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British Labour Party conference: Brown stands up for health
privatisation
By Julie Hyland
29 September 2006
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For months, sections of the British Labour Party, the trade
unions and the media have been insisting that Chancellor Gordon
Brown represents a more Old Labour alternative to
Prime Minister Tony Blair. Should Brown succeed Blair as Labour
leader, the result would be a Labour Party more in tune with its
former social democratic credentials, they argued.
Events at this weeks Labour Party conference put paid
to this fraud.
The Unison trade union had tabled a motion to conference calling
on the government to rethink the headlong rush to a competitive
system in the state-run National Health Service (NHS). Its
motion was debated as hundreds of workers took their second 24-hour
strike action against the proposed sell-off of the not-for-profit
health supplies service, NHS Logistics.
In one of the largest ever health privatisation schemes, the
contract for supplying and equipping hospitals in England is to
be sold off to DHL, a subsidiary of Deutsche Post. Some 1,650
staff currently employed by NHS Logistics and the NHS Purchasing
and Supply Agency are to be transferred to the private operator
on October 1.
The government claims that the 10-year contract will lead to
£1 billion in savings. In reality, it is private capital
that will reap a financial bonanza.
DHL, whose partners include Texas-based Novation and Exel Logistics,
will take control of a £777 million business supplying goods
to 600 NHS organisations. This is despite the fact that Novation
was targeted as part of a US Senate investigation into alleged
anti-competitive behaviour earlier this year, centring on claims
that medical supply companies were using their monopoly position
to overcharge the federally funded Medicare system.
The NHS Logistics sell-off is in line with similar plans involving
the Dental Practice Board, the Prescription Pricing Authority
and the NHS Pensions Agency. According to the Financial Times,
The Dental Practice Board, based in Eastbourne, pays around
£340m in fees to 19,000 NHS dentists. The pensions agency
in Fleetwood, Lancashire handles contributions from 1.2m staff
and pays out to more than 500,000 pensioners...while the Prescription
Pricing Authority handles over 600m prescriptions a year, paying
14,000 pharmacists and dispensing doctors from Newcastle.
In June, the Financial Times revealed that some of the
worlds largest private health companies had been asked to
submit tenders for control of primary care trusts, which
spend 80 per cent of the NHSs budget.
Labours health policies have aroused enormous hostility
amongst health workers and working people in general. With a major
funding crisis developing within the NHS, leading to staff being
laid off and a freeze on recruitment, Health Secretary Patricia
Hewitt was booed and heckled off the stage at a nurses conference
earlier this year.
The Unison resolution was only a pale reflection of this anger,
and intended to head off popular opposition by claiming Labour
could be pressured into concessions. It did not oppose privatisation
outright, merely requesting that the government slow down the
pace of its reforms. It asked that the competitive
system of payment by results not be extended without a full
assessment of its consequences, and that further outsourcing
of services to the private sector take place only after full
consultation with those affected.
But the Labour leadership made clear it would not tolerate
any public criticism of its policies and sought to get the Unison
motion withdrawn.
According to reports, it was Brown who led the charge during
a meeting of the partys national executive, where he insisted
there would be no retreat on the sell-off, and expressed anger
at Unisons criticisms. He also denounced a motion by the
Transport and General Workers Union (TGWU) suggesting lengthy
prison sentences for company bosses convicted of corporate manslaughter
as crazy.
Browns demand that the Labour Party National Executive
Committee send a message to the country that it was unified
and serious apparently persuaded two members to change their
vote at the last moment, so that the leadership won on both motionsbut
only by 16 to 15.
He was not so successful on the conference floor, however,
where Unisons motion was carried overwhelmingly on a show
of hands.
During the debate, the platform cut the microphone to Unison
General Secretary Dave Prentis on the grounds that he had overrun
his allotted time. In his remarks, Prentis pleaded, If the
government doesnt change direction then we will not win
a fourth term.
Only two days earlier, the union had issued a press statement
praising Brown, the listening chancellor, for his
speech to conference in which he made clear his intention of seeking
to become the new leader of the Labour Party. Headed Unison
Welcomes Listening Brown, the statement described the speech
as one with a vision that hinted at a different
approach to public services if he becomes prime minister.
Brown had, in fact, said that he hoped for the NHS to be the
best and fairest insurance policy and healthcare system in the
world, but made clear that this would involve the private
sector.
The defeat of the National Executive Committee proposal on
the NHS will have no impact on government policy. The annual conference
is a stage-managed affair, and previous defeats for the leadership
in recent yearsincluding on NHS privatisationhave
all been ignored.
Health Minister Andy Burnham insisted there would be no change
in course. In a sop to the unions, he promised the establishment
of a stakeholder forum to discuss how to minimise
redundancies following the DHL sell-off.
Browns intervention has shored up his support with Rupert
Murdochs News International, the entity to which the chancellor
is in reality answerable. Murdoch has readily acknowledged Browns
role as the joint architect with Blair of New Labours big
business policies, but had expressed doubts as to whether the
chancellor would be prepared to implement more far-reaching measures
in the face of popular opposition.
In recent weeks, Brown has sought to assuage such concerns
and was rewarded with a friendly interview in the Sun.
Following his display on Wednesday, Murdochs headlines made
clear he was more than satisfied with Browns performance.
The Times, another Murdoch newspaper, reported glowingly
that the chancellor was being praised by Blairite members
of the executive last night for showing his modernising colours
at the National Executive Committee.
Although Mr. Blair was at the meeting, he left it to
Mr. Brown to lead the argument against the Unison motion and to
twist arms to defeat it, the newspaper reported.
The Sun gloated over how Brown had squared up
to Labours mutinous ruling executive over the privatisation
plans and had laid into Old Labour dinosaurs, even branding
his TGWU pal Jack Dromey crazy.
True, the leadership went on to be defeated when the
party conference voted on it later, the Sun continued,
but Brown must ignore that protestand carry on hauling
the cash-guzzling state sector into the 21st century.
See Also:
Blairs conference speech: Labour
Party applauds its own gravedigger
[28 September 2006]
British Labour: A party of war and social
reaction
[25 September 2006]
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