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‘Mean-spirited and shabby’

Unite slams PM for not waiving ÂŁ400 surcharge for NHS migrant workers
UniteLive, Thursday, May 21st, 2020


BREAKING NEWS: Thanks to Unite action the PM is now saying the overseas NHS and care workers will have the charge removed (at 16.41, May 21)

Read original story below: 

Unite slammed Boris Johnson’s hard-line stance not to waive the £400 NHS surcharge for overseas health and social care workers combating coronavirus today (Thursday May 21), describing it as ‘mean-spirited and shabby’.

Unite said the hypocrisy of the prime minister was given extra piquancy as he singled out two non-UK  nurses – one from New Zealand and the other from Portugal – for praise after he survived his fight with Covid-19.

The NHS fee of ÂŁ400-a-year for care workers applies to those from outside the European Economic Area, regardless whether they use the NHS or not. It is set to rise to ÂŁ624 in October.

There is also controversy over the £900m figure which the prime minister told MPs is raised by this charge. The Institute of Fiscal Studies put the sum at a tenth of that – £90m.

“Of all people, Boris Johnson should appreciate the wonderful and dedicated work of NHS health and social care professions, including the two non-UK nurses he singled out for particular praise in his fight for survival against coronavirus,” commented Unite national officer for health Colenzo Jarrett-Thorpe.

“The fact he won’t waive this £400 fee for overseas health and social care workers is mean-spirited and shabby”.

Unite NHS members are clearly unimpressed. “With this prime minister warm words of praise come cheap, but a small financial gesture for NHS migrant workers, many of them low-paid, is beyond his compass. His stance is hypocritical,” said Jarrett-Thorpe.

“Tonight, we will have the Thursday ‘clap for carers by the people of the UK, many of them who voted for Boris Johnson as recently as last December – there is a big irony here. This charge should be waived immediately.”

Unite has 100,000 members in the health service.

 

By Shaun Noble

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