Daily Mirror

Don’t patronise us

Nurses’ anger over Health Secretary’s offer of free cuppa rather than pay rise

- BY MARTIN BAGOT Health Editor martin.bagot@mirror.co.uk @MartinBago­t

STRIKING nurses could be offered free hot drinks instead of better pay in a move dubbed “patronisin­g tea and sympathy”.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay will reportedly propose perks such as free coffee, breakfasts and parking to those set to strike as he tries to show he understand­s anger over working conditions.

Mr Barclay yesterday repeated his promise to resume talks with the Royal College of Nursing about those conditions – but not pay.

Speaking on a visit to the

Royal Marsden Hospital in Chelsea, West London, Mr Barclay said: “The priority for me is to continue the dialogue with the trade unions, with the RCN. I’ve been extremely clear that my door is open.

“They have raised a range of issues, not just pay, but also about working conditions, patient safety. And so I’m very happy to continue that dialogue.” His pledge follows reports Armed Forces personnel could drive ambulances and stand in for frontline hospital roles under contingenc­y plans being prepared for the strikes on December 15 and 20. Mr Barclay said he has not formally contacted the military about stepping in to assist during walkouts, but officials will consider a “range of options”.

An RCN spokesman said: “When the Government would rather send for the military than negotiate with nurses, their priorities are seriously amiss.

“Today’s reports of striking nurses to be offered hot drinks by the minister shows this has become a patronisin­g case of ‘tea and sympathy’.”

NHS England chief Amanda Pritchard yesterday told MPs patients will not have procedures cancelled at the last minute due to strikes and would receive updates about any changes to upcoming treatments “sooner rather than later”.

The Treasury is reportedly “not countenanc­ing” new pay negotiatio­ns as the Government is expected to blame striking carers for growing NHS backlogs that have reached 7.1 million appointmen­ts in England alone.

Shadow Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: “The Conservati­ves don’t have a plan to fix the NHS, so instead they’re letting strikes go ahead and blaming nurses. This is not a game and it is patients who will pay the price.”

However, a government spokesman said: “We hugely value the hard work of all NHS staff and we are doing what we can to help ease pressures put on the health and care system as result of winter and Covid.”

HAPLESS Health Secretary Stephen Barclay should be rolling up his sleeves to find a way of avoiding two one-day nursing strikes before Christmas.

The National Health Service is precious. Yet the Conservati­ves running Britain seem so incompeten­t you have to wonder if they are deliberate­ly provoking walkouts to invent scapegoats for their own 12 years of failure.

Nurses would be the most reluctant strikers in history, but they are being short-changed.

The fact they’ve been driven to vote for industrial action is the ultimate condemnati­on of this government’s disintegra­tion.

Barclay, who has been accused of patronisin­g nurses, must come up with answers now.

But the fear is there are some in this government who relish strikes in the NHS and are plotting to turn the public against nurses. It’s a dangerous plan that would fail. Patients are not gullible, they know who is at fault – and it’s not our heroic nurses.

It’s Tory ministers who are the problem.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom