Current Affairs 2017 General Election

2017 general election

  • Lib Dems

    Votes: 24 6.5%
  • Labour

    Votes: 264 71.0%
  • Tories

    Votes: 41 11.0%
  • Cheese on the ballot paper

    Votes: 35 9.4%
  • SNP

    Votes: 4 1.1%
  • Plaid Cymru

    Votes: 4 1.1%

  • Total voters
    372
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What a silly thing to say.... We have a Tory government now and we have the NHS now.......this little myth of the left carries no weight except in the minds of the left......

As an NHS doctor, it’s my public duty to vote Labour
Yannis Gourtsoyannis

Published:13:14 BST Thu 27 April 2017

Follow Yannis Gourtsoyannis


‘The Red Cross says the NHS is in the midst of a humanitarian crisis. They are right.’ Photograph: David Sillitoe for the Guardian

Austerity has been built on the graves of tens of thousands of people. Yet the Conservatives remain silent about this collateral damage – or even cover it up
I cannot put it more bluntly: as a doctor I consider it my public duty to urge votes against the Tories, and votes for Labour. And I’m not alone. Hundreds of NHS workers shared their fears of a Conservative election victory on social media under the hashtag #mypublicduty yesterday. The reason is simple. The last seven years of austerity have been built on the graves of tens of thousands of people.

Only a few months ago the Red Cross took the unprecedented step of announcing that the NHS was in the midst of a “humanitarian crisis”. The Red Cross is right. And that crisis continues. In the fifth richest countryin the world people are dying needlessly.

Spike in mental health patient deaths shows NHS 'struggling to cope'

A slow, grinding structural violence has pervaded this country – and bearing the brunt are the most vulnerable. Mental health patients, unable to care for themselves, are dying in their homes, denied access to dangerously rationed mental health services. Some are discovered, having died alone, days or even weeks after their deaths.


Migrants are increasingly hassled for payment as they recover from NHS emergency care. Elderly patients are dying suddenly and unexpectedly on understaffed medical wards. Disabled benefit recipients are forced to justify their inability to work during their last few months of life. Ambulance services are increasingly overstretched, causing unacceptable delays in reaching people in need. And suicide rates continue their upwards trend, especially among my female nursing colleagues.

The death toll is rising. We have seen the biggest annual rise in overall death rates in 50 years. Research carried out at Oxford University shows that trends over the past four years may soon result in the highest death rates since the second world war.

Yet the Conservatives remain silent about this collateral damage – or worse, often seek to cover it up. If you want an example of “post-truth” politics just listen to every single pronouncement on the NHS that Theresa May and Jeremy Hunt have made over the past six months.

An ethical choice lies before us on 8 June. It’s a choice that will have consequences for years to come.

Labour will give pay rise to 'overworked and underpaid' NHS staff

A Labour government will legislate for safe staffing levels, restore bursary funding for NHS students, lift the 1% NHS pay cap imposed by the government (which is resulting in a recruitment crisis and hardship for countless health workers), work collaboratively with health sector unions rather than undermining them, and value carers in the community by increasing their allowance.

Labour will end the grip of private finance, which has drained billions in funding to pay for interest on loans to big banks; and reverse privatisation that uses our taxes to line the pockets of companies such as Virgin, while services are downgraded or scrapped.

I know that for some, especially first-time Labour voters, a vote for Labour may cause trepidation. So, how will all this be paid for? By bringing corporation tax in line with European norms, reversing Tory tax breaks to super-rich individuals, and clamping down on tax avoidance. The result will be ample funding to provide healthcare to all who need it. Ending privatisation and tackling debt will allow us to reclaim the billions in taxpayer-subsidised private profits, and redirect our money where it belongs – into our health service.

And before you think that polling makes 8 June a foregone conclusion, an election is not a spectator sport. We are not simply observers, we are participants. We have agency and control. By campaigning and voting in line with our consciences we can overcome the odds.

Many who care about the future of our NHS may think that the Liberal Democrats are a good bet. But a vote for the Lib Dems is worse than a wasted vote. It’s a vote for a party that was a crucial enabler of the coalition’s most pernicious health policies. The Lib Dems will now pay lip service to supporting the NHS to gain votes – and then, if they return in another coalition government, won’t hesitate to pick up where they left off in 2015: carving up the NHS with their Conservative allies.

Clement Attlee’s Labour government created our NHS, and only Labour can be trusted to restore it. For me, the choice at this election couldn’t be clearer.
 
Look forward to the Conservatives fighting this election campaign on their record over the last 7 years and not having to revert to ridiculous claims that the muppets in this country lap up.
 
As an NHS doctor, it’s my public duty to vote Labour
Yannis Gourtsoyannis

Published:13:14 BST Thu 27 April 2017

Follow Yannis Gourtsoyannis


‘The Red Cross says the NHS is in the midst of a humanitarian crisis. They are right.’ Photograph: David Sillitoe for the Guardian

Austerity has been built on the graves of tens of thousands of people. Yet the Conservatives remain silent about this collateral damage – or even cover it up
I cannot put it more bluntly: as a doctor I consider it my public duty to urge votes against the Tories, and votes for Labour. And I’m not alone. Hundreds of NHS workers shared their fears of a Conservative election victory on social media under the hashtag #mypublicduty yesterday. The reason is simple. The last seven years of austerity have been built on the graves of tens of thousands of people.

