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Boris Johnson has been accused of misleading the public after it emerged his ‘cash boost’ for hospitals was not “new money”.

The Prime Minister promised £1.8 billion of fresh cash for the NHS on Sunday, listing 20 hospitals which would benefit from the money.

But in reality, much of the cash is ministers releasing funds which had previously been blocked.

Some £1 billion comes from cash surpluses that had been saved by NHS trusts.

They had already planned to spend the funds on vital maintenance and repairs, but the Treasury had blocked them from doing so.

Mr Johnson has merely lifted the block.

(Image: Getty Images)

The Mirror revealed on Saturday that the Government had siphoned off more than £4 billion of the NHS maintenance and repairs fund to pay for day to day expenses.

The £1 billion for repairs is barely enough to cover the ‘high risk’ backlog of maintenance needs reported by hospitals.

In total, the cost of eradicating the NHS’ repairs backlog would cost in excess of £6 billion.

The Prime Minister's official spokesman acknowledged some of the money would "allow existing upgrades to proceed".

Sally Gainsbury of the Nuffield Trust health think tank said: "It’s the equivalent of giving someone cash then banning them from spending it, only to expect cheers when you later decide they can spend it after all."

Labour ’s Shadow Health Secretary Jonathan Ashworth said: " Boris Johnson has misled the public and our NHS staff. You cannot trust a word he says and his claims are unravelling.

"It is now clear this is not new money, but funds already earmarked for hospitals which ministers previously blocked.

"With 4.4 million patients waiting for operations and over 20,000 cancer patients waiting longer for treatment, it is a disgrace that Johnson is trying to treat people like fools."

(Image: Getty Images)

Speaking during a visit to the Pilgrim Hospital in Boston, Lincolnshire - one of the hospitals set to benefit from the increase - Mr Johnson was adamant that the £1.8 billion was new money.

"It's part of a national programme that the NHS asked for and I want to stress this is new money," he said.

"I said 10 days ago on the steps of Downing Street, that we would be upgrading 20 hospitals - 20 new hospital upgrades around the country - and this is it."

At a briefing for political journalists at Westminster, Mr Johnson's spokesman said: "This is new money.

"It includes £850 million in new funding for 20 hospital upgrades and £1 billion of new funding for NHS capital spending, allowing existing upgrades to proceed and tackling the most urgent infrastructure projects."

(Image: PA)

Health minister Chris Skidmore repeatedly said the Government was offering new money, before it was put to him that health experts argue it includes cash saved by hospitals by cutting on services - which they are now allowed to spend on capital projects.

Asked if this analysis was untrue, Mr Skidmore told Channel 4 News: "No, it's not untrue.

"When it comes to capital you can't just suddenly announce this on projects that suddenly appear. Projects are in the pipeline for a long period of time and what we've been able to do today is release the money to make those projects finally happen."

Sally Warren, director of King's Fund health think tank, acknowledged that the announcement would give the NHS "new spending power".

However, she said that it could also be seen as simply reversing cuts which had been made last year.

"At one level yes it is new money - if the Treasury today were not providing this money, NHS trusts would not be able to spend this £1.8 billion," she told the BBC.

"But another view is that actually - particularly the £1 billion that's been announced today - is really reversing cuts that trusts were asked to make this year."

Nigel Edwards, chief executive of the Nuffield Trust, said the money was only a fraction of what was needed to deliver the improvements the service needed.

"This is a welcome down payment on the staggering £6 billion needed to clear the backlog of NHS maintenance but it will only be a fraction of what it would cost to really upgrade 20 hospitals," he said.

"Nobody should expect shiny new hospitals in their towns any time soon."

Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers - the body which negotiates on behalf of NHS trusts with the Government - said "both the Government and the health think tanks are correct".

He added: "As a result of this morning's announcement, frontline NHS providers will be able to spend £1 billion in 2019-20 on backlog maintenance and other capital spending that they weren't able to spend last week.

"The Department of Health and Social Care's capital spending limit will be increased accordingly and that will count against overall government capital spending limits. By our definition that is genuine, new, extra money.

"At the same time, the health think tanks are correct that some of the extra 2019/20 capital expenditure enabled by this announcement will be funded through cash surpluses currently sitting on provider balance sheets.

"That spending can legitimately be described as money that trusts already had, but were told they couldn't spend and are now able to spend."