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The People's Chamber · 7 May 2026

99% want more doctors trained. The 1% are consultants.

The People's Chamber · Commentary

The Medical Training (Prioritisation) Act has secured 99% public support — a result so unambiguous it barely qualifies as polling and instead resembles a national consensus. The proposition is straightforward: train more doctors, train them faster, and stop allowing the entire pipeline to drain steadily away to Sydney, Auckland, or, in particularly bleak moments, Frankfurt. The remaining 1% who oppose the Bill are widely believed to consist almost entirely of consultants who have now noticed that a sudden expansion of the medical workforce might, in some indirect way, complicate the queueing system at private clinics in Marylebone. The Bill itself is currently "under consideration," that immortal British political euphemism meaning "it has been placed somewhere and very thorough work is being done in not finding it." Two select committees have asked questions. A consultation has been opened, in the technical sense that someone has set up an email address. A timeline has been promised, in due course. The 99% continue to wait, with that distinctively British patience that has previously sustained the country through two world wars and three separate attempts to reform the railways.

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