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Wales Online
National
Will Hayward

Mark Drakeford absolutely blows his top when questioned about the Welsh NHS

Mark Drakeford lost his temper with Welsh Conservative leader Andrew RT Davies during a tempestuous Senedd exchange over the state of the NHS in Wales. At the end of a fiery back and forth, the First Minister could be seen shouting and was visibly furious. The normally-sedate Welsh Labour leader finished the exchange with a flurry when he started aggressively moving his paper around.

Having been questioned by an increasingly forceful Mr Davies over ambulance waiting times Mr Drakeford fired back: "It is absolutely shocking to me that you think that you can turn up here this afternoon with the mess that your party has made to the budgets of this country, to the reputation of this country around the world, that you promise those people that there will be more to come. And you think you turn up here this afternoon and claim some sort of moral high ground? What sort of world do you belong in?"

The exchange started with Mr Davies questioning the First Minister about the struggling Welsh NHS. The Welsh Ambulance Service, in particular, is under extreme pressure with paramedics unable to drop patients off at hospital due to a lack of capacity.

Read more: Governance in Wales is a convoluted mess that needs to be fixed

Mr Drakeford was visibly agitated (Senedd TV)

Mr Davies said: "First Minister: on the weekend there were a series of incidences where ambulances could not turn up to critical incidents. Ben Symons, a 22-year-old, was laying on a football pitch in Cefn Cribwr with a serious back injury. His mother said at the time that there was a disgraceful wait involved, five hours, and that the system is broken. Do you agree with his mother?"

Mr Drakeford replied: "Llywydd, I agree that the Welsh Ambulance Service is under enormous pressure. It’ll be under far greater pressure when his party has finished cutting the budget of the health service, as Jeremy Hunt has said he intends to do. Yes, you can groan and you can moan, but the responsibility lies where it lies and people out there understand that too. Yes, the system is under huge pressure – we know it’s under huge pressure. I spoke to someone who was at the game where that incident took place and they told me that when the ambulance driver arrived, they explained the other calls that they had been on already that day – including a number of calls to 999 which didn’t need an ambulance to be there at all. So the system is under enormous pressure from legitimate and demand that should have gone to a different part of the system.

"But when he asks me his next question, let him just reflect for a moment on what will happen to ambulance services in Wales when we face the cuts – cuts to the health service: unbelievable. [Interruption.] But cuts to the health —[Interruption.] Yes, look. I know, I know. You think by making a lot of noise that you distract people from your responsibility. Believe me, you absolutely do not."

He was challenged about the massive questions facing the Welsh NHS (Senedd TV)

The Tory group leader would not let the matter rest, reading out the comments of another person who'd had a negative experience of the Welsh NHS. He said: "I, unlike you, First Minister, have never voted to cut a health budget. You have, First Minister. Your party has been running the health service here, which the ambulance service is an important part of, for the last 23 years.

"Another incident happened in Merthyr Tydfil, where a patient was left on the floor after a 15-hour wait – a 15-hour wait – where the individual's daughter said – and I'll quote her words, they're not my words, they're her words: 'In Wales we're like a third-world country when it comes to our healthcare.... I'm sure Aneurin Bevan would be turning in his grave'.

"They're not my words – they're from someone whose father was rolling around on a floor for 15 hours. You have been responsible for the health service here in Wales for 23 years. You voted to cut the health budget here in Wales. You can throw your pen down, First Minister, but you are responsible. What are you going to do about it?"

To this the First Minister said: "I understand the pressure that the Conservative party is under. I understand how difficult it must be for the leader of the opposition to come here and ask questions today. But don't let him believe that by shouting at me he will persuade anybody outside this chamber that his responsibility – I've not heard ever a single word from him assuming responsibility for the actions of his government."

As Mr Drakeford replied, Plaid Member Llyr Gruffydd pointed out that Mr Davies had supported Liz Truss. Mr Drakeford jumped on that, saying: "Yes – he supported Liz Truss. We know that. He is partly responsible for the mess we're in. Just shouting at me about the difficulties that are there in the ambulance service, which I acknowledge – and we are working very hard with people who work in the ambulance service to get that service where it needs to be. There's no solution to that by shouting at me as though all the right in this argument belonged to him, which we certainly know it doesn't, and everybody else is at fault. I completely refute, on behalf of those people who work so hard every day in our health service in Wales, that it is accurately described in the way that he did, whoever he may be quoting.

"Our health service does miracles every single day in the lives of people here in Wales and it does it because we have dedicated people – doctors, nurses and others – who will have heard him describe the service that they provide in the way that he did. If he thinks that helps at all to improve the service, to make people come in and drive those ambulances and staff those accident and emergency departments, I tell him now it absolutely does not."

It was the following question from Mr Davies that seemed to send Mr Drakeford over the edge. He said: "First Minister, I used a direct quote from Mr Keith Morris' daughter. Pressure is when you see someone you love rolling around on the floor in pain and the service that you are looking to for help hasn't arrived for 15 hours. That's pressure, First Minister.

"You are the First Minister. You haven't said once in response to my two questions the solution that the government is proposing to take this pressure out of the ambulance service and allow them to get on with the job that they do, which is a fantastic job when it works correctly. Now this is happening time and time again. I could have cited – [Interruption.] I hear sedentary voices. I accept that there are pressures across the United Kingdom but the issue here in Wales is particularly acute. What I want to leave this chamber understanding is what the roadmap from the Welsh Government is as we go further into the winter months to alleviate these problems so that Aneurin Bevan will not be turning in his grave, and our government, which is responsible for the health service, has a solution to the problems that Mr Morris' and other families are feeling day in, day out."

This led Mr Drakeford to his furious response which you can see in the video above.

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