GPs call for health tech boss Frank Hester to resign after Abbott remarks

The health tech boss and Tory donor Frank Hester is facing calls to resign from GPs, his firm’s main UK clients, after his remarks about Diane Abbott which have been widely condemned as racist and misogynist.

Hester’s company TPP runs the electronic patient records of almost half the GP practices in the UK. On Thursday the BMA’s general practice committee (GPC), which represent all UK GPs, voted for an emergency motion urging Hester to stand down from the company with immediate effect.

The Guardian revealed on Monday that at a meeting in 2019, Hester said seeing Abbott on TV made “you want to hate all black women” and that “she should be shot”. Hester has apologised for the remarks but denied they were motivated by race or gender.

The GPC also urged family doctors to consider Hester’s comments about Abbott before agreeing to sign any more contracts with TPP.

An emergency motion was debated today in response to reports of comments allegedly made by Frank Hester OBE, chief executive of The Phoenix Partnership (TPP).

The motion, below, has passed in all parts. [1/2] pic.twitter.com/aQopaeIoED

— General Practice (@BMA_GP) March 14, 2024

The motion said: “This meeting is disgusted by the reported violent, openly racist and misogynistic comments, made by Frank Hester, director of The Phoenix Partnership (TPP), and directed at the Rt Hon Ms Diane Abbott MP.”

The GPC also noted Hester’s comments “contravened NHS England’s fit and proper person test framework introduced in response to the 2019 Kark review recommendations”.

And it “calls upon UK health boards to apply their own processes vigilantly when contracting external stakeholders whose views and values may not align with the wider professional NHS workforce”/

After the meeting, Dr Alan Stout and Dr Andrew Buist, co-chairs of GPC, said: “This emergency motion makes clear how appalled GPs are. There is no room for racism or sexism in the NHS, and the committee believes he should resign his position with immediate effect.”

TPP has received more than £400m in contracts from the NHS and other government bodies since 2016.

Hester has donated £10m to the Conservative party, making him the party’s largest donor. He is also reported to have donated a further £5m earlier this year. Rishi Sunak is under increasing pressure to return the money after the disclosure of Hester’s remarks.

When the £5m donation was announced this month, Hester rejected the idea that he was giving money to secure more government contracts, saying many came from hospitals and GPs. “GPs decide which software they’re using, not Rishi Sunak,” he said.

Dr Steve Taylor, spokesperson for the general practice committee of the Doctors’ Association UK, backed the GPC motion.

He said: “Doctors’ Association UK GP committee have significant concerns over the recent comments reportedly made by Frank Hester, owner of TPP, one of major suppliers of GP IT systems.

“The GP workforce is a diverse community of people and these comments are deeply upsetting. We agree with other GP bodies that it calls into question the leadership of TPP.”

TPP has been contacted for comment.