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When Covid-19 swept the world, governments scrambled to protect
their citizens and chart a course back to normality. As Health
Secretary, Matt Hancock was at the forefront of Britain's battle
against the virus, trying to steer the country through the crisis
in a world where information was scarce, judgements huge and the
roadmap non-existent. Drawing on a wealth of never-before-seen
material, including official records, his notes at the time and
communications with all the key players in Britain's Covid-19
story, this candid account reveals the inner workings of government
during a time of national crisis, reflecting on both the successes
and the failures. Recounting the most important decisions in the
race to develop a vaccine in record time and to build a nationwide
testing capacity from the ground up, Pandemic Diaries provides the
definitive account of Britain's battle to turn the tide against
Covid-19. Crucially, it also offers an honest assessment of the
lessons we need to learn to be prepared for next time - because
there will be a next time.
How good is the NHS, really? That is the question this book seeks
to answer, as the health service emerges from the gravest crisis in
its history with more money - but greater challenges - than ever
before. During the pandemic, voters made extraordinary sacrifices
to save the NHS from collapse. Thanks to these efforts and the
dedication and bravery of the NHS workforce, hospitals were able to
treat patients with coronavirus, but millions of others lost out.
Now an exhausted and depleted NHS workforce faces a huge backlog.
The gap between supply and demand for publicly funded healthcare
has never been so wide. With record numbers waiting for treatment,
the politicians' answer has been to spend ever more taxpayers'
money. The question is whether throwing cash at the problem will
work. Every day, millions of patients receive care that is fair,
good or outstanding. In keeping with Nye Bevan's founding
principles, the same treatment is available to rich and poor, free
at the point of need. Public support for the concept remains
overwhelming. Yet for every positive NHS experience there are
negatives: care that is substandard, disjointed and arrives too
late. A cult of secrecy surrounds errors and failings. Politicians
on all sides dissemble and lie. This book seeks to strip away the
spin and uncover the true state of the NHS: the good, the bad and
the ugly. It explores an increasingly urgent question: in an era of
pandemics, can the NHS provide the quality of service patients
deserve?
After a decade as Conservative Party leader and six years as Prime
Minister, he remains an enigma to those outside his exclusive inner
circle.Now, in the wake of his dramatic resignation following the
sensational EU referendum campaign, this new edition of the book
that 'got the world talking' (Daily Mail ) revisits the real David
Cameron, bringing the story of his premiership to its final
chapter.Based on hundreds of interviews with colleagues past and
present, friends and foes, this unauthorised biography charts
Cameron's path from a blissful childhood in rural Berkshire through
to the most powerful office in the country, giving a fascinating
insight into his most intriguing relationships, both political and
personal.Exploring the highs and lows of his administration, from
his brush with disaster over the Scottish question and his
humiliation over Syria to his surprise election victory in 2015 and
his controversial win on gay marriage, this fully updated edition
offers a comprehensive assessment of Cameron's legacy in office,
weighing up the extraordinary achievements of Britain's youngest
Prime Minister for 200 years.
Britain is at a crossroads. As we leave the EU, we face a great
challenge and also the opportunity to forge a new identity in an
increasingly uncertain world. Our Armed Forces will be critical to
our power and prosperity. For centuries, they have been the envy of
the world. Now barely a day passes without reports of diminishing
prowess. The number of Navy workhorse ships has been halved and the
Army reduced to its smallest size since the Napoleonic war. Our
spectacular new aircraft carriers and the F-35 fighter jet
programme are mired in controversy. Meanwhile, the Armed Forces
face questions about their purpose. The bitter experiences of Iraq
and Afghanistan have undermined the concept of the military as a
`force for good.' Voters are now sceptical of discretionary wars in
faraway places. Aside from sporadic jihadi attacks, few believe
there is any real threat to our way of life. Thus defence spending
is no longer a public priority. Politicians know that there are
more votes in schools and hospitals, even while they are deploy our
troops onto the streets after suicide bombings or, more recently, a
nerve agent attack. In what feels like peacetime, no wonder top
brass have to justify big budgets. Yet this country faces an array
of new and escalating threats, while Brexit and Donald Trump raise
difficult questions over the future of our most important
alliances. Have we become dangerously complacent? Are we still
masters of our own destiny, or have we run up the white flag?
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