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Boris Johnson offers new health funds to meet Brexit promise

Mr Johnson pledged an extra £1.8bn to immediately help frontline services
Mr Johnson pledged an extra £1.8bn to immediately help frontline services

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson has promised new funds for Britain's state-run national health service NHS, seeking to fulfil one of the promises of his 2016 Brexit campaign.

Mr Johnson pledged an extra £1.8bn to immediately help frontline services, in a move that further fuelled speculation he is preparing for a snap election.

During the referendum on Britain's European Union membership, Mr Johnson's "Vote Leave" campaign promised to divert £350m a week sent to Brussels to the NHS after Brexit.

But the claim was misleading. Britain's gross contribution to the EU budget is £350 million, but it gets a £85m a week rebate.

In an article in the Sunday Times, Mr Johnson paid tribute to NHS staff, but noted "the pressures, the delays, the cancellations and the obvious need to get more funding to the front line".

"Which is why I am so determined to deliver now on the promises of that 2016 referendum campaign: not just to honour the will of the people, but to increase the cash available for this amazing national institution," he wrote.

Johnson's "Vote Leave" campaign promised to divert £350m a week sent to Brussels to the NHS after Brexit

However, the main opposition Labour party questioned whether the money would ever be delivered and said that even if it was, it would not make up for a decade of spending cuts.

The Nuffield Trust health think tank said the NHS has a £6bn maintenance backlog and the new funds were only a "fraction" of what was needed to fulfil Johnson's pledge to modernise 20 hospitals.

Critics also argue that spending plans will never be fulfilled if there is a "no deal" Brexit.

Mr Johnson has vowed to take Britain out of the European Union on 31 October, after his predecessor Theresa May was forced to twice delay Brexit amid wrangling over the exit terms.

Parliament has rejected the divorce deal Mrs May struck with the EU but many MPs say they will stop Boris Johnson's threat to leave without a deal, fearing the economic disruption.

EU leaders meanwhile say they will not renegotiate Theresa May's deal, creating an impasse that many at Westminster believe can only end in a snap election.

Mr Johnson has fuelled this speculation by touring Britain and making a series of domestic policy pledges in his first days in Downing Street. The NHS pledge follows a promise on police funding.