The Sunday Times - UK (2021-11-28)

(EriveltonMoraes) #1

34 The Sunday Times November 28, 2021


NEWS


The left claims Tories have been planning to


privatise the NHS. If only there had been a plan


Robert Colvile


policy reversals are common across
Whitehall. But recent health secretaries
haven’t even been able to agree on
whether their job is to run the NHS or to
hold it to account. Sajid Javid, the latest,
finds himself shepherding through
legislation drafted by Matt Hancock,
based on proposals from Stevens, to
undo Lansley’s changes. Stevens himself
has now been replaced by Amanda
Pritchard. And all this while the health
service struggles to cope with the
consequences of the pandemic.
To his credit, Javid and his team
understand the issues. They are
explicitly studying the lessons of the
education revolution, and have even
brought in Barber to advise them. They
are rationalising the quangos. Workforce
and digital transformation are being
brought back under the control of NHS
England. Funding is being shifted
towards primary care and prevention.
The question is whether these
reforms end up representing a
movement or a moment. The charge
from the left is that the government has a
long-term plan to move the NHS towards
privatisation. The real problem with the
health service is that there hasn’t been a
consistent plan at all.
@RColvile

said, ‘Let there be Gove.’” Or, to quote
Johnson, opening one of the first free
schools in 2012: “The secretary of state
for education has added a new word to
the English language: ‘I give, they gave,
he gove.’”
But Barber is right. Gove’s reforms
were dramatic, and overwhelmingly
positive, but they essentially
turbocharged the Blair agenda. Indeed,
while the churn in education secretaries
has been ridiculous — imagine a
company having 17 chief executives in 33
years — there are key themes that
repeatedly crop up, starting with Baker
and Keith Joseph in the 1980s: tougher
basic standards; devolution of budgets
and responsibility to the front line;
clearer accountability; better training
and leadership; a willingness to
intervene when schools are failing.
As a result, while things are still very
far from perfect, the education system
has had significant improvement. As
Barber’s report says, “There are now
many more good schools than 30 years
ago, far fewer bad schools, vastly more
good teachers and far fewer poor ones.”
Which brings us back to the NHS.
The health service, like education, has
been through repeated reform over the
past 30 years. But it is hard to discern

O


ver the past week a rather
magnificent conspiracy theory
has been circulating on the
left. It holds that the prime
minister’s speech to the CBI on
Monday was a Machiavellian
masterstroke. By getting the
pages of his speech the wrong
way round, and securing days of
negative headlines, he ensured the
public failed to pay attention to the
Tories’ NHS reforms. In the words of the
Labour MP Jon Trickett, “Peppa Pig was
a media distraction to disguise the
handover of your NHS to private health.”
This theory is a rare example in
politics of the double fruit loop. Its
validity depends on a crowd-pleasing
prime minister deliberately tanking a
key speech, in the service of a cunning
plan that doesn’t actually exist. Experts
agree there is absolutely nothing in the
Health and Care Bill that moves the NHS
towards privatisation. In fact, it reverses
previous expansion of choice and
competition. So, of course, Trickett has
attracted thousands of retweets.
In fact, there’s a more interesting —
and important — story to tell about NHS
reform. And it ties in to a new
Foundation for Education Development
report by Sir Michael Barber, who has

been Whitehall’s go-to expert on policy
delivery for the past 20 years, setting up
“delivery units” for both Tony Blair and
Boris Johnson.
Barber and his co-author interviewed
14 of the 17 living education secretaries,
from Kenneth Baker to Gavin
Williamson. And they say two
unfashionable things. The first is that
these were mostly good people, trying
hard to do their best for the country and
its children. And the second is that,
despite their very different personalities
and priorities, they largely shared an
analysis of what was wrong with the
schools system and how to improve it.
Yes, there is a clear pattern of radical
reformers — Baker, David Blunkett,
Michael Gove — being followed by
“consolidators” with orders to calm
things down. But whether they were
tapping the brakes or the accelerator,
taking the motorway or the side roads,
they were heading in the same
approximate direction (with long-
serving juniors such as Andrew Adonis
and Nick Gibb helping greatly with the
navigation).
This may seem heresy to some
Conservatives. Their narrative of
education reform essentially goes: “In
the beginning was the Blob. And God

