The post you are reporting:
The hypocrisy of government ministers knows no bounds.
The Foreign Secretary William Hague is to join a mass protest against NHS cuts in May, the Sun reveals today.
No doubt the move will also raise speculation that he was among the three cabinet ministers who raised their concerns via ConservativeHome of the NHS Bill.
Hague says he is against plans to move inpatient paediatric care to James Cook University Hospital — a modern 1,010-bed unit 22 miles away in Middlesbrough.
This would mean the maternity unit at Friarage, a 230-bed district hospital, would only be available for straightforward births. Mr Hague has warned that some young families and pregnant women living in the moors would face journeys of up to 60 miles for specialist treatment.
Guess what - if you force NHS trusts to save money then they have to close hospital units.
Every hospital or unit closure will now be (rightly) associated with the NHS Bill.
Meanwhile, the Daily Mail has also stepped up its reporting on the NHS.
In a long article a writer compares her treatment on the NHS and in an American hospital. Her conclusion?
The NHS was not free to me because I have not lived in Britain for so long. I have yet to receive the bill, but the published cost of a gall bladder removal by laparoscopy is around £3,000 in the UK, so I am expecting a similar charge for my appendectomy in London.
But no one was rushing to get my signature on the dotted line, unlike in LA. A pleasant lady turned up with a form giving my insurance details, which I could sign at my leisure on the day I left the Chelsea and Westminster.
Of course, for most people reading this article there would be nothing to pay. So, next time you hear an NHS horror story, remember the other side of the coin.
The NHS may have its faults but, rather like having surgery itself, it really is so much better than the alternative.
Andrew Lansley is in deep, deep trouble.
Update: Alex Andreou has an excellent video of David Cameron sounding a very different note on the NHS than now.