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The fight to save health provision at Kidderminster
Hospital flows in Dr Richard Taylor's blood.
His strength of belief and commitment to the National
Health Service has propelled him into the Commons as
Westminster's only independent MP.
Dr Taylor, 66, who stood as the Kidderminster Hospital and
Help Concern candidate, won the Wyre Forest seat in the West
Midlands with a majority of 17,630. The campaign was based on the sole issue of preventing the
downgrading of Kidderminster Hospital and demanding the
re-opening of its accident and emergency department and it brought the most dramatic result in the election and
moved thousands of voters to turn out.
Dr
Taylor said the result showed that people could oppose the
political system if they felt passionate enough about the
issue.
Speaking after his victory, he pledged not to let down his
constituents ...
"They can look forward to being represented
honestly and fairly in the House of Commons. They will have their needs recognised."
"I think the most staggering thing this morning is
that the chief executive of the trust and one of the important
directors of the trust have shaken my hand. I've been persona non grata for three-and-a-half
years and already they are looking to talk to me."
Now the campaign is over, the hard work really starts for
the retired consultant, who must find his way through the
political jungle without the support of a party. The
softly-spoken doctor has admitted to being daunted by the
prospect of finding an office and settting himelf up in
parliament.
However, he is able to call on the experience of Martin
Bell, formerly the independent MP for Tatton, who has offered
advice throughout the campaign. The two men both went to the same school, Leys School in
Cambridge. Mr Bell will be on hand, although from the outside, as he
failed in his attempt to unseat the Conservative MP in
Brentwood and Ongar.
It will be an eye-opening experience for Dr Taylor, who has
been a floating voter in the past, backing all three main
parties. But the issue that he has no indecision about is the future
of the hospital where he worked for 23 years. In the early 1990s he raised more than
£400,000 for the
cancer centre at Kidderminster General Hospital. In 1997, he became chairman of the campaign to save the
services there.
Now Wyre Forest's newest MP must turn his experience of
fighting one issue to representing a whole constituency.
WE ARE ALL ENTITLED TO
PROPER MEDICAL CARE
WITHIN REASONABLE REACH
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