'Grotesque scandal of cancer divide shows Britain is two nations in one country'
The great cancer divide between the rich and poor is a grotesque scandal.
It is an outrage that deserves a sustained drive to end the gulf between two nations in one country. That working class people are far more likely to die from the disease than the middle and upper classes is a stain on our land.
Women in Knowsley, Merseyside, should not be at a three-fold increased risk of dying of lung cancer compared with women in Waverley, Surrey. Similarly it is a disgrace that one in five men in Manchester are expected to die from cancer before they turn 80, compared to one in eight Harrow in North West London.
The deadly disparity detailed by Imperial College London is the result of inequality and the failure of the Conservative Government to improve health across the board. We desperately need stronger initiatives to improve incomes because killers such as obesity are linked to poverty.
Instead the NHS had the life squeezed out of it, which has meant prevention and early detection have both been clobbered. When the nation’s poor are dying years earlier than the rich, the two nations, as described way back in 1845 by Benjamin Disraeli, is a political sacrifice of lives.
Teachers, civil servants and train drivers walk out in biggest strike in decadeWeak Rishi
As he stumbles from crisis to crisis, Rishi Sunak is a battered Prime Minister who is fighting daily to stay in Downing Street.
Today’s Rwanda crisis vote is a sign of a Tory PM who is losing control of the Conservative Party. Plotting MPs are prioritising civil war over what is best for Britain, which would be to scrap a vile plan that is costing £290million.
Sunak’s poor memory at the Covid inquiry is either a man wilting under the strain, or one who found it convenient to have blanks.
Whey aye, Sam
Ebullient Sam Thompson is king of the jungle with ambitions to be Ant or Dec.
Or maybe both when Sam’s enthusiasm is so boundless.