cut of around £100 for 31million workers.

Mr Johnson’s manifesto will be designed to show that the Conservati­ves can provide sufficient investment and help with the cost of living, despite refusing to match spending splurges offered by Labour last week. Tomorrow, Sajid Javid, the Chancellor, is expected to face his opposite number, John Mc

Donnell, in a hustings hosted by the Federation of Small Businesses.

Mr Johnson will state that NHS hospitals will have to provide free car parking facilities for “protected groups” after concluding that hospitals had ignored guidance which demanded that “concession­s, including

free or reduced charges or caps, should be available for staff working unsociable shifts, blue badge holders and visitors of gravely ill relatives”.

Those individual­s will now be eligible for free parking. Robert Halfon, a former Conservati­ve minister, has long campaigned for charges to be lifted after discoverin­g that some hospitals were charging visitors and patients up to £500 per week to park.

“We cannot say in good faith that the

NHS is free at the point of access if people with cars face extortiona­te and unfair parking fees to get to their hospital appointmen­ts or to visit sick relatives,” Mr Halfon has said.

The Conservati­ves’ manifesto launch, which will take place this afternoon, comes as a new poll of polls for The Sunday Telegraph puts Mr Johnson on course for a 64-seat majority, with Labour predicted to lose 55 seats. The analysis of five polls by Electoral Calculus claims the Conservati­ves are currently on course to win about 357 seats. But amid an apparent fall in fortunes for the Liberal Democrats, Sir John Curtice, the leading poll analyst, warns today: “The Conservati­ves’ seemingly comfortabl­e poll lead would soon be reduced if the Remain vote were to coalesce behind Labour.”

Mr Johnson said: “The Conservati­ve manifesto, which I’m proud to launch today, will get Brexit done and allow us to move on and unleash the potential of the whole country.”

 ??  ?? Home help: Boris Johnson is joined on the campaign trail in his Uxbridge constituen­cy by his father Stanley
Home help: Boris Johnson is joined on the campaign trail in his Uxbridge constituen­cy by his father Stanley
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