Bevan
Creator of the NHS
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Haus Publishing
Published:29th Feb '24
Should be back in stock very soon

The creation of the National Health Service was the most significant of the many reforms of the post-war Labour government. The man responsible was Aneurin 'Nye' Bevan. The son of a Welsh miner, he became a local trade union leader at only nineteen and in 1929 was elected as a Labour MP. Bevan believed the war was Britain's opportunity to create a new society, a position he maintained throughout the conflict. When war ended in 1945, the landslide Labour victory gave him the chance to make this vision a reality. Known for his impassioned oratory, Bevan's fundamental belief that the new NHS should be freely available to all was ultimately at odds with a government struggling to balance the books. He resigned in 1951 over the introduction of charges for prescriptions and glasses. With the NHS requiring an ever-increasing share of national income, this updated edition considers Bevan's legacy as the future of the health service he created is fought over as never before.
'Clare and Francis Beckett have written a short, thoroughly readable and affordable introduction to Bevan's life and politics.'
-- Keith Flett, Socialist Review 20ISBN: 9781913368838
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
202 pages
Revised