The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 1,326 contributions

Speeches by Streeting.

Every Hansard contribution by Wes Streeting this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 601620 of 1,326 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
16 Jun 2025Access to GPs

The Government inherited a ludicrous situation whereby patients could not get a GP appointment and GPs could not get a job, so one of my first acts was to cut red tape to give practices flexibility to hire GPs, along with an extra £82 million investment. Thanks to that combination of investment and reform, this Governm

healthhousinglocal-government
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16 Jun 2025Access to GPs

We are investing an extra £900 million in general practice, and have reformed the GP contract to help bring back the family doctor and end the 8 am scramble. That contract reform included further changes to make it easier to recruit GPs through the scheme. As my hon. Friend will see shortly when we publish the 10-year

healthhousinglocal-government
112
16 Jun 2025Access to GPs

My hon. Friend is absolutely right. Just as this Government are delivering record home building with a huge target to build the homes that Britain needs, we also need to ensure that people get the local services that they deserve. That is exactly why this Government have invested an extra £102 million this year to crea

healthhousinglocal-government
122
16 Jun 2025Access to GPs

Probably because being that prescriptive about every housing development is not sensible, even if the thrust of what the hon. Member describes—that as new housing development is built, we need to ensure that local infrastructure goes alongside it—is the right approach. I take what he says about the number of GPs, and a

healthhousinglocal-government
104
16 Jun 2025Access to GPs

I can well understand the hon. Member’s concern and her constituents’ concern. Practice closures are hard on communities wherever they are, but they disproportionately hit rural communities and those that suffer with poor transport connectivity. I would urge her in the first instance to raise the specific local issues

healthhousinglocal-government
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16 Jun 2025NHS: Wasteful Spending

This Government are delivering record investment in our NHS, but that investment is drawn from taxpayers, and we have a responsibility to every taxpayer in the land—as well as to patients—to ensure that every single penny is well spent. That is why that investment is matched with bold reform, so that we get as much val

healthfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
106
16 Jun 2025NHS: Wasteful Spending

I would be delighted to do so. My hon. Friend is absolutely right: we have to ensure that the NHS is not only benefiting from, but at the forefront of the revolution taking place in digital services and medical technology. It is key to driving productivity and financial sustainability. That is why, at the spending revi

healthfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
117
16 Jun 2025NHS: Wasteful Spending

Given the state of the NHS in Scotland, I suspect my counterpart needed to go and drown his sorrows. The truth is that the longer the SNP is in government, the longer the NHS in Scotland is on the road to nowhere. The SNP is now on its fifth health plan in four years. Thanks to the decisions taken by the Chancellor, it

healthfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
126
16 Jun 2025NHS: Wasteful Spending

I can reassure the hon. Member that end-of-life care is featured in the 10-year plan for health. I also recognise the pressure on our hospice sector, which is why this Government, as well as delivering £26 million through the children’s hospice grant, committed £100 million of capital investment— the biggest in a gener

healthfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
146
16 Jun 2025NHS: Wasteful Spending

Fiscal decisions and spending are matters for my right hon. Friend the Chancellor, but let me reassure the hon. Gentleman of two things. First, the way in which the taxpayers of this country were ripped off during a national emergency was a total disgrace, and this Government are determined to get our money back and re

healthfiscal-policyeconomy-jobs
113
16 Jun 2025A&E Waiting Times

This Government are committed to fixing the NHS and reducing A&E waiting times. Our new urgent and emergency care plan is backed by nearly £400 million of investment to deliver new urgent treatment centres, mental health assessment centres and almost 400 new ambulances. Alongside that investment, we are reforming u

health
91
16 Jun 2025A&E Waiting Times

I know that my hon. Friend the Minister for Secondary Care enjoyed her visit, and I thank the staff at Newham hospital for the work they do, which also benefits my constituents. We need to make sure that we are supporting hospitals across our country to meet need, because we are part of a wider ecosystem—I noticed that

health
132
16 Jun 2025A&E Waiting Times

I think the hon. Gentleman will find that, since this Government came to power, we have reduced the size of NHS waiting lists by a quarter of a million. NHS waiting lists are coming down—latest figures show that this is the first time in 17 years that waiting lists have fallen in the month of April—so we are making pro

health
102
16 Jun 2025Topical Questions

Waiting lists are at their lowest level for two years, we have taken almost a quarter of a million patients off waiting lists and for the first time in 17 years waiting lists were cut in April. There is a long way to go, but this Government are finally putting the NHS on the road to recovery. Through our plan for chang

healthsocial-carelabour-market
110
16 Jun 2025Topical Questions

The hon. Gentleman is right to commend Sir Chris Whitty’s report. We have taken that into consideration, as well as the wider consultation we did in preparation for our 10-year plan for health, which will commit to tackling the gross health inequalities that affect our country, particularly in rural and coastal communi

healthsocial-carelabour-market
52
16 Jun 2025Topical Questions

First, I just do not buy the argument that investing in our staff is somehow not investing in the NHS. Who on earth do the Opposition think provides the treatment, delivers the care, organises the clinics and delivers the services? Even in this great new world of technology, the NHS will always be a people-based servic

healthsocial-carelabour-market
104
16 Jun 2025Topical Questions

I thank the shadow Secretary of State for his question and, even more importantly, I thank the amazing campaigners for what they are doing. This is probably the easiest question he is ever going to ask me. The answer is, of course, an emphatic yes.

healthsocial-carelabour-market
45
16 Jun 2025Topical Questions

Can I first thank my hon. Friend the Minister for Care for the considerable amount of work he has done to support the House as it makes its deliberations on this important issue? Of course, the Government are neutral; it is for the House to decide. There is not money allocated to set up the service in the Bill at prese

healthsocial-carelabour-market
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16 Jun 2025Topical Questions

I should just say for the record that it is thanks to my friends at the Treasury that we are able to do so much to invest in our health service. It is important to put that on record ahead of the Budget. The hon. Lady raises a really serious issue, and we are looking carefully at what we can do to ensure that we get gr

healthsocial-carelabour-market
122
16 Jun 2025Topical Questions

I am really proud of the contribution that overseas workers make to health and social care services across our country. If they all left tomorrow, the services would simply collapse. But I think there is an overreliance on overseas staff in health and care services, and that is contributing to levels of net migration t

healthsocial-carelabour-market
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.