Sefton UNISON Sefton UNISON
CALL US ON: 0151 928 9911
  • Sefton UNISON
  • Why UNISON
  • Need Help
    • Need Help
    • Redundancy Support Staff
  • Team
  • Our Local News
  • Contact Sefton UNISON
Sefton UNISON Sefton UNISON
  • Sefton UNISON
  • Why UNISON
  • Need Help
    • Need Help
    • Redundancy Support Staff
  • Team
  • Our Local News
  • Contact Sefton UNISON
Jun 29

Blog: Matt Hancock made for grim listening at the COVID Inquiry

  • 29 June 2023

Matt Hancock, the man responsible for the health and care of the nation during the deadliest emergency for a century, finally gave his evidence to the COVID Inquiry this week. And it was just as grim as I’d expected.

He talked about social care like it was something he found down the back of his sofa, rather than a vital public service he was responsible for. At one point, he said: “We at the health department” – once again forgetting about social care.

He admitted he didn’t know how many care homes there were in the country when COVID hit, or how many care home residents lived in them. So how could he possibly have known where to throw that ‘protective ring’ he boasted about?

The care sector had been in crisis long before the pandemic – a crisis presided over by years of Tory mismanagement and failed political choices. This left the sector exposed to the ravages of the pandemic, right from the start.

Mr Hancock failed in his responsibility to provide enough PPE, testing and paid leave for care workers who needed to self-isolate. He was warned by UNISON, repeatedly, about the need for sick pay and yet he failed to act decisively.

When the government belatedly brought in an “infection control fund” to provide money for sick pay, UNISON care worker members told us the system didn’t work, with many still left without adequate pay. 

It’s also telling how he relied so heavily on his lack of direct control over social care as an excuse for these failings, but when he saw the vaccination programme giving the Tories a boost in the polls, he had no problem introducing the ill-advised “mandatory vaccination” in care homes, which ironically undermined the roll-out.

He found the levers to make vaccination mandatory for care workers, but not sick pay.

Even now, when the time is right for self-reflection and taking responsibility, he is dodging it and passing the buck.

There are lessons to be learnt from the inquiry. A big one is about the urgent need to fix the social care crisis. A nationally integrated, fully funded system, delivered by empowered local councils, would have ensured a secretary of state for health and social care took responsibility for the whole job. It could have saved lives, and the UK could have avoided one of the worst death rates in Europe.

UNISON’s campaign for a National Care Service got a big boost from the Fabian Society report a few weeks ago and 16,000 people have already signed our recently launched petition. If Matt Hancock showed us this week how care was so easily forgotten by Tory ministers, you can show how important it is to you, by signing our petition today.

The article Blog: Matt Hancock made for grim listening at the COVID Inquiry first appeared on the UNISON National site.

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Reddit
  • Pinterest
  • LinkedIn
  • E-Mail

Comments are closed.

Local & National News

  • National News from UNISON (1,184)
  • News (28)
  • Sefton Unison (38)

Archives

Recently…

  • Invest in NHS admin staff to keep patients safe, says UNISON 16 April 2026
  • ‘We’re worth a wee bit more than that’ 16 April 2026
  • ‘Migration does not weaken the NHS, migration is the reason it survives’ 15 April 2026
  • Overworked NHS staff report stress, sickness, and a reliance on antidepressants and counselling, says UNISON 15 April 2026
  • The climate emergency is a health emergency 15 April 2026
  • Opinion: The real problems with school food 14 April 2026
  • Health conference debates ‘the scourge of gender-based violence’ 14 April 2026
  • International NHS staff don’t feel safe or welcome and want to quit the UK, says UNISON 14 April 2026
  • Health care assistants leading the fight for pay equity in health 13 April 2026
  • Pay top of the agenda at health conference – but with much more to fight for 13 April 2026

Check out our past posts

June 2023
M T W T F S S
 1234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  
« May   Jul »

Get in Touch

Sefton UNISON, 38 Church Road, Waterloo, Liverpool. L22 5QL Phone: 0151 928 9911 E-Mail: info@seftonunison.co.uk
    • Join UNISON today
    • My UNISON
    • Contact UNISON
    • Jobs
    • Media centre
    • Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement 2021

We’re talking about…

  • Invest in NHS admin staff to keep patients safe, says UNISON
  • ‘We’re worth a wee bit more than that’
  • ‘Migration does not weaken the NHS, migration is the reason it survives’
  • Overworked NHS staff report stress, sickness, and a reliance on antidepressants and counselling, says UNISON

Contact us:

Sefton UNISON, 38 Church Road Waterloo, Liverpool L22 5QL Phone: 0151 928 9911 E-Mail: info@seftonunison.co.uk Web: www.seftonunison.co.uk
Sefton UNISON : Collective Action : Collective Responsibility : Collective Representation - Supporting you throughout your career
Images supplied by Sefton UNISON, Pixabay & Unsplash : Website Maintenance