‘We must stand up for a fully-public NHS’
In an opinion article, Islington North MP Jeremy Corbyn calls for strong solidarity with NHS workers
Friday, 22nd September 2023 — By Jeremy Corbyn

MP Jeremy Corbyn
THIS month, for the first time in the history of the NHS, junior doctors and consultants are taking joint strike action.
Both groups have seen their pay drop by more than a third in real terms over the past 15 years, and almost half of junior doctors say they now find themselves struggling to meet rent or mortgage payments.
However, NHS workers are not just striking for decent pay. Understaffed and overworked, they are striking for the safety of us all.
After 13 years of systemic underfunding, the NHS is on its knees. In January, the waiting list for hospital treatment rose to a record 7.2 million; half of patients spend more than four hours in A&E.
The average waiting time for an ambulance is 90 minutes.
We will not revive our NHS unless we tackle the root causes of its collapse: underfunding and privatisation.
More than 330,000 excess deaths have been attributed to austerity.
Public sector cuts produced a lethally toxic combination; they increased the pressures on our healthcare service (due to poorer nutrition, social isolation and inadequate housing) and reduced the capacity of the NHS to respond.
By the time the pandemic hit, a diminished, overworked and underfunded service was somehow expected to cope with its biggest-ever demand.
We didn’t just warn against the dangers of austerity. Before that, we warned against the dangers of Private Finance Initiatives (PFI). We were ignored, and our local hospital paid a heavy price.
As many of you will know, the Whittington Hospital is being sued by a PFI firm. The Whittington had disputed the performance of maintenance work by the PFI, and subsequently brought the services back in-house.
They are now being held responsible for the PFI’s loss of profit.
The Whittington provides a wonderful local service and is our precious local hospital. It is outrageous that those who sought to make money out of the NHS through a PFI are now looking to make even more during an unprecedented healthcare crisis.
Our message to them – and to anyone else in our borough looking to promote private healthcare – is as clear today as it has ever been: keep your hands off our NHS.
Austerity and privatisation are the causes of, not the solutions to, the healthcare crisis. We built the NHS to provide free and universal healthcare at the point of use. Today, we must rediscover that foundational purpose.
That means reversing the disaster of privatisation. That means supporting striking workers in their demands for decent pay. And that means standing up for the principle of free, public and universal healthcare.
We should be expanding this principle, not desecrating it. Earlier this month I was on LBC Radio debating the importance of a National Care Service. This would make social care freely available to all who need it, wherever they need it, whenever they need it.
For Conservative MP Danny Kruger this was a “dangerous idea”. I disagree. What is dangerous is a social care system that forces families to fend for themselves and plunges millions into social isolation. It also forces many middle-aged adults into double debt – of supporting their children through university and their parents through social care.
In Islington North we believe health and social care is a human right, not a commodity. This has guided us through several people-powered campaigns across our constituency.
In 2010, we marched down Holloway Road to protest the closure of our local A&E department – and we won. Last year, we campaigned to take back Hanley Primary Care Centre from US healthcare giant Centene – and we won. Now NHS staff are striking to protect a public service on which we all rely – and we will win.
If healthcare workers deserved our applause on the doorstep, then they deserve our support on the picket line. Ultimately, they are continuing a long tradition in our constituency: standing up for a health service that meets the needs of us all.
Nye Bevan once said that the NHS would last as long as there were people willing to fight for it. Our solidarity is proof of that conviction.
I’m proud to have spent my life campaigning alongside my community for a fully-public health service. With your support, that is what I’ll continue to do.