Only a few months ago the Red Cross took the unprecedented step of announcing that the NHS was in the midst of a “humanitarian crisis”. The Red Cross is right. And that crisis continues. In the fifth richest countryin the world people are dying needlessly.

Spike in mental health patient deaths shows NHS 'struggling to cope'

A slow, grinding structural violence has pervaded this country – and bearing the brunt are the most vulnerable. Mental health patients, unable to care for themselves, are dying in their homes, denied access to dangerously rationed mental health services. Some are discovered, having died alone, days or even weeks after their deaths.


Migrants are increasingly hassled for payment as they recover from NHS emergency care. Elderly patients are dying suddenly and unexpectedly on understaffed medical wards. Disabled benefit recipients are forced to justify their inability to work during their last few months of life. Ambulance services are increasingly overstretched, causing unacceptable delays in reaching people in need. And suicide rates continue their upwards trend, especially among my female nursing colleagues.

The death toll is rising. We have seen the biggest annual rise in overall death rates in 50 years. Research carried out at Oxford University shows that trends over the past four years may soon result in the highest death rates since the second world war.

Yet the Conservatives remain silent about this collateral damage – or worse, often seek to cover it up. If you want an example of “post-truth” politics just listen to every single pronouncement on the NHS that Theresa May and Jeremy Hunt have made over the past six months.

An ethical choice lies before us on 8 June. It’s a choice that will have consequences for years to come.

Labour will give pay rise to 'overworked and underpaid' NHS staff

A Labour government will legislate for safe staffing levels, restore bursary funding for NHS students, lift the 1% NHS pay cap imposed by the government (which is resulting in a recruitment crisis and hardship for countless health workers), work collaboratively with health sector unions rather than undermining them, and value carers in the community by increasing their allowance.

Labour will end the grip of private finance, which has drained billions in funding to pay for interest on loans to big banks; and reverse privatisation that uses our taxes to line the pockets of companies such as Virgin, while services are downgraded or scrapped.

I know that for some, especially first-time Labour voters, a vote for Labour may cause trepidation. So, how will all this be paid for? By bringing corporation tax in line with European norms, reversing Tory tax breaks to super-rich individuals, and clamping down on tax avoidance. The result will be ample funding to provide healthcare to all who need it. Ending privatisation and tackling debt will allow us to reclaim the billions in taxpayer-subsidised private profits, and redirect our money where it belongs – into our health service.

And before you think that polling makes 8 June a foregone conclusion, an election is not a spectator sport. We are not simply observers, we are participants. We have agency and control. By campaigning and voting in line with our consciences we can overcome the odds.

Many who care about the future of our NHS may think that the Liberal Democrats are a good bet. But a vote for the Lib Dems is worse than a wasted vote. It’s a vote for a party that was a crucial enabler of the coalition’s most pernicious health policies. The Lib Dems will now pay lip service to supporting the NHS to gain votes – and then, if they return in another coalition government, won’t hesitate to pick up where they left off in 2015: carving up the NHS with their Conservative allies.

Clement Attlee’s Labour government created our NHS, and only Labour can be trusted to restore it. For me, the choice at this election couldn’t be clearer.

This is just a rant.
How about we go back to 1948 when the NHS was created in a time which was a million miles away from what we face today. If we were starting out now with a blank page there is no way we'd have the NHS we have today. We fool ourselves into thinking we have the best heath service in the world; there is not a single country in the 200+ nations in the UN which has copied our NHS model.

Most have an insurance based health service with charges at the point of treatment. I know this from my experience in France a few years ago when my wife needed treatment for an ugly leg wound. We had to cough up the cost there and then and claim it back on our EU health card. Seems sensible to me.
 
I think their (and her) colours were nailed to the mast as early as that interview with Corbyn in the immediate aftermath of the Paris shooting.

The state controlled BBC had to reign in their anti Corbyn, Laura - Fake News - Kuenssberg aggressive anti Corbynism today. On her 6 O'clock report she despicable brought Corbyn's wife into the political arena 'hiding in the bushes' but by her 10 O'clock bulletin had dropped Corbyn's wife reference. But it still couldn't stop her nailing her Tory party political broadcast colours - over Merkel's speech - to the mast with her, 'Teresa May, I think will use this to her advantage'.

Kuennsberg should be sacked forthwith.
 
This is just a rant.
How about we go back to 1948 when the NHS was created in a time which was a million miles away from what we face today. If we were starting out now with a blank page there is no way we'd have the NHS we have today. We fool ourselves into thinking we have the best heath service in the world; there is not a single country in the 200+ nations in the UN which has copied our NHS model.

Most have an insurance based health service with charges at the point of treatment. I know this from my experience in France a few years ago when my wife needed treatment for an ugly leg wound. We had to cough up the cost there and then and claim it back on our EU health card. Seems sensible to me.

You are advocating everyone get taxed an extra five and a half percent (edit: sorry, its 5.25%) of their earned income?
 
Wasn't though, was it? It was a piece by an actual doctor in the actual NHS with some actual facts in it.

Your post, on the other hand, could have been written by Conservative Central Office.

Where was the photo taken. I've been in many hospital A&Es and general wards, helping people, and I've never seen a picture such as this. It looks a bit 'staged' to me.......
 
Really? I didn't see "strong and stable government" anywhere.

picture1.jpg


"Strong and stable government"

("strong and stable government").
 
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