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Chef Jamie Oliver praises Plaid Cymru's 'pop tax' plans | Chef Jamie Oliver praises Plaid Cymru's 'pop tax' plans |
(about 2 hours later) | |
Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver has praised Plaid Cymru's call for a levy on sugary drinks in Wales, a so-called "pop tax". | Celebrity chef Jamie Oliver has praised Plaid Cymru's call for a levy on sugary drinks in Wales, a so-called "pop tax". |
Research for Plaid has suggested a 20% tax on the drinks could cut the number of obese people in Wales by 8,300. | Research for Plaid has suggested a 20% tax on the drinks could cut the number of obese people in Wales by 8,300. |
Oliver, who is to charge 10p more for sugary drinks in his UK restaurants, said it was "good to hear" of a party taking the issue "seriously". | Oliver, who is to charge 10p more for sugary drinks in his UK restaurants, said it was "good to hear" of a party taking the issue "seriously". |
Labour said Plaid's plan to fund 1,000 extra doctors with such a levy was "demonstrable nonsense". | |
On Friday, Oliver said he had "seen first hand the devastating effects that a poor diet and too much sugar is having on children' futures". | On Friday, Oliver said he had "seen first hand the devastating effects that a poor diet and too much sugar is having on children' futures". |
"I firmly believe we need to take urgent action on this public health crisis," he said. | "I firmly believe we need to take urgent action on this public health crisis," he said. |
He added that money raised by his own "child health levy" would be used to fund "food education for children". | He added that money raised by his own "child health levy" would be used to fund "food education for children". |
Welcoming his backing, Plaid Cymru health spokesperson Elin Jones said: "Plaid Cymru has long-announced our positive plans to introduce a sugary drinks levy in Wales, and it's good to see that Jamie Oliver is introducing similar voluntary measures in his restaurants as he continues to campaign for action." | Welcoming his backing, Plaid Cymru health spokesperson Elin Jones said: "Plaid Cymru has long-announced our positive plans to introduce a sugary drinks levy in Wales, and it's good to see that Jamie Oliver is introducing similar voluntary measures in his restaurants as he continues to campaign for action." |
However, the Welsh Labour government claimed the idea would not work. | |
Deputy Health Minister Vaughan Gething said: "They say this scheme, which we can't actually introduce under the current devolution framework, would pay for 1,000 doctors. | |
"This is just demonstrable nonsense - it would require everyone in Wales to spend all day drinking pop to pay for that number, even if they could be recruited from around the world." | |
The British Soft Drinks Association (BSDA) has insisted such a tax would "neither have the health nor economic impact" suggested, claiming that "obesity stems from a range of factors, not one product". | The British Soft Drinks Association (BSDA) has insisted such a tax would "neither have the health nor economic impact" suggested, claiming that "obesity stems from a range of factors, not one product". |
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