31 January 2022
Sir Charles Walker condemns Parliament’s bullying of NHS and care staff who choose not to get vaccinated

Sir Charles Walker calls on Government to use encouragement to persuade NHS staff to get vaccinated rather than mandate, and avoid language that casts NHS workers, who put themselves at incredible risk during the pandemic, as pariahs.

Sir Charles Walker (Broxbourne) (Con)

I promised my wife that I would stop being angry, but I just cannot. Long before vaccines existed, these people who we cast as pariahs were day in, day out, coming into hospitals and care homes and holding the hands of the dying because their children and grandchildren could not. They were doing that while most people in this House were sitting on their backsides safely at home. Now, by all means, let us encourage people to get vaccines, but the language used, suggesting that these people who, for whatever reason—they may have needle phobia, like me—have chosen not to get vaccinated are somehow deserving of our bile is a disgrace. It does not reflect badly on them; it reflects badly on us.

Sajid Javid (The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care)

What I hear from my hon. Friend, and I very much agree, is that vaccines are safe and effective. They remain our most important weapon in fighting the pandemic and, as more people come forward and choose to get vaccinated, that is not only good for them but right for the rest of society, their loved ones and everyone else around them. That is especially so if the people around them—they might be in a care setting or a hospital—are more vulnerable than most of the population. The best way forward is therefore to encourage everyone now to continue to think of the vaccine in that positive, sensible way and to come forward.

Hansard