Kent Messenger Maidstone

We should be proud of our NHS

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I worked as a hospital theatrepor­ter/orderly for a long time, more than 20 years ago, and recently due to a “lifestyle disease”, needed the delicate, close attention of many junior doctors and nurses as well as all sorts of staff at the William Harvey Hospital, so one could say that I have some experience of our National Health Service, on and off for the past 60-odd years ..... “both ends of the stick” so to speak!

There is still full care cover, the best in the world that will save your life as it did mine, an NHS free at the point of access for those who need it, right through any “industrial action”.

Imposing a contract on junior doctors now, with no choice nor any proper arbitratio­n (as there used to be) for allegedly “better seven days per week care-cover” (not a great significan­t difference in actual patient mortality, by the way, so this is mainly a spurious political excuse) is not the way to start to bring harmony and encourage the two sides of the British economy, (employees/consumers versus employers/owners). We all know who has lost out so far. Despite the distortion­s and spins of politician­s and their publicists, those taking industrial action here in Britain do observe the law and the morality of it, especially where our most valuable asset, our lives and our health, are concerned.

So, in spite of some minor organisati­onal or managerial problems occasional­ly encountere­d, I can certainly attest to the excellence still, in 2016, of our National Health Service and all the associated agencies, services and practition­ers here. Bravo and a thousand thanks to all our health workers. David Berrie, Wye Road, Boughton Lees, Ashford. they will redraw the Parliament­ary map in a way that benefits the Conservati­ve Party.

Furthermor­e, hidden in the Trade Union Bill is a clause that is deliberate­ly designed to cut off trade unions’ financial support for the Labour Party – while doing nothing to limit the hedge funds and millionair­es that support the Tories.

They’re attacking democracy by silencing opposition, whether it’s from unions, campaigner­s, or charities; and by changing the rules to make it harder for anyone else to win an election.

As the House of Lords debate the Bill over the next weeks, I can only hope the government will take the opportunit­y to embody the values of democracy and decency they claim to support, and drop these unfair proposals. Peter Hughes, Christchur­ch Road, Ashford during last week’s Prime Minister’s Question time as an ally on the cause, heaven only knows.

The jungle drums have gone silent on where – and when – the Department for Transport will propose a lorry park for Operation Stack. Meanwhile, the contract for Manston Airport as a temporary emergency lorry park runs until June. What happens then is anyone’s guess.

Follow Paul on Twitter @ PaulOnPoli­tics

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