A map of the NHS’s


organisation looks


like a conspiracy


theorist’s


whiteboard


map of how the health service was
organised. It ended up looking like a
conspiracy theorist’s whiteboard.
“The NHS has suffered badly from
swinging between radical centralisers
and radical decentralisers,” admits
Jeremy Hunt, Lansley’s successor as
health secretary. He argues that
reformers have never managed to find a
way — as happened in education — to
combine empowerment with
accountability: to devolve power and
funding to those on the front line while
making sure they get results.
But some of the discontinuities are
more basic still. Andy Cowper of Health
Policy Insight points to the decision in
2006 to fix a short-term funding crisis by
slashing training budgets, which
contributed to staff shortages that still
plague the NHS. And even when there
has been strategic thinking, he says,
there has been little consensus about
fundamental issues: “The problem today
is not just rising demand, but a shortage
of supply, in terms of the capacity of the
workforce. But the assumption from
politicians often seems to be that people
just haven’t been shouting at the NHS
loudly enough.”
This isn’t just a problem with the NHS.
High turnover of ministers and repeated

anything like a golden thread. Blair
imposed rule by targets, while throwing
money at the system in general and
waiting lists in particular. Andrew
Lansley took things in a completely
different direction (for which nobody
now has a good word). Simon Stevens, as
head of NHS England, ripped up the
Lansley reforms in favour of greater
integration, via the bill that is now going
through parliament. Layers of
bureaucracy have been added and taken
away, quangos and incentives created
and then abolished. In 2017 the King’s
Fund think tank attempted to produce a

Mad cyclists need


to be regulated


A leading retailer of e-scooters
thinks they should have
numberplates, and your poll
suggests that readers agree
(News, last week). But why
stop there? Bicycles should
also be registered.
Recently I almost

demolished a lunatic cyclist
who was weaving through the
traffic in a badly lit London
street at breakneck speed. His
cycle had no lights, he was
wearing dark clothing and no
helmet and he was running
red lights.
I have no problem with
cyclists who observe the
Highway Code and behave
with due regard to other

road-users. But the fact is that
many don’t, and we should
deny them the opportunity of
being an accident statistic.
David Sorton, Billingshurst,
West Sussex

Real-world experience
Like many, I am a cyclist, a
pedestrian and a car driver —
and I have used e-scooters in
Paris and London. I can say

that e-scooters are the worst,
dangerous to oneself and
others. Yes, they work well in
the promotional videos, on a
clear road with no bumps or
holes — but the real world is
very different.
Neil Fletcher, London W1

Lazy lanes
Adult e-scooters are a lazy
and frankly embarrassing

way to get about, but if these
wheeled menaces are to
become an established part
of the urban transport scene,
planners need to supply them
with their own highway
channels. Pedestrians or
cyclists (who actually have to
put physical effort into their
travelling) should not have to
share pathways with them.
Kate Perez, Cambridge

that they do — and that
women’s choices, by
default, should always be
treated as sacrosanct — is an
insult to our feminist
foremothers.
Teenagers and young
women are still being told
that attractiveness and sexual
availability are intrinsically
linked to their worth. What is
sad is that it’s now their
fellow women who are
pushing this idea.
Nellie O’Toole
Middlesbrough

Last week we explored the debate on nudity and feminism

Our canine correspondent in
the Magazine has a devoted
following — and readers quite
like to know what Andrew
Cotter has been up to as well.
Last weekend he was
pressing the need for would-
be owners to adopt a rescue
pet rather than buy a puppy.
But it’s not always that easy,
as Amy Jackson explained:
“Adoption agencies have

started setting the bar way
too high. We’ve had our track
record of three successful
adoptions waved aside as
irrelevant because the dog
may be left alone for four
hours rather than three.
People are being turned away
because their fence has been
extended with chicken wire
rather than expensive
panelling.” “Absolutely,”

agreed Yorkshire lass. “Our
daughter was desperate to
adopt but the rescue charities
wouldn’t consider her.” Tom
M recommended “Many
Tears Animal Rescue in
Wales. The staff will deliver
your dog at stops on the M1 if
you are far away, save dogs
doomed for kill centres and
have a realistic rehoming
policy.”

Now, what links
Bolognese, Maltese, pug and
papillon? They are all toy
dogs? That’s true, but the
answer we were looking for is
that they formed a question
in the BBC quiz show Only
Connect, which turned out to
have an ardent following
among readers. Stephen
Fletcher was one of the
faithful and boasted: “Very

occasionally I get one of the
questions correct.” “Me too,”
said John — The Original:
“Very, very occasionally I get
a question the teams don’t
get.” “We call those
Connectobombs,” cheered
Christopher Jackson. The
questions are certainly tough,
but Nigel Evans lamented:
“ts thn swrs strg glw th.”
We published gritty photos

Last week we asked:
Should e-scooters be required to have numberplates?

