Will they increase it or won't they. Apparently it is still going ahead despite the fact that both Boris and Rishi seem to want to distance themselves from it. I was watching BBC news with Reeta Chakrabarti, and a guest on the programme was suggesting there are fairer ways of raising the money to clear the backlog in the NHS than a blanket across the board increase in national insurance.. She mentioned, for example, that people earning over £50,000 a year in effect only pay 2% whilst those on low incomes pay 12%. (I have to take her word for that). So far so good.
But in the next breath she quite shocked me when she suggested that pensioners should be paying the full 12% rise as they are often better off than low paid young people. Indeed, some pensioners are undoubtedly better off than others, but the majority of pensioners are now facing increases in food prices, fuel, heating, council tax etc. while they are existing on a fixed income - plus the fact that the triple lock which was designed to help pensioners has been suspended.
I agree that there are better ways to fund the NHS backlog, but targeting pensioners is not one of them.