Home

Tories woo NHS

David Cameron wants to make the Conservatives "the party of the NHS"David Cameron wants to make the Conservatives "the party of the NHS"

Wednesday, 02, Jan 2008 12:00

David Cameron has laid out the Conservatives' desire to become the "party of the NHS" in a speech in Manchester.

The Tory leader spoke at Trafford General hospital where, 60 years ago this year, Nye Bevan laid the founding stone for the post-war Labour government's crowning achievement.

Mr Cameron attacked modern-day Labour for its management of the NHS, saying Tony Blair and Gordon Brown had "ripped out its heart and installed a malfunctioning computer instead".

He attacked the prime minister for having a short-term strategy in NHS management, claiming Mr Brown was "worse than [Mr] Blair" when it came to "soundbites and tricksy politics".

Attacking the government's enthusiasm for targets as a means of securing improvements, he said: "The NHS is suffering from the shoddy jargon-ridden schemes served up on powerpoint and swallowed whole by the people who are supposed to be custodians of the health service and custodians of taxpayers' money."

Mr Cameron pledged a Conservative government would continue to increase public funding for the NHS "using the proceeds of growth".

He claimed proposals for an NHS constitution were his party's idea and said an emphasis on outcomes rather than targets would be prioritised.

"We'll measure cancer survival rates, for instance - not the number of radiotherapy courses delivered per month in a particular oncology unit," he explained.

"That means that health policy can become evidence-based rather than target-driven - delivering not only equity, but excellence and value for money too."

Mr Cameron said his party had a "historic opportunity" to become the "champions" of the NHS.

"That's quite an aspiration - but I believe it is our duty to live up to it. To be the party of the NHS is an honour that must be earned," he concluded.

"I pledge today, here at the place where the NHS began, that I and my party will work tirelessly this year to earn that honour to deserve the trust of the patients and staff of the NHS and to be what I believe we should be: the party of the NHS."


What do you think ?

Name 

Town/Country 

Your email 

Your comment 

Enter the text shown to the right

Our new look

We hope you find our new design easier on the eye and to navigate than the old design. Read more about the new site

Newsletter

Sign up to politics.co.uk’s daily newsletter and you’ll never miss a key political story again

Opinion Formers

Electoral Reform Society

The Electoral Reform Society is a voluntary organisation that campaigns for a better democracy, particularly through changes to our electoral system.

Related News

MPs want salary hike

Members of the House of Commons are looking to secure a ten per cent salary increase eventually reaching a further £6,000 annually, reports claim.

Labour and Conservative MPs reportedly agree on voting for 10 per cent salary increase.

Related Analysis

Analysis: Tory fightback

David Cameron has been trying to pin the blame for the economic downturn on Gordon Brown for over a year now, but the prime minister keeps wriggling away.

Analysis: Tory fightback

Speakers Corner