From a poll of 7,551 Times and Sunday Times readers

This week’s question:
Would you buy a fake Christmas tree to save the planet?
Have your say at sundaytimes.co.uk/poll

1919 Nancy, Viscountess
Astor, wins by-election to
become first female MP
1990 Margaret Thatcher
gives resignation speech
from doorstep of No 10
2000 Netherlands passes
bill to legalise euthanasia,
the first country to do so

Liddle difference
Rod Liddle worries that giving
up smoking has caused his
personality to change,
making him a sanctimonious
twerp (Comment, last week).
He shouldn’t fret. He has not
changed at all.
David Simpson
Darby Green, Hampshire

Short shrift
The acronym Hogo — hassle
of going out — is a new one on
me (News Review, last week),
but it calls to mind an
acquaintance of mine who
was a busy general manager.
He would sometimes tell his
secretary that for the rest of
the day he was in a CBA
meeting and could not be
disturbed. He rightly
assumed nobody would ask
what the meeting was. If they
had, they would have learnt
that CBA stood for “Can’t be
arsed”. It worked a treat.
Keith Nicholson
East Boldon, Tyne and Wear

Character assassination
Matthew Syed’s warning
about the dangers of social
media is welcome and much
needed (Comment, last
week). The insight echoes
words found in Othello: “Who
steals my purse steals trash

... But he that filches from me
my good name ... makes me
poor indeed.” The fact that
the lines are spoken by the
duplicitous Iago does not
detract from this truth.
Terry Carter, Edlesborough
Buckinghamshire


Appreciating assets
Further to your piece “The
great retirement” (Business,
last week), I’d argue there’s a
simple reason many people
have left the workforce since
Covid: they have realised that
life is precious. Many have
thought, “I’ve enough to
retire on — why keep
working?” As the Gospel of
Matthew says: “You know not
the day nor the hour.”
The Rev Dean Henley
Driffield, East Yorkshire

Climate of fear
Robert Colvile refers to
research showing that young
people are worried about
bringing childen into a world
of uncertainty due to climate
change (Comment, last
week). Let’s hope the feelings
remain: if so, catastrophic
climate change is less likely.
Chris Mills
Ryton, Tyne and Wear

Blowing the wrong way
Jamie Nimmo’s engaging
interview with the head of
SSE described the financial

games played with wind
farms by multibillion-pound
energy companies (Business,
last week). But it did not
mention the vast subsidies
included silently in the bill of
every household. These
represent a huge transfer of
money from the poor to the
rich. Until they are removed,
the plutocratic bosses will
happily play their self-
indulgent financial games.
Philip Sullivan
Lutterworth, Leicestershire

Comfortable seat
Ross McKean says that the
“mediocrity” of MPs is due to
the low salary (Letters, last
week). I could not disagree
more. They are far better
paid than the vast majority of
British people (whose taxes
pay their salaries), and surely
a high salary is the wrong
motive for entering public
service in any case.
Pete Dorey, Bath

Free pass
I greatly enjoyed the tale of
Oxford dons helping the son
of the dictator Ferdinand
Marcos to pass his exams
(News, last week). When I
was studying in Poland in the
1980s, the son of a prominent
communist functionary failed
his exams. Pressure was
exerted, and one candid
examiner wrote in his exam
book: “Knowledge of subject:
zero. On the orders of the
chancellor: pass.” I guess that
is why communism fell.
Andrew Fedyszak, London W11

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of British life since the 1960s,
and a picture of a 1970s male
stripper caused much mirth
in Hermes: “The girl with her
hands covering her face looks
like she’s about to have a
stroke ... but she couldn’t
reach!” “The old ones are the
best,” chortled Emitter
Follower. If you’re sure, EF.
If you’re sure.
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I write from Hastings, which Sian WilliamsSa a s, broadcaster, 57, b oadcaste , 5
you featured in two very
different reports last week:
one on the help offered to
migrants by locals, the other
echoing the government’s
increasingly shrill rhetoric of
crisis (News, last week).
There is no refugee crisis.
The overall numbers of
asylum seekers are down from
last year. The 24,000 who
have crossed the Channel
have done so because they
have no other route: formerly
they might have taken a flight.
Here is what your revered
writer the late AA Gill wrote
when he watched refugees
being tenderly welcomed on
the Mediterranean island of
Lampedusa in 2013. “The
reason the Lampedusans are
kind and good to these
desperate visitors is because
they can be. They’ve met
them and they see them; the
reason we can talk about
‘them’ as a problem, a plague
on our borders, is because we
don’t see them. If any of these
refugees knocked on our
doors and asked for help, we
would give it ... because we
are also good and kind.”
This kindness is what we
are seeing in Hastings, where
the outpouring of support is
overwhelming. If we do have
a crisis, it is a crisis of the
attempted and wilful
destruction of our empathy —
which, nevertheless, burns
very brightly in our town.
Dr Felicity Laurence, Hastings

Firm hand
As a taxpayer, I am appalled
by the number of illegal
migrants flooding into this
country at my expense.
Welcome to the land of milk
and honey — let me shake
your hand.
Draconian but humane
measures are required. Illegal
entrants should be first

housed in detention centres,
not hotels. Those who are not
provably fleeing persecution
should be shipped back to
their EU country of entry.
Those who knowingly employ
illegal migrants should be
heavily fined.
All illegal migrants are
perpetrating a fraud on those
migrants who seek to enter
this country legally.
Nigel Duckworth, Dartmouth

