Laurence Fox sparks fresh Twitter storm as he slams NHS and says staff ‘aren’t my saviours’
Laurence Fox #LaurenceFox
Laurence Fox has sparked a fresh storm today after branding the NHS ‘unfit for purpose’.
In a series of withering remarks, the actor said NHS employees, ‘aren’t my saviours.’
Outspoken Fox – a scion of the Fox acting dynasty – is currently attempting to turn his hand at a career in politics.
But he faced a backlash after revealing he had a ‘large group’ over for lunch – despite England’s lockdown rules banning people from meeting indoors, or outdoors in groups larger than six.
After enjoying the get-together at the weekend, Fox tweeted: ‘The @nhs isn’t my church and salvation. It’s employees aren’t my saviours.
‘If you can’t deal with a 99.9% survival rate virus, you aren’t fit for purpose. You don’t need protecting, my elderly relatives do. I also love your emergency care and will continue to pay for it. For now.’
Laurence Fox is currently attempting to turn his hand at a career in politics
Fox revealed he had a ‘large group’ over for lunch before hitting out at the NHS in a series of tweets
His message followed an earlier Tweet: ‘Just had a large group over to lunch and we hugged and ate and talked and put the world to rights. It was lovely. You’ll never take that away from people. Stay out. Protect your rights… If the @nhs isn’t fit for purpose. Compliance is violence.’
The tweets sparked fevered debate online, and a riposte from actor Mark Dexter.
Dexter, who has appeared in Doctor Who, The Crown and Transformers: The Last Knight, tweeted: ‘Wasn’t going to get involved with the Laurence Fox stuff, but now he’s bragging about putting my family at risk, I figure why not.
‘I was once up against him for a US TV role – to play the son of James Fox’s character. As in, Laurence’s actual dad. I got it.’
Piers Morgan also hit out at Fox over his ‘reckless’ Covid-19 tweets amid England’s nationwide four-week lockdown.
During Good Morning Britain on Monday, Piers angrily hit out at Laurence, telling him the pandemic is ‘not about you’.
He fumed: ‘He’s made a lot of good comments about the wokies, I have sympathy for him. But his behaviour in the pandemic has gotten reckless. [He reads out the tweet].
‘Laurence, why don’t you just shut up? Seriously? Think about all the people who can’t see all their loved ones in care homes because they’re following the rules.
‘Not for their desire to carry on as normal, but because they’re thinking about other people. I just found that tweet ridiculous.
‘It’s for the most vulnerable in our society, it’s to stop them being killed. It’s not about you.’
Piers also described Laurence’s controversial tweet slamming the NHS as a ‘selfish kick in the teeth’ for frontline workers
The presenter went on to plead with Laurence to ‘think about’ what he was doing as he slated the TV star’s actions.
He continued: ‘Think about what you’re doing Laurence. You have 250k followers and you tweet garbage like that.’
On Sunday evening, Piers said Fox’s tweet was a ‘selfish kick in the teeth’ for frontline workers.
He penned: ‘This is such a pathetically selfish kick in the teeth to everyone working in the NHS, many of whom have lost colleagues to the virus. Shame on you Laurence.’
The actor, 42, revealed on Twitter that he had a ‘large group’ over for lunch – despite England’s lockdown
Fox was at the centre of an earlier storm earlier this year after he made controversial comments on Question Time regarding racism.
The 42-year-old faced a backlash after claiming that he found it racist for someone to say he has ‘white privilege’.
During his programme he clashed with a member of the audience who said Meghan Markle has been subjected to racism. Fox replied saying that ‘playing the race card was getting boring’.
His comments resulted in over 200 Ofcom complaints and Laurence came under fire again in October, when he urged fans to boycott Sainsbury’s for supporting Black History Month, as he accused the supermarket of ‘segregation’.
He has now set up his own political party called the Reclaim Party which he claims has already had £5million in donations and hopes to reform publicly-funded institutions – like the BBC – to ‘promote an open space’ for freedom of speech.