Liberal Democrats would Raise £126 m Extra for NHS and Social Care in Hertfordshire
The Lib Dems will plug funding gaps for the NHS and Social Care by putting a penny on income tax.
The penny tax would raise an additional £126.6m for Hertfordshire, with £82m for the NHS and £44.6m for social care each year.
This is the party's flagship spending commitment and its first major policy announcement for the election.
The Liberal Democrats have set out a five-point recovery plan
for NHS and social care services in their manifesto.
At least 70% of Brits would happily pay an extra 1p in every pound if that money was guaranteed to go to the NHS, an ITV poll found last October.
Parliamentary Candidate for South West Hertfordshire, Christopher Townsend said:
"Right now in Hertfordshire we are seeing patients lying on trolleys in hospital corridors, urgent operations being cancelled and the elderly being denied the care they need.
"The Liberal Democrats are prepared to be honest with people and say that to secure the future of the NHS we will all need to chip in a little more."
"A penny in the pound would allow us to invest in improving local NHS services and ensuring the elderly receive the care they deserve.
"This Conservative government has left our health and care services chronically underfunded - and while the crisis gets worse they just don't seem to care.
"We cannot continue asking the system to deliver more and more, without giving it the resources to do so."
Lib Dem Health Spokesperson and former health minister Norman Lamb said:
"The NHS was once the envy of the world and this pledge is the first step in restoring it to where it should be."
A penny in the pound to save the NHS is money well spent in our view."
But simply providing more money on its own is not enough and that's why this is just the first step in our plan to protect health and care services in the long-term."