BORIS Johnson is to enshrine in law a commitment to raise spending on the NHS year-on-year when the first Queen’s Speech of the new Parliament is unveiled on Thursday.
The Prime Minister is expected to use the legislative programme to underline commitments made during his victorious General Election campaign to support the health service.
It will include a bill to requiring the Government to honour its pledge to raise spending on the NHS to £33.9 billion by 2023-24.
The Conservatives said it would be the first time any government has made a legally binding spending commitment over several years.
Meanwhile, the Prime Minister’s chief adviser Dominic Cummings was reported to be preparing a radical overhaul of the civil service to ensure it delivers on Johnson’s agenda.
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According to The Sunday Telegraph, Cummings is planning to review the way officials are hired and fired, while The Sunday Times reported departments could be abolished and civil servants replaced by outside experts.
It comes after Johnson used a symbolic visit on Saturday to Tony Blair’s old Sedgefield constituency to promise to repay the trust of traditional Labour voters who turned for the first time to the Conservatives in the election.
The County Durham seat was part of a previously solid “red wall” of safe Labour seats across the north, Midlands and north Wales which turned blue on Thursday night, helping the Conservatives to a crushing Commons majority of 80.
A No 10 source said: “This election was as much about delivering on the people’s priorities as it was about getting Brexit done – and the Prime Minister understands that.
“We will show the public, especially Labour voters who trusted us with their vote, that we will deliver on the promises we have made on helping with the cost of living, tackling crime and supporting our NHS.
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“This starts with making sure the NHS has the funding it needs to carry on being the best healthcare service in the world. It is one of the key priorities of the people’s Government.”
While the Queen’s Speech will be largely the same as that delivered in October before Parliament was dissolved for the election, it is expected to include a number of additional measures. They include changes to the justice system after Johnson promised serious offenders would not be released early following the London Bridge terror attack.
There are also expected to be measures to ensure minimum services operate during transport strikes, new protections for renters and a ban on local authorities boycotting products from other countries, such as Israel.
In his speech on Saturday, Johnson echoed the word of Blair when he became prime minister, saying: “When we get down to Westminster and we begin our work, remember we are not the masters, we are the servants now.
“Our job is to serve the people of this country, and to deliver on our priorities. And our priorities and their priorities are the same.”
He also promised to “repay” the trust of traditional Labour supporters who voted for the Tories.
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