Imagine you are a sweaty hand shareholder with interests in companies that gain from the privatising of the NHS, and by design or good fortune, you find yourself in a position to direct the direction of the NHS towards privatisation, what would you do? Well knowing the greed orientated motives of such a shareholder, it is no doubt they would push for more privatisation of that NHS. Perhaps you would say that isn't fair, those people should not be influencing the direction of our NHS, but they are there, and they are influencing the direction of our NHS, they're called MPs.
The number of MPs with interests in companies that stand to gain from slicing of sections of the health service to the private sector is considerable. Then there are those who have financial links with individuals involved in the private heath sector.
Is it any wonder that we see approximately a further £1 billion per year of tax payers money finding its way into the private health sector, when it could be going into our NHS and patient care. The system stinks, is riddled with self interest by financially greedy individuals, by any standard it would be deemed unfair, but we tolerate it. The millionaire cabal are gleefully slicing and dicing our NHS to their own personal gain, while we pay their salaries, and suffer ever increasing strain on our health services. They stink, they are corrupt, they are greedy, they are selfish to the extreme, they are beyond any form of trust. The Westminster Houses of Hypocrisy and Corruption with its pampered, privileged, parasitic bunch of crooks and liars should be flushed down the toilet.
Below is just two from each of the main political parties taken from a list of 215 compiled by
Social Investigation:
With that amount of private health care interest directing our NHS, how do think it will be developed?
1. Lord
Ashcroft: Conservative benches and funder - Until 2010, held investments in
two private healthcare groups. From his website 'Other business interests
include significant investments in healthcare.' In 2010 bought a 34% stake in The Priory for £44m.
2. Lord
Ashton: Conservative - Shares in Marsh Inc insurance brokers and in Zurich
Financial Services AG - In a review for
the Department of Health of the NHS litigation Authority - written by Marsh
Inc, it recommended involving opening up clinical negligence cover over to
private insurers. Zurich Financial Insurers said they didn't have the expertise
but the Marsh review envisaged
opening up a dialogue which might eventually give them the information
they needed. The DoH unsurprisingly accepted the large majority of Marsh's
recommendations. Lord Ashton also has shares in a private dental company called
Smilepod Hygiene Ltd.
1. Lord
Alliance: Shares in Huntsworth plc - a company whose CEO is
Conservative Lord
Chadlington – which donated £15,500 to the party in August last
year and has given money every year since 2008. Denied it at first but
Electoral Commission found them out. The same company that had Baroness
Cumberledge as one of their non-executive directors. Heavily involved in
lobbying and PR. Article on Lord Alliance here.
2. Baroness Barker: Director, Barker and Woodard Consulting Limited
(strategic advice to charities, local authorities and companies engaged in charitable
activities. Income received from the Member's work in this connection is paid
to the company. Baroness Barker has 50 per cent holding in Barker and Woodard
Consulting Limited. On the website
it says Baroness Barker and Kirsty Woodward established the company in
2008, (though her interest was registered on 26/04/12).
On
a blog post on the NHS from their website it
says - "As we all know, it’s incredibly difficult out there for most third
sector organisations, especially for smaller locally based/funded ones, and
however much many organisations in principle disagree with the changes to the
NHS, most organisations are also seeing it as an opportunity to tap into health
service funds.
1. Baroness
Billingham: Made regular contributions to Cumberlege Eden & Partners a
training company for training NHS personnel and is a political networking firm
that works "extensively" with the pharmaceutical industry.
2. Lord
Carter: The head of the increasingly influential Competition and
Cooperation Panel, is a7n adviser to Warburg Pincus International Ltd, a
private equity firm with significant investments in the healthcare industry.
Chairman Patrick Carter, or Lord Carter of Coles to give him his full title,
was the founder of Westminster Health Care, a leading private nursing home
company. He is also the Chair of McKesson Information Solutions Ltd, which
delivers IT to “virtually every NHS organisation”
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