The Secretary of Health is accused by a local activist to carry out massive budget cuts from the NHS “fragments” throughout the country, to avoid a national announcement on the boat.
MR Streeting NHS NHS Trust himself has announced that he hopes to “restrict” services in the next financial year due to “radical” work budget cuts.
The former Chadwell Labor Councilor, Andy Walker, who once campaigned with MR Streeting against the NHS cuts, said: “Unfortunately, it is not surprising. The dominant coalition in this government is a great business.
“With a few clicks from a mouse, you can see that Streeting has tasks significant amounts of money from people with the left to private medical care. My group is that we are seeing privatization by stealth.”
Mr. Streeting’s office did not respond.
The members of the Board in Barking, Havering and Redbridge University Hospitals NHS Trust (BHRUT), which runs the Queen’s hospital at the Romford and King George hospital in Ilford, have been warned that they face “very difficult decisions.”
The trust admitted to Newsquest that it must save £ 61 million in the next financial year.
Executive President Matthew Trainer told the Board that he will probably have to “restrict access to certain services.”
“When King Jorge’s A&E was under threat, local conservative politicians like Keith Prince and Iain Duncan Smith faced their local hospital and made a position against their own government,” Walker said.
“It is very disappointing that until now, not a single labor politician has said one thing against the cuts planned by the thesis. I am throwing the glove. But I suppose they won a word.
“I Will Be Pushing for A Consultation. Usually, If Services are Going To Be Tasks Away, There Would Be a Consultation. rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather rather Rateres to piecemealears.
The consequence of a postal code lottery in which some areas withdraw the services are more people who have to go private, said Walker, that he believes is the final objective of work.
The Newsquest Scottish newspaper, The National, has long reported on the custom of MR Streeting to accept donations of individuals and organizations linked to private medical care.
Between 2017 and 2019, £ 40,000 accepted businessman Peter Hearn, a recruitment executive whose companies help recruit for the private health industry.
Since then, Mr. Streeting has accepted just £ 20000, two or Mr. Hearn’s Companies, MPM Connect LTD and OPD Group Ltd.
Between 2022 and 2023, Hey also accepted £ 95,000 by John Armitage, a coverage fund manager with hundreds of millions of pounds invested in the world’s largest private health insurer.
He declared all these donations, which means that he has done nothing.
The labor has been previously described to the left between donations and private medical care as “dim in the best of cases.”
The Department of Health and Social Care this week told Newsquest: “The NHS is and will remain free at the point of use under this government: the Secretary of Health has been absolutely clear in this commitment.”
Wes Streeting and Andy Walker campaigns together against the East London NH cuts in 2014 Walker has directed the Save King George Hospital blog since 2011 and is now a member of the Trade Union and Socialist Coalition.
He accused the labor labor government, saying that although he had announced the administrative cut NHS England, he had not announced the cut to local trusts.
Instead, he said, the news of huge cuts was a drip of one region at the same time.
Newsquest has recently reported on more than 1,000 employee cuts in Cambridgeshire, Southampton and Isle of Wight.
But East London Bhrut is the first to warn that he faces to have to restrict treatments.
Mr. Trainer told the Board in January that he faced “reaxly difficult decisions”, including “deliberate decisions for Constain’s access to services.”
“It is being carried out a little by little throughout the country, instead of Wes Streeting announces national thesis and defenders cuts in Parliament,” said Mr. Walker.
“I should take questions about this in the dispatch picture.”
Mr. Streeting’s office was contacted to comment, but did not respond.