UK General Election to be on 4th July

Blackleaf

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Reform UK leader Nigel Farage stops for a pint with GB News's Christopher Hope and says that his party will get 6 million votes.

It's predicted that Nigel Farage will become an MP for the first time. It will be interesting seeing him take on Starmer in the Commons during the weekly PMQs...

 

spaminator

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What DIY dentistry has to do with the British election
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Karla Adam
Published Jul 03, 2024 • 4 minute read

Layla Waters in 2019, before she pulled five of her own teeth. She said that while the pain was unbearable and she initially felt relief, "now all I want is to be able to smile like I used to." MUST CREDIT: Family photo
Layla Waters in 2019, before she pulled five of her own teeth. She said that while the pain was unbearable and she initially felt relief, "now all I want is to be able to smile like I used to." MUST CREDIT: Family photo Photo by Family photo /Family photo
LONDON – Layla Waters pulled out five of her own teeth after not being able to get an appointment with a National Health Service dentist.


This kind of do-it-yourself dentistry has become increasingly common in the United Kingdom. There are reports of people yanking out their teeth with pliers from the garden shed, fixing crowns with superglue and traveling abroad for dental care. Local politicians’ inboxes are filled with complaints from constituents upset with lack of access to affordable dentistry.

This helps to explain how dentistry, which accounts for a small part of the NHS budget, has emerged as one of the top local issues in the U.K. general election. Brits go to the polls Thursday.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Labour’s Keir Starmer have been grilled about dentistry in live television debates. All of the major parties mention dentistry in their manifestos.


Labour says it’s time to “stop the rot” and says it will reform a dental contract between dentists and the NHS, provide 700,000 more urgent dental appointments, recruit new dentists to the areas most in need, and introduce supervised toothbrushing in schools. The Conservatives say they will reform the dental contract, introduce financial incentives for dentists to work in remote areas and ensure new dentists work in the NHS for a time or pay back training costs.

When the NHS began in 1948, dentistry was free for patients. But by 1951, charges were introduced. Some people are still exempt, such as children and those on low incomes, while a majority of adults pay a subsidized rate. But securing an appointment with an NHS dentist can be hard. Earlier this year, the police were called to manage crowds who gathered outside of a newly opened dental practice in Bristol.


Waters, 53, vividly recalls the first time she took matters into her own hands. She is among the 10 percent of Brits who say they have performed dentistry on themselves.

She said she had called over 50 NHS dentists within a 70-mile radius of Peterborough, the closest big city to her village, but none of the dentists were accepting new patients. An infection left her with incredible, nonstop pain. Desperate, she ripped off a piece of paper towel so the tooth “wouldn’t slip” and then “pulled and pulled” on it. The pain was too much at the time, but now she says, “all I want is to be able to smile like I used to.”

Mark Jones, founder of the activist group Toothless in England, said that stories he has heard of the measures some people have taken seem like “something out of a Charles Dickens novel.”


England has about 11,000 dental practices. They operate like small businesses, with many providing a mix of NHS and private care. But dentists say that they are struggling to cover their costs with the money from the government, pushing them toward private practice.

A 2022 BBC survey found that 90 percent of dental practices were not accepting new adult NHS patients. A report by a parliamentary committee last summer concluded that “urgent” reform was needed and called on the government to ensure that everyone who needed an NHS dentist could access one within a “reasonable” time frame and distance. The government responded with a “dental recovery plan,” which included dentists being offered cash incentives to accept new patients.


The Labour Party, which is expected to win the election, is seen by voters as stronger on the NHS. But analysts say that bigger changes than those listed in party manifestos are needed.


Ian Mills, a professor in dentistry at the University of Plymouth, said that “unless you make radical change to the workforce and contracts, the best they can hope for is things don’t get much worse.”

Americans enjoy having a go at Britain’s reputation for bad teeth – think of Austin Powers’s discolored, crooked teeth or the “Simpsons” episode in which a young boy is scared into cleaning his teeth after a dentist shows him “The Big Book of British Smiles.” But a 2015 article in the journal BMJ challenged that stereotype, concluding that Americans have more missing teeth than the English and that the inequalities in oral health are wider between the rich and the poor in the United States than in England.


But activists in the United Kingdom are concerned that inequality here is widening and that there is increasingly a two-tiered system in England, in which those on higher incomes go private while those on lower incomes are more likely to be the ones struggling to find affordable dentistry.

Some U.K. residents find it is quicker and cheaper to get dental work done abroad. Rasel Syed, 44, a chef, lives across the street from an NHS dentist. But after he broke a tooth, he was told that the work by an NHS dentist would have cost about $2,500, with a waiting period of up to a year. A private dentist quoted $6,300. When the pain became unbearable, he booked a round-trip flight to Bangladesh, where he was born, and saw a dentist within an hour of his plane landing. The flight and the work cost about $1,300.

