Willink was elected as
Member of Parliament (MP) for
Croydon North in a wartime
by-election on 19 June 1940. There was only one other candidate, an independent, who received a very small vote. In 1940, he was appointed Special Commissioner for the homeless in
London. Willink was made a
privy counsellor in 1943, the year he became
Minister of Health, a role in which he served until the Conservatives lost the
1945 general election. Willink, with
John Hawton, was responsible for the 1944
White Paper, following the
Beveridge Report, called
A National Health Service. It proposed the creation of a fully comprehensive, universal healthcare system, free of charge and available to all citizens irrespective of means. When Labour came into office in 1945, it presented its own plan in preference to Willink's, which it had supported. The principal difference was that Willink's plan talked of a "publicly organised" rather than a "publicly provided" service, and Labour's plan brought hospitals into full national ownership. Willink's successor
Nye Bevan, however, made concessions to
General practitioners. Willink kept his seat at the
1945 general election by just 607 votes over Labour's
Marion Billson. Turnout was low and there were rumours of sacks of servicemen's votes left uncounted in the Town Hall basement. Labour's
David Rees-Williams - later Baron Ogmore - had taken
the other Croydon seat. Willink resigned from Parliament on 29 January 1948, and the
subsequent by-election was won resoundingly by Conservative
Fred Harris, with a majority of almost 12,000 votes, despite a ballot of high-profile candidates. == Public service ==