Labour in sickness and health
We are told the NHS is a ‘national treasure.’ That it was built by socialists. That it belongs to us. That if we just had the right funding and the right managers, it could be restored to its former glory.
But we know better. The NHS is often cited, especially by those still enthralled by the Labour Party, as an example of ‘socialist’ legislation passed during the 1945–1951 Attlee government. Even people who now admit Labour is not socialist cling to the NHS as proof that it once was.
Let’s be clear: the NHS was never socialist. It wasn’t created to empower workers or take profit out of care. It was built to keep the workforce functional – to patch us up and send us back to work. A healthy worker is a productive worker – and a productive worker generates value for the boss. That’s why the capitalist class signed off on it. Not out of compassion. Out of calculation.
Sure, there was high-minded rhetoric at the time. Aneurin Bevan, considered the founder of the NHS, said: ‘No society can call itself civilised if a sick person is denied medical aid because of lack of means’. And William Beveridge, architect of the welfare state, said: ‘A revolutionary moment in the world’s history is a time for revolution, not for patching’. Later he stormed the barricades of the House of Lords as he became a Liberal peer.
The real context was fear. The ruling class had just dragged us through mass unemployment and a world war, and it now faced an angry, armed working class returning home. It saw what had happened in Italy. Reforms were made not to end capitalism but to save it from social and industrial unrest.
Bevan once asked: ‘How can wealth persuade poverty to use its political power to keep wealth in power?’ He blamed the Conservatives, calling them ‘vermin’. But take the party labels off, and the question becomes sharper. The problem isn’t just the Tories. It’s a system that ensures poverty exists in the first place.
Bevan couldn’t see that. For him, the enemy wore a blue rosette. For us, the enemy is the wages system, the class system, the profit system. That’s what’s killing the NHS. That’s what’s killing us.
Now, 75 years on, they’re not even pretending. The NHS has become a marketplace. Drugs are bought from profit-hungry pharmaceutical firms. Cleaning is outsourced to contractors who cut wages and corners. Just this month, a scandal was revealed over botched cataract operations performed by private clinics cashing in on NHS contracts.
We used to joke the NHS was held together with duct tape and goodwill – now they’ve outsourced the duct tape and privatised the goodwill. They say this is a Tory problem. But what has Labour done?
Wes Streeting – dubbed ‘Wes the Rat’ by campaigners – is Health Secretary and says he’s ‘not ideological,’ which is odd for a politician. He wants to ‘use spare capacity in the private sector’. He calls patients ‘customers.’ He says the NHS is no longer ‘the envy of the world’ – not because it’s been gutted, but because it hasn’t been modernised. That’s code for markets, contracts, fragmentation. The same failed model, just rebranded.
Starmer campaigned in 2020 on ending NHS outsourcing. That pledge disappeared like a junior doctor’s lunch break. Now it’s all about ‘outcomes,’ ‘efficiency,’ and ‘value for money’. In his worldview, health is a product, not a right.
He’s cited NHS England as an example of excessive bureaucracy, duplications, and inefficiency. NHS England’s functions are now being absorbed into the Department of Health and Social Care. The transition will take about two years – less time than it takes many trans people to get a first appointment on the NHS waiting list.
Around 9,000 jobs are being axed in the process, as AI systems take over. One of the main tech firms involved is Palantir, a data analytics and armaments contractor with deep ties to the American MAGA state.
Palantir’s NHS involvement began with a £1 (one pound) trial contract in March 2020, part of the pandemic response. Then came:
- July 2020: £1 million contract
- December 2020: £23 million, two-year deal
- June 2023: £25 million contract
- November 2023: £480 million for the Federated Data Platform (FDP)
Now, the NHS is locked in.
Palantir was co-founded by billionaire Peter Thiel, a Trump backer who once called the NHS a ‘monstrosity’. The company built software for the US Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE), the CIA, and for predictive policing systems. Its platforms – Gotham and Foundry – have been used for deportations, drone strikes, and surveillance. The CEO, Alex Karp, bizarrely refers to himself as a ‘socialist’ and a ‘neo-Marxist,’ despite running a firm helping military and police forces worldwide. He studied the Frankfurt School and Marxian philosophy but now says Western tech should serve national power and defence. In his book The Technological Republic, Karp argues that declining interest in Western civilisation has left tech without ‘patriotic duty’. Palantir, in contrast, builds tools for ICE and the US military – showing where its duty lies.
This company now runs NHS data infrastructure. There was no public debate. No vote. Just a quiet, technocratic handover, sold as ‘integration’ and ‘efficiency’. It sounds like an IT upgrade. In reality, it’s a power shift – from public stewardship to corporate control.
Palantir claims it doesn’t own the data. Maybe not. But it owns the system. The architecture. The infrastructure. That’s vendor lock-in – like getting a free coffee machine and finding the pods cost £12 each and are only sold in Texas.
This isn’t reform. It’s enclosure. The same old privatisation, dressed up as innovation. And the outcome? A two-tier system. A burnt-out workforce. A public service run like a business where care takes a backseat to cost-cutting.
They say the NHS is free. But people pay for it – with taxes when they pay them, with our labour and with our time. It’s not free. We are. Free to wait. Free to suffer. Free to die while shareholders get dividends and algorithms determine care.
The Socialist Party stands for more than better management or fresh branding. We advocate the abolition of the wages system. The end of profit in care. A world where there are no customers, no contracts, no markets – just people, meeting each other’s needs.
Health is not a service. It’s a condition of freedom. The NHS can’t be saved. It must be superseded – by a system where care is not rationed, outsourced, or monetised. Where no one waits, no one pays, and no one profits. That’s not utopian. That’s socialism. And we’re not asking for it. We’re organising for it.
ANTO