Tom Thayer, an oral surgeon who launched a petition on the issue, along with the British Dental Association and the Mirror newspaper, treats patients in hospital with injuries from DIY dentistry. “We have patients who can’t access care,” he said, “and if they can’t access care, things get worse.”
1720075331740.png
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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What DIY dentistry has to do with the British election
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Karla Adam
Published Jul 03, 2024 • 4 minute read

Layla Waters in 2019, before she pulled five of her own teeth. She said that while the pain was unbearable and she initially felt relief, "now all I want is to be able to smile like I used to." MUST CREDIT: Family photo
Layla Waters in 2019, before she pulled five of her own teeth. She said that while the pain was unbearable and she initially felt relief, "now all I want is to be able to smile like I used to." MUST CREDIT: Family photo Photo by Family photo /Family photo
LONDON – Layla Waters pulled out five of her own teeth after not being able to get an appointment with a National Health Service dentist.


This kind of do-it-yourself dentistry has become increasingly common in the United Kingdom. There are reports of people yanking out their teeth with pliers from the garden shed, fixing crowns with superglue and traveling abroad for dental care. Local politicians’ inboxes are filled with complaints from constituents upset with lack of access to affordable dentistry.

This helps to explain how dentistry, which accounts for a small part of the NHS budget, has emerged as one of the top local issues in the U.K. general election. Brits go to the polls Thursday.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Labour’s Keir Starmer have been grilled about dentistry in live television debates. All of the major parties mention dentistry in their manifestos.


Labour says it’s time to “stop the rot” and says it will reform a dental contract between dentists and the NHS, provide 700,000 more urgent dental appointments, recruit new dentists to the areas most in need, and introduce supervised toothbrushing in schools. The Conservatives say they will reform the dental contract, introduce financial incentives for dentists to work in remote areas and ensure new dentists work in the NHS for a time or pay back training costs.

When the NHS began in 1948, dentistry was free for patients. But by 1951, charges were introduced. Some people are still exempt, such as children and those on low incomes, while a majority of adults pay a subsidized rate. But securing an appointment with an NHS dentist can be hard. Earlier this year, the police were called to manage crowds who gathered outside of a newly opened dental practice in Bristol.


Waters, 53, vividly recalls the first time she took matters into her own hands. She is among the 10 percent of Brits who say they have performed dentistry on themselves.

She said she had called over 50 NHS dentists within a 70-mile radius of Peterborough, the closest big city to her village, but none of the dentists were accepting new patients. An infection left her with incredible, nonstop pain. Desperate, she ripped off a piece of paper towel so the tooth “wouldn’t slip” and then “pulled and pulled” on it. The pain was too much at the time, but now she says, “all I want is to be able to smile like I used to.”

Mark Jones, founder of the activist group Toothless in England, said that stories he has heard of the measures some people have taken seem like “something out of a Charles Dickens novel.”


England has about 11,000 dental practices. They operate like small businesses, with many providing a mix of NHS and private care. But dentists say that they are struggling to cover their costs with the money from the government, pushing them toward private practice.

A 2022 BBC survey found that 90 percent of dental practices were not accepting new adult NHS patients. A report by a parliamentary committee last summer concluded that “urgent” reform was needed and called on the government to ensure that everyone who needed an NHS dentist could access one within a “reasonable” time frame and distance. The government responded with a “dental recovery plan,” which included dentists being offered cash incentives to accept new patients.


The Labour Party, which is expected to win the election, is seen by voters as stronger on the NHS. But analysts say that bigger changes than those listed in party manifestos are needed.


Ian Mills, a professor in dentistry at the University of Plymouth, said that “unless you make radical change to the workforce and contracts, the best they can hope for is things don’t get much worse.”

Americans enjoy having a go at Britain’s reputation for bad teeth – think of Austin Powers’s discolored, crooked teeth or the “Simpsons” episode in which a young boy is scared into cleaning his teeth after a dentist shows him “The Big Book of British Smiles.” But a 2015 article in the journal BMJ challenged that stereotype, concluding that Americans have more missing teeth than the English and that the inequalities in oral health are wider between the rich and the poor in the United States than in England.


But activists in the United Kingdom are concerned that inequality here is widening and that there is increasingly a two-tiered system in England, in which those on higher incomes go private while those on lower incomes are more likely to be the ones struggling to find affordable dentistry.

Some U.K. residents find it is quicker and cheaper to get dental work done abroad. Rasel Syed, 44, a chef, lives across the street from an NHS dentist. But after he broke a tooth, he was told that the work by an NHS dentist would have cost about $2,500, with a waiting period of up to a year. A private dentist quoted $6,300. When the pain became unbearable, he booked a round-trip flight to Bangladesh, where he was born, and saw a dentist within an hour of his plane landing. The flight and the work cost about $1,300.

