Yorkshire Post

Vow over new nurse jobs ‘may have been misread’

- Tom Richmond Tom Richmond is Comment Editor of The Yorkshire Post. Follow him on Twitter via @OpinionYP

A “MISREADING” of the Tory manifesto may have resulted in people thinking they are pledging 50,000 “new” nurses if they win the General Election, Culture Secretary Nicky Morgan said.

Her comments came moments after Health Secretary Matt Hancock insisted there will indeed be 50,000 more nurses and 40 new hospitals under a Conservati­ve government. The veracity of Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s General Election manifesto promises have been called into question, with Labour saying the nursing figure was disingenuo­us when it included 19,000 nurses who the Tories wanted to retrain, and another 12,000 from overseas.

It means only 19,000 posts would be filled by new nurse trainees enjoying the return of maintenanc­e grants – bursaries scrapped by former Tory Chancellor George Osborne.

After unveiling a poster in Westminste­r with a picture of Jeremy Corbyn and the words “Prime Ditherer”, Mr Hancock said the party had “a really clear manifesto” to get Brexit done and then concentrat­e on the domestic priorities.

Mrs Morgan joined Mr Hancock at the poster in Westminste­r and said there are “lots of different ways” to make sure that in 2025 there will be “50,000 more nurses”. Mrs Morgan said: “I think there’s been a confusion sometimes, people reading that as 50,000 new nurses. I think sometimes that’s a deliberate confusion.”

Asked if there is confusion by her party, Ms Morgan said: “No. Because I think 50,000 more couldn’t be clearer, but actually I think an awful lot of people have decided to say that there is a confusion.

“It’s not. 50,000 more means 50,000 more nurses by 2025.”

YOU CAN always tell when a Tory politician is pulling the proverbial wool over the eyes of voters because Matt Hancock is the first to take to the airwaves to defend them.

“I thought the Prime Minister’s speech was brilliant,” the pipsqueak Hancock declared on Sky News moments after Boris Johnson had launched the Conservati­ve party’s election manifesto.

He would, wouldn’t he? After all, the brazen Hancock owes his job – Health and Social Care Secretary – to the patronage of the PM who clearly thinks the Minister has hidden talents.

Hancock said the same after David Cameron and Theresa May launched their own blueprints in 2015 and 2017 and is a career sycophant who would do the same if Donald Trump – or even Donald Duck – was leading the Tories because he’d be desperate to ingratiate himself.

Yet it is precisely this odious bootlickin­g and brown nosing which has contribute­d to the breakdown of trust between politician­s, and the public, in this election because of the extent to which politician­s – Matt Hancock being one of the worst examples – dodge their responsibi­lities.

And it is why Hancock’s post-manifesto launch words were so nauseating – they came at the end of a speech in which the PM had made no reference to the issue when he set out his vision for the country.

Johnson, who promised social care action on the day he became PM, did later restate the Tory manifesto commitment to form a “national consensus” about future funding after being prompted by a national journalist, but that was it.

Yet, while the Conservati­ves are still scarred by the 2017 manifesto when its so-called ‘‘dementia tax’’ contribute­d to Theresa May losing her majority, it does not excuse Hancock’s inaction since he took over the Department of Health from Jeremy Hunt in July 2018 (Hunt did admit during this summer’s leadership contest that social care cuts had gone too far).

One of Hancock’s first priorities was to publish the long-overdue social care Green Paper setting out future policy ideas and here are a selection of statements that he told MPs on October 17, 2018. ‘‘The adult social care Green Paper, which will be published later this year, will bring forward a range of ideas.’’ ‘We are working on both the Green Paper for the future of social care, which will come before the end of the year and the long-term plan for the future of the NHS.’’ ‘‘I hope that we can build cross-party support for it.’’

Which year? The Budget debate nearly a fortnight later on October 30, 2018, left no doubt when Hancock told Parliament, ‘‘The social care Green Paper to be published later this year...’’ and ‘‘The social care Green Paper will address the question of long-term funding reform’’.

And since then? A series of public utterances about as unreliable as one of beleaguere­d rail operator Northern’s rush hour trains on the Harrogate to Leeds line. Yes, the Tory manifesto commits to the provision of an extra £1bn of funding for every year of the new Parliament, but this will struggle to cover rising costs – never mind the needs of 1.5 million elderly and vulnerable adults who, says Age UK, have unmet care needs.

Just what has Hancock, said to be desperate to become Chancellor, been doing? Attempts to establish if he has ever tried to begin cross-party talks with Labour, and others, have drawn a blank. Perhaps he’d like to take this opportunit­y to enlighten readers of The Yorkshire Post.

Now there’s no mention of the fabled Green Paper – it has either been ditched or was always a work of fiction – while Hancock spent Saturday morning, 24 hours before the manifesto launch, touring the TV studios blaming the profligacy of the last Labour government (which left office in 2010) and the 2017 Tory manifesto (which he backed).

What he does not realise is that every week of delay, dither and indecision makes it even harder to come up with a solution which poses a great a political challenge as Brexit.

He does not appreciate that fully functionin­g community care is crucial to fulfilling the NHS Ten Year Plan so that hospitals can meet the health needs of a growing population.

And he does not understand that uncompromi­sing political language – I accept all sides are to blame – will make it harder to achieve compromise.

People’s lives are at stake here – if only Hancock realised that this is the issue – and the social care system is propped up by health profession­als, carers, charities and volunteers whose brilliance is sparing Ministers from even greater embarrassm­ent. Not even 50,000 new nurses, another mythical promise, will fill the breach.

I would suggest that Matt Hancock cuts out the media appearance­s – and focuses on the day job – but fear that this will further expose his limitation­s. And, as a former Tory MP put it to me, who else will go on TV at all times of day and night to defend the indefensib­le?

tom.richmond@ypn.co.uk

People’s lives are at stake here – if only Hancock realised that this is the issue – and the social care system is propped up by health profession­als, carers, charities and volunteers.

 ?? PICTURE: PA ?? SUPPORTING ROLE: Matt Hancock was quick to praise Boris Johnson’s manifesto speech – but he was slow to act on the pressing issue of social care.
PICTURE: PA SUPPORTING ROLE: Matt Hancock was quick to praise Boris Johnson’s manifesto speech – but he was slow to act on the pressing issue of social care.
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