
On July 27th and today, 29th, only two days later, we read of two incidents of failure leading to unnecessary deaths after delays by ambulances, reported by BBC Wales.
Astonishingly, neither report mentions that current Welsh Minister for Health is Eluned Morgan MS. Do BBC Wales know of him. Do the Welsh people know? Does Welsh Labour know?
Sorry its ‘her’:

She’s not mentioned at all in the BBC reports of a clearly emerging crisis in NHS Wales.
Welsh Ambulance operations director, Lee Brooks, is mentioned:

Actually, there are no calls for him to go. The opposition parties in Wales seem to have nothing to say and he just says he’s sorry.
Contrast this with the media profile of Humza Yousaf if so much as paper clips go missing from an NHS office.
AND, it’s not even the first time. In 2019:

Then, Jason Killens, chief executive:
“We are sorry that our response took longer than we would have liked on this occasion. “Lengthy waits for an ambulance are a sign of pressures across the whole unscheduled care system, not just in Wales but across the UK.
Imagine, just imagine, Scottish opposition politicians, hearing that?


The Buck stops at the Top
But only in Scotland
Where a whole MSM army manufacture
Them and let lose
Meanwhile in the rest ok UK
they have scrapped all Bucks
A new commandment for them
From the infallible Boris
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The Welsh obviously do not have the benefit of that Scottish phenomenon , Anus Sarwar , Ambulance Chaser extraordinaire !
No incident , no matter how far removed from the Scottish Government’s responsibility , will be allowed to escape the attention of the Labour Avenger .
The man who subscribes to the old political tenet that once you can fake sincerity , you’ve got it made !
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I’ll let that go as a typo but the bottom line here is no personal abuse of opposition MSP’s rears
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Sorry , John – meant to say Anal … is that better ?
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Why not just use Mr Sarwar’s proper first name?
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“Let the dead pile up”. –An unnoticed quote from Blondie, the hero of “Scottish” hackery.
You can die many times in England—unreported.
You can die a few times in Wales—vaguely in view.
But die in Scotland, and the “Scottish” hack-pack will have you dead once, twice or as many times, in many different contexts, as can be managed between weather reports and the wee white dot (after the English Anthem)—for days, weeks, months on end.
A stranger might imagine it is a contest between aspiring Goebbelesque types for a Great Prize–
“Brit Nit Hyperbole-ist of the Year”.
A job in the Hi Jack Bunker, and a wee pat on the head from Grand Dame Ruthie, awaits the winner.
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