Tom Thayer, an oral surgeon who launched a petition on the issue, along with the British Dental Association and the Mirror newspaper, treats patients in hospital with injuries from DIY dentistry. “We have patients who can’t access care,” he said, “and if they can’t access care, things get worse.”
View attachment 22896

Labour will do sod all. There's almost no difference between them and the so-called Tories nowadays. Labour aren't about to win the biggest landslide since 1832 because they are so popular. They're about to do it just because the Tory Government is so unpopular.
 

B00Mer

Keep Calm and Carry On
Sep 6, 2008
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Rent Free in Your Head
x.com
What DIY dentistry has to do with the British election
Author of the article:Washington Post
Washington Post
Karla Adam
Published Jul 03, 2024 • 4 minute read

Layla Waters in 2019, before she pulled five of her own teeth. She said that while the pain was unbearable and she initially felt relief, "now all I want is to be able to smile like I used to." MUST CREDIT: Family photo
Layla Waters in 2019, before she pulled five of her own teeth. She said that while the pain was unbearable and she initially felt relief, "now all I want is to be able to smile like I used to." MUST CREDIT: Family photo Photo by Family photo /Family photo
LONDON – Layla Waters pulled out five of her own teeth after not being able to get an appointment with a National Health Service dentist.


This kind of do-it-yourself dentistry has become increasingly common in the United Kingdom. There are reports of people yanking out their teeth with pliers from the garden shed, fixing crowns with superglue and traveling abroad for dental care. Local politicians’ inboxes are filled with complaints from constituents upset with lack of access to affordable dentistry.

This helps to explain how dentistry, which accounts for a small part of the NHS budget, has emerged as one of the top local issues in the U.K. general election. Brits go to the polls Thursday.

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and Labour’s Keir Starmer have been grilled about dentistry in live television debates. All of the major parties mention dentistry in their manifestos.


Labour says it’s time to “stop the rot” and says it will reform a dental contract between dentists and the NHS, provide 700,000 more urgent dental appointments, recruit new dentists to the areas most in need, and introduce supervised toothbrushing in schools. The Conservatives say they will reform the dental contract, introduce financial incentives for dentists to work in remote areas and ensure new dentists work in the NHS for a time or pay back training costs.

When the NHS began in 1948, dentistry was free for patients. But by 1951, charges were introduced. Some people are still exempt, such as children and those on low incomes, while a majority of adults pay a subsidized rate. But securing an appointment with an NHS dentist can be hard. Earlier this year, the police were called to manage crowds who gathered outside of a newly opened dental practice in Bristol.


Waters, 53, vividly recalls the first time she took matters into her own hands. She is among the 10 percent of Brits who say they have performed dentistry on themselves.

She said she had called over 50 NHS dentists within a 70-mile radius of Peterborough, the closest big city to her village, but none of the dentists were accepting new patients. An infection left her with incredible, nonstop pain. Desperate, she ripped off a piece of paper towel so the tooth “wouldn’t slip” and then “pulled and pulled” on it. The pain was too much at the time, but now she says, “all I want is to be able to smile like I used to.”

Mark Jones, founder of the activist group Toothless in England, said that stories he has heard of the measures some people have taken seem like “something out of a Charles Dickens novel.”


England has about 11,000 dental practices. They operate like small businesses, with many providing a mix of NHS and private care. But dentists say that they are struggling to cover their costs with the money from the government, pushing them toward private practice.

A 2022 BBC survey found that 90 percent of dental practices were not accepting new adult NHS patients. A report by a parliamentary committee last summer concluded that “urgent” reform was needed and called on the government to ensure that everyone who needed an NHS dentist could access one within a “reasonable” time frame and distance. The government responded with a “dental recovery plan,” which included dentists being offered cash incentives to accept new patients.


The Labour Party, which is expected to win the election, is seen by voters as stronger on the NHS. But analysts say that bigger changes than those listed in party manifestos are needed.


Ian Mills, a professor in dentistry at the University of Plymouth, said that “unless you make radical change to the workforce and contracts, the best they can hope for is things don’t get much worse.”

Americans enjoy having a go at Britain’s reputation for bad teeth – think of Austin Powers’s discolored, crooked teeth or the “Simpsons” episode in which a young boy is scared into cleaning his teeth after a dentist shows him “The Big Book of British Smiles.” But a 2015 article in the journal BMJ challenged that stereotype, concluding that Americans have more missing teeth than the English and that the inequalities in oral health are wider between the rich and the poor in the United States than in England.


But activists in the United Kingdom are concerned that inequality here is widening and that there is increasingly a two-tiered system in England, in which those on higher incomes go private while those on lower incomes are more likely to be the ones struggling to find affordable dentistry.

