- 13 November 2019
- 5 min read
Labour pledges to end NHS crisis with £26bn real-terms rescue plan
SubscribeLabour to spend extra £6bn more on NHS than current Government. Shadow chancellor John McDonnell will say the cost of Labour's NHS funding pledge will be covered by taxing the richest in society.

Rescue plan for the NHS
Health funding will be boosted by £26 billion under a Labour government which will cover the cost by taxing the richest in society, the party has pledged.
Labour said its “rescue plan” will provide safe, quality care, recruit thousands of staff, rebuild crumbling facilities and provide modern state-of-the-art equipment.
On Wednesday, shadow chancellor John McDonnell and shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth will announce Labour’s proposals to “end the Tory NHS crisis” with a £26 billion real-terms – £40 billion in cash terms – healthcare funding boost.
In a speech at the Royal Society of Medicine, they are expected to announce an annual average 4.3% funding increase for health spending over the next four years, funded from Labour’s proposals to reverse corporation tax cuts and tax the wealthiest people in society.
World class health service
Labour’s plan includes NHS capital expenditure rising to the international average, £1 billion-a-year training and education budgets, and £1 billion more to fund an expansion of public health services.
There will be a focused drive on prevention measures to stop people getting sick, as part of Labour’s mission to tackle health inequalities and prioritise children’s health and well-being.
Mr McDonnell is expected to say: “The world-class health service we all need and depend on needs proper funding.
“Labour’s policies to tax the richest in society and invest for the future through our Social Transformation Fund mean we will be able to improve millions of lives.
“And ending privatisation means that money can be spent on healthcare rather than dividends for Boris Johnson’s friends in the private healthcare industry.”
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