Yorkshire Post

Ministers’ U-turn over levy for overseas health and care staff

Surcharge to be waived after political outcry Labour leader hails move ‘victory for common decency’

- GERALDINE SCOTT WESTMINSTE­R CORRESPOND­ENT ■ Email: geraldine.scott@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @Geri_E_L_Scott

OVERSEAS HEALTH and care staff will be exempted from the fee levied on migrants to pay for the NHS in a U-turn from Boris Johnson which came after mounting pressure from senior Tories.

Downing Street said the Prime Minister has asked officials at the Home Office and the Department for Health and Social Care to remove health and care workers from the surcharge “as soon as possible”.

Full details will be announced in the coming days, a Number 10 spokesman said.

Mr Johnson “has been thinking about this a great deal” and as a “personal beneficiar­y of carers from abroad” he understand­s the difficulti­es faced by our amazing NHS staff, the spokesman said.

“The purpose of the NHS surcharge is to benefit the NHS, help to care for the sick and save lives.

“NHS and care workers from abroad who are granted visas are doing this already by the fantastic contributi­on which they make.”

The £400 surcharge remains in place for other categories of visa applicants and will increase to £624 in October, as planned.

The change will apply to all NHS workers, ranging from medical health staff to vital porters and cleaners. It also includes independen­t health workers and social care workers.

The U-turn comes after senior Tories demanded change, with former party chairman Lord Patten calling it “appalling” and “monstrous”.

Former Conservati­ve Party vice-chairman Sir Roger Gale had warned Mr Johnson that not to waive the current surcharge “would rightly be perceived as mean-spirited, doctrinair­e and petty”.

After the policy shift, he said: “There will of course be those who will claim this as ‘another Uturn’.

“Personally, I believe that politicall­y courageous and sensible politician­s have the ability to revisit positions and to put something right if it has gone wrong.”

Public Administra­tion and Constituti­onal Affairs Committee

chairman William Wragg called for an immediate change in policy, adding “now is the time for a generosity of spirit towards those who have done so much good”.

Mr Johnson and Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer had sparred over the issue in the House of Commons on Wednesday, with the Prime Minister insisting that charging NHS and care staff was “the right way forward”.

Yesterday, Sir Keir said: “This is a victory for common decency and the right thing to do. We cannot clap our carers one day and then charge them to use our NHS the next.”

The announceme­nt also came a day after another U-turn when the Government extended a scheme offering indefinite leave to remain to the families of all NHS staff who die after contractin­g coronaviru­s. Care workers, cleaners and porters had originally been left out of the scheme, which only applied to certain occupation­s including nurses, biochemist­s and radiograph­ers.

Sensible politician­s have the ability to revisit positions.

Former Conservati­ve Party vice-chairman Sir Roger Gale.

 ?? PICTURES: PA WIRE/GETTY IMAGES ?? BACK ON TRACK: Clockwise from left, a commuter wearing a protective face mask at Clapham Common Tube station; workers unload a shipment of 120,000 surgical coveralls from China; an ambulance crew relax by the Serpentine in Hyde Park; customers at the reopened Francini Cafe De Colombia, Worcester.
PICTURES: PA WIRE/GETTY IMAGES BACK ON TRACK: Clockwise from left, a commuter wearing a protective face mask at Clapham Common Tube station; workers unload a shipment of 120,000 surgical coveralls from China; an ambulance crew relax by the Serpentine in Hyde Park; customers at the reopened Francini Cafe De Colombia, Worcester.

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