Lost control
Boris Johnson said Brexit
would allow us to take back
control of our borders. Now
you report that as members
of the EU we were able to
transfer hundreds of migrants
a year back to the first
member state they entered,
whereas only five of the
migrants who reached Britain
by boat this year have been
returned. The arguments over
hard Brexit or soft Brexit now
seem irrelevant: what has
been delivered is just a very
badly thought-out Brexit.
Graham Davies
Shoreham-by-Sea, West Sussex

Mettle of Hastings
The pictures of Hastings
residents helping migrants
make me feel proud to be
British. We have created an
attractive, free society, which
many people want to be part
of. Welcome!
Bob Riddler, London E14

Free ride
“HM Coastguard has been co-
ordinating search and
rescue,” you report. Why is
the coastguard setting out to
provide a taxi service for
those who willingly put
themselves in danger? In
effect, they are being assisted
to enter this country by our
own government.
Thomas Bidwell
Newtown, Powys

My town won’t let


the migrants down


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CORRECTIONS &


CLARIFICATIONS


Better plate than never
Last week I was driving at
30mph up a hill, only to be
overtaken by an e-scooter.
What’s needed is regulated
roadworthiness standards;
speed restriction;
numberplate; mandatory
insurance; and, dare I say it, a
test before one can use these
devices.
Paul Lishman, London SW16

NO


89% 11 %


YES


READERS’ POLL


Posing nude is a


feminist betrayal


Your article “Blurred lines:
can selling your body ever be
empowering?” (News Review,
last week) was a perfect
illustration of the problems
with “choice feminism”. The
decisions over whether to
post nude or semi-nude
pictures, to set up an
OnlyFans account or to take
part in pornography do not
exist in a vacuum. To suggest

Never safe, never free
This choosy-choice
empowered rubbish is not
feminism. Just because a
woman is making a choice,
that does not make it a
feminist act.
If you are taking part in the
business of women’s bodies
being sold to men for their
sexual gratification, you are
perpetuating a world in
which women’s lives are less
valuable than men’s pleasure.
A world in which women will
never be equal, will never be
safe and will never be free.
Feminism is about tearing
that world down, not
propping it up.
Olivia Smith, Manchester

Lust comes first
Alongside the feminist issue
of empowerment for a few
successful women, we also
have the feminist issue of
modern slavery, which is
alive and well in our cities in
the form of vulnerable
immigrant women who are
tricked and trafficked into sex
“work”.
It is hard to see how people
can support one and
campaign against the other —
when it is male lust that
facilitates both.
Claire Skrine, London W1

Mandatory jabs


will save lives


Austria’s decision to make it
mandatory for citizens to
have the Covid vaccination is
a good one (“Austria erupts as
protesters decry vaccine
‘dictatorship’”, News, last
week). Yes, the policy is an
infringement of human
rights, but this works both
ways. Surely citizens should
also have the right to travel
on public transport, attend a
concert and so on without the
risk of contracting a deadly
disease; and to go to hospital
without finding they cannot
be treated because it is
overflowing with antivaxers.
David Simmonds, Woking

No, Vienna
That’s Austria off the bucket
list, then. One would have
thought the country had had
enough of compulsion, but
clearly history is low on the
Viennese curriculum.
Charles Foster, Chalfont St
Peter, Buckinghamshire

Mask action
Why does the government
not mandate the wearing of
masks in public indoor
spaces? Last week a meta-
analysis of 72 studies found
that mask-wearing is
associated with a 53 per cent
reduction in infections. The
UK has little room for error as
we head into the colder
months and mask-wearing
could reduce the risk of a full

lockdown — so why are we
waiting?
Pam Johnstone
New Forest, Hampshire

Tunnel vision
Mask-wearing is still a
condition of carriage on the
Tube in London, but many
selfish people don’t comply
and it is simply not enforced.
It’s an ugly part of UK culture
that some are so uncaring of
others and assert their
“right” to do as they like. It is
my right not to get infected by
people who do not wear
masks — and who put a
cherry on the top by
coughing for the entire
journey.
Alison Cousins
Tooting, London

Put growth on


the back burner


Was Oliver Shah on holiday
for the first two weeks of
November, when the Cop26
climate talks took place? He
writes, “Going for growth is
our only way out of this
quagmire” (Business, last
week). But even our present
levels of consumption vastly
exceed what’s sustainable on
this fragile planet. He gives a
cursory nod to tackling
environmental issues in his
prescription for the UK
economy — “electric cars and
green energy” — but the
vision is business as usual
with different technology.
The economic approach of
the 1980s is no answer for the
2020s. It’s what got us into
these social, economic and
environmental crises.
Baroness Bennett of Manor
Castle, House of Lords
London SW1

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