The Socialist 24 November 2005 Don't let 'fat cats' axe our NHS Don't let 'fat cats' axe our NHS Campaign for a new workers' party Big business destroying the planet On the threshold of genderquake? The Constant Gardener directed by Fernando Mereilles Iraq - anger grows at brutal occupation Turbulent politics as Sharon divorces Likud Big gains for United Socialist Party Venezuela: Stop the repression of trade unionists Defending jobs, services and rights |
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Home | The Socialist 24 November 2005 | Join the Socialist Party Save our health serviceNEW LABOUR Health Secretary Patricia Hewitt says she won't 'bail out' NHS hospitals that are in debt. In fact she is demanding £700 million worth of cuts this winter. Outrageously Hewitt calls Karl Marx in her defence, saying: "I don't know whether Marx ever said waste is theft from the working class but he should have done." She blames hospitals for keeping patients in hospital for too long - it seems 'bed blockers' cause all the problems. After government-inspired cuts have closed or privatised council-run care homes, New Labour want cash-strapped social services departments and an increasingly bankrupt NHS to squabble over who looks after released patients. But, as our reports below show, campaigns across Britain are fighting for a real solution to the NHS's crisis. > Cardiff Royal InfirmaryTHE CAMPAIGN to re-open the Cardiff Royal Infirmary (CRI) moves up a gear with a mass lobby of the Welsh Assembly on 30 November. Dave Bartlett, secretary, CRISIS, Cardiff Royal Infirmary - Save Its ServicesCRISIS's campaigning work gained a big victory with the decision not to sell off the CRI land. But now Cardiff Local Health Board is discussing what new facilities should be situated there and for us only one facility is acceptable - the hospital we were promised in 1996! We won £5 million from the Welsh Assembly to fund new facilities at the CRI site, so the land doesn't have to be sold. But now we have to fight to demand a hospital at CRI. It's down to the Assembly to demand a hospital and an end to the huge waiting times and waiting lists that afflict the NHS in Wales. We will hand in the 70,000 signature petition for a new CRI. We'll have a chance to see the new £60 million debating chamber the Assembly built itself while working-class people all over Wales demand new hospitals. The lobby begins at 12 noon on Thursday 30 November at National Assembly building, Cardiff Bay. Minibus transport available from St. German's Church Hall at 11.30 am. > LincolnshireOVER THIS summer Lincolnshire people have watched the local NHS trust try to plug a £8 million budget deficit. There are plans to close five hospital wards and cut back on frontline services like ambulances and put more responsibility onto the voluntary sector. Marc GlasscoeOn 1 October around 1,500 people demonstrated against the planned closure of the accident and emergency ward in Grantham. When a senior nurse at Grantham complained about the effect the cuts were having - he was suspended! On 19 November over 100 people protested against the closure of a ward at Skegness hospital. On 26 November, people will gather at Lincoln County Hospital in a demonstration against the cuts organised by UNISON and other public-sector unions. Meanwhile we're watching Lincolnshire County Council cut back on education by merging local primary schools on the grounds that class sizes are too small! Throughout the summer, Socialist Party members have been raising the issue of NHS cuts, demanding an end to privatisation, a massive increase in health service funding and the rebuilding of the NHS under democratic workers' control. We will again be at Saturday's demonstration, explaining the need for a decent, democratically run health service. In this issue
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