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Johnson proposes UK tax hike to support health and social care crisis

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UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has unveiled plans to raise taxes to support the National Health Service

Johnson set out plans to raise taxes on workers, employers and some investors in an attempt to fix a health and social care funding crisis.

The proposal though has angered some in his governing party following the PM breaking election promises.

The UK government spend billions to fight the coronavirus pandemic – but now the Prime Minister is returning to an election pledge to address the United Kingdom’s creaking social care system – where costs are projected to double as the population ages over the next two decades.

Boris Johnson also attempted to try and tackle a backlog in Britain’s health system, which has seen millions waiting months for treatments such as operations from the state-run National Health Service.

The delays had been caused after resources were refocused to deal with COVID-19.

“It would be wrong for me to say that we can pay for this recovery without taking the difficult but responsible decisions about how we finance it,”

THE PM SAID IN PARLIAMENT

The UK’s history of health care struggles

Politicians in Britain have attempted to find a resolution to pay for social care for years, though successive Conservative and Labour prime ministers have ducked the issue because they feared it would anger voters and their own parties.

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