Some U.K. residents find it is quicker and cheaper to get dental work done abroad. Rasel Syed, 44, a chef, lives across the street from an NHS dentist. But after he broke a tooth, he was told that the work by an NHS dentist would have cost about $2,500, with a waiting period of up to a year. A private dentist quoted $6,300. When the pain became unbearable, he booked a round-trip flight to Bangladesh, where he was born, and saw a dentist within an hour of his plane landing. The flight and the work cost about $1,300.

Tom Thayer, an oral surgeon who launched a petition on the issue, along with the British Dental Association and the Mirror newspaper, treats patients in hospital with injuries from DIY dentistry. “We have patients who can’t access care,” he said, “and if they can’t access care, things get worse.”
View attachment 22896


Let me guess they gargle with gasoline too 😂😂

Okay Marc Nixon
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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...and you wake up tomorrow and the sign reads!!

View attachment 22899

That would be nice. I've already voted for Reform UK's Trevor Jones here in the Bolton North East constituency but I think Labour's Kirith Entwistle will win.

Where I live was for years part of Bolton South East constituency (we had Labour's Yasmin Qureshi as our MP) but for this election onwards we are now part of Bolton North East constituency (which is weird considering we are in the south east of the town). Mark Logan was the Tory MP for Bolton North East but he recently defected to Labour. So I reckon Kirith Entwistle will soon be my MP.

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Blackleaf

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BBC Question Time audience member tried to embarrass Reform UK leader Farage during the election campaign but it failed miserably...

 
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Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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maxresdefault (8).jpg

Reform UK leader Nigel Farage looks set to become an MP for the first time after years of being an MEP. He is running in the Essex seaside constituency of Clacton.

Yesterday young people in the town spoke of their support for Reform UK.

It is the Reform youth who will sweep Farage to power in 2029.

 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and his wife Akshata Murty arrive at their local polling station to vote.

I bet they didn't vote Labour.

 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Ten minutes to go until the polling stations close at 10pm and BBC One, BBC News 24, ITV1, Channel 4 and Sky News release the highly accurate exit poll.

It's going to be a dramatic night in British politics.
 

Blackleaf

Hall of Fame Member
Oct 9, 2004
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Exit poll - Massive Labour landslide

Labour to win 410 seats (out of 650), a majority of 170

It would be the biggest gain in seats since 1945

Tories to be decimated to just 131 seats, their lowest since 1832

Tories may suffer the biggest collapse of any party in history

Reform UK predicted to win 13 seats

Scottish nationalists SNP to be reduced to just 10 seats
 
Last edited:

Blackleaf

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Blyth and Sunderland in the north east of England are competing to be the first to announce their results. Sunderland has been the first in recent elections.
 

Blackleaf

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83f56ad0-3a48-11ef-bbe0-29f79e992ddd.png

All quiet outside Sunak's house in Richmond​

The BBC'S Victoria Derbyshire is outside Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's house in his constituency of Richmond, Yorkshire

She says it's been very quiet there and Sunak is inside, no doubt absorbing the news of the exit poll. "If it's accurate, he'll be contemplating the defeat, the brutal battering he has led his party to," she tells the BBC's election programme.

We're expecting a result from Sunak's constituency at about 04:00 BST.

The prime minister took to X a short while ago to say: "To the hundreds of Conservative candidates, thousands of volunteers and millions of voters: Thank you for your hard work, thank you for your support, and thank you for your vote."

Starmer thanks voters for putting 'trust in our changed party'​

Labour leader Keir Starmer smiles outside a polling station


Reaction to the exit poll - which predicts a Labour landslide - continues to come in.

Keir Starmer has now expressed his gratitude to everyone who worked and voted for his party.

In a post on X, he says: "To everyone who has campaigned for Labour in this election, to everyone who voted for us and put their trust in our changed Labour Party - thank you."

 

Blackleaf

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Tories set for lowest vote share in party’s history​

Professor Sir John Curtice
BBC polling expert

The Conservative share of the vote and seat tally, according to the exit poll, could be the lowest in the party’s history.

Its seat tally might be affected by the party’s vote falling more heavily in seats where they were previously strongest - a pattern that is largely because support for Reform has risen most there.

Mortgage rises look to have hit Tory vote​

Professor Sir John Curtice
BBC polling expert

It appears the Conservatives have suffered heavily in places where more than a third of households have a mortgage - a reflection perhaps of the damage done by former prime minister Liz Truss’s "fiscal event".

Meanwhile, Labour’s vote is up more in seats where a large part of the population say they are in bad health - a measure of relative deprivation - and in places where more people voted Leave in 2016.

The party also seems to be advancing strongly in Scotland but less well in Wales, where they're in power.

 

Blackleaf

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Reform UK deputy leader Dr David Bull has told Sky News: "This would be an incredible result for us. This is the beginning of a revolt. Imagine what we can do in five years' time."