David Cameron and Ed Miliband clash over NHS reform in PMQs
Miliband told Cameron to "stop wasting millions and put the bill", while Conservative leader replicas that Miliband is an opportunist
, David Cameron, made a passionate defense of health reforms in the government faces a challenge, Ed Miliband, to "stop wasting millions and put his bill."
Prime Minister made it clear that his government intended to put the bill of health and social Coll, despite growing opposition within the NHS and the Conservative Party.
Cameron launched the battle for the reorganization of the NHS as a conflict between a bureaucratic term NHS and NHS medical term, insisting that reforms were stripped billions of pounds in the bureaucracy to "reinvest "in patient care, and attacked the refusal of work to fund increases in the NHS budget.
"They are not for the money, which are not in favor of reform, are just a bunch of opportunists," said Cameron House of Commons.
The Prime Minister also joined the defense of his embattled health secretary, Andrew Lansley, after a No 10 insider has been quoted as saying that should be "taken out and shot", which raises questions about their future in the cabinet.
Prime Minister and Labour leader faced with the question time the Prime Minister on the day that the reform of health care and social returns to the House of Lords stage report, which he bent to face strong opposition from sectors of the Second Chamber. In a lively discussion, Miliband told Cameron that "in their heart of hearts," the Prime Minister knew that Bill was "a total disaster," citing opposition to reforms in a long line of the health sector unions and partnerships.
"That's why his advisers say that the secretary of health should be taken and shot," he said. "Because they know that reality is a mess this bill is as follows:. Doctors know that it's bad for the NHS, nurses know it's bad for the NHS and patients know that it's bad for the NHS every day fighting for this bill., the confidence of every day in the NHS, he escaped, and every day it becomes clearer the health service is not safe in their hands. "
return to the Labour leader's comments in his closet Conservative colleague, sitting at some distance from the front pews, Cameron joked: "I must say that the career of my colleagues are much better than yours."
- While the two leaders exchanged verbal blows, Miliband said that Cameron could not defend a pre-election manifesto promised that there would be a reorganization of top-down, and refuses to hear the cries of opposition from health professionals. "Now you say you know best nurses, doctors, midwives best best, better than patients of the Association, people who, day after day, and are based on dedicated their lives to the service of health" has Miliband said. "It's a question of confidence in the Prime Minister. Can you honestly look people in the health service in the eye and say he kept his promise to reorganize higher down?"
- Cameron did not answer directly, saying instead that the reforms were taking £ 4.5 billion bureaucracy of the system being "integrated into patient care." "Now if you do not support the reforms do not see that money goes to operations, doctors, nurses, hospitals, health assistants. This is what happens actually within the NHS. "
"Today, 50 trusts have written to the founding of newspapers in support of our reforms and oppose this work means."
the past 18 months, more than 100,000 patients were treated every month, there were 4,000 more doctors, the number of nosocomial infections is reduced and there was a 94% reduction in the number of male and female patients in the rooms, the Prime Minister said. "This is what happens, because you have a combination of cash flow and reform."
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