Wes Streeting: NHS won’t get any extra cash from Labour without major surgery

Wes Streeting NHS wont get any extra cash from Labour without major surgery
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Wes Streeting has warned that the NHS will get no extra funding from Labour without “major surgery” or reform, including more use of the private sector.

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The shadow health secretary insisted he would not be put off by “middle-class Lefties” who cry “betrayal” over using the private sector to bring down waiting lists – adding he was “up for the fight” with NHS unions.

It is the latest in a series of bold statements about the health service by Mr Streeting, who said Labour will only give the NHS an extra £1billion pounds if medics work weekends to ensure more patients are seen.

He wrote in The Sun: “The NHS is a service, not a shrine. It is judged by how well it serves the public, not how heavy a price we’re paying for failure.”

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Mr Streeting doubled down on his comments during an interview on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, telling the show: “There’s a principled argument here, which is that those who can afford it are paying to go private, are being seen faster, and their outcomes and their life chances and their quality of life will be better. Those who can’t afford it are being left behind. And those tend to be people from working class backgrounds like mine, and I think that’s a disgrace.”

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Leader of the Labour Party Sir Keir Starmer and shadow health secretary Wes Streeting (PA Archive)

He also said that the “howls of outrage” from those who are concerned about NHS privatisation are “water off a duck’s back” because: “I don’t think I could look someone in the eye who’s waiting for months and months, sometimes over a year in pain and agony for treatment, and tell them that they should wait longer because my principles trump their timely access to care.”

Quizzed about whether it was right to write for The Sun, he said he made “make no apology whatsoever for making sure that the widest possible audience is hearing Labour’s alternative, especially on one of the biggest crises facing our country, which is the crisis in the NHS.”

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The shadow health secretary has long been a staunch proponent of NHS reform and has made it clear that Labour will take a preventative approach to healthcare in a bid to reduce demand on the NHS.

Labour has repeatedly said it will not make any unfunded spending pledges and that shadow ministers must consider reform before cash due to the UK’s economic woes.

Mr Streeting was recently critical of the NHS, calling it a “20th-century service that hasn’t changed with the times and isn’t fit for the modern era” and that “If the NHS doesn’t change, it will die.”

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The shadow health secretary’s comments have evoked ire from campaign organisation Every Doctor, which has said Mr Streeting is “attempting to make an argument for unnecessary NHS reform and privatisation by pitting one group of voters against another”.

Mr Streeting has previously come head to head with healthcare unions over Labour’s plans for the NHS. The shadow health secretary highlighted what he had called a “something-for-nothing culture in the NHS” and accused the British Medical Association (BMA) of being out of touch. The BMA’s deputy chair Emma Runswick called his comments “incredibly disappointing”.

Today’s comments come as part of Labour’s plans to digitise the NHS red book parents use for their children’s medical records as part of a series of reforms to the NHS app.

The shadow health secretary said the plans were a “major step, will transform children’s healthcare, and will mean more children protected against measles.”

Prime Minister Rishi Sunak pledged to reduce NHS waiting lists (PA Wire)

Labour’s health blitz comes amidst a raft of distressing headlines about the state of the UK’s health service. Figures uncovered by the Independent showed that the number of people dying needlessly in A&E soars on a Monday as hospitals are stretched to the limit and failing to discharge patients at the weekend, while the Times reported that more than 150,000 patients had to wait more than 24 hours for a hospital bed in 2023.

The dire statistics will be a major blow for Rishi Sunak who pledged to reduce NHS waiting lists as one of his five key pledges when he became prime minister.

Mr Streeting said that it would “take time” for Labour to rebuild the NHS’ capacity, “just as it’s taken over a decade for the Conservatives to break the NHS to the point of the worst crisis in its history”.

Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Laura Trott MP said Labour’s promises were “completely unfunded”: “Labour’s own shadow Health Secretary has admitted Labour cannot say how they would pay for their spending commitments.

“All of Labour’s promises to the NHS are completely unfunded. They cannot say how they would pay for their social care promises or how they will plug their £2.7 billion black hole because they do not have a plan. Without a plan, Labour will have to put up taxes – taking us back to square one.”



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