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 81100 of 1,326 contributions · most-recent first

← PreviousPage 5 of 67Next →
DateDebate & contributionWords
24 Feb 2026Cancer Diagnosis

The hon. Gentleman is absolutely right; this is about not just diagnosis but faster access to treatment. We are meeting the faster diagnosis standard; performance was at 77.4% in December 2025, and we aim to improve that to 80% by the end of March this year. We have to go a lot further, a lot faster, on the commencemen

health
116
24 Feb 2026Cancer Diagnosis

My hon. Friend is right that leukaemia patients are disproportionately diagnosed too late. We are working with GPs to ensure that they are better prepared to spot symptoms or concerning blood test results, so that we can cut out avoidable delays. The real difference, however, will come with the introduction of genomic

health
84
24 Feb 2026Cancer Diagnosis

Cancer is the canary in the coalmine for the NHS. For far too many cancer patients, under the Tories, the NHS was not there when they needed it. Under Labour, an extra 213,000 patients have been diagnosed, or have received the all-clear on time. Much has been done, but there is much more to do. I pay tribute to the lea

health
142
24 Feb 2026Health and Social Care: Rural Communities

We have 2,000 more GPs now than when Labour came into office, but the hon. Lady is right to say that we need to ensure that that provision and increased capacity are reflected throughout the country. Because general practices serving more deprived areas receive 10% less funding per needs-adjusted patient than those in

healthsocial-care
128
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

It is important that the Bill is workable. A number of factors may well interrupt our ability to move at the pace at which I want to open up those places. One of those factors is the ongoing risk of industrial action. We know that the BMA is balloting for further industrial action at the moment. We respect the process

healthlabour-marketimmigration
151
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

I am certainly aware of my right hon. Friend’s concerns. I can give her that assurance and will report back to her on progress. Without action to prioritise UK medics, we will also make it tougher than it already is for those from working-class backgrounds like mine to become doctors—or, for that matter, to even consid

healthlabour-marketimmigration
190
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

The hon. Member puts her finger right on the issue at the heart of the Bill. That is exactly the challenge we want it to address. The Bill is not a panacea—it does not solve all the problems—but reducing competition for specialty places from around four to one to less than two to one, as the Bill will do, will make it

healthlabour-marketimmigration
143
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

We set UK medical school places based on future health system needs. We cannot control how many places the overseas campus universities create, whether they are UK-based universities or not. Prioritising those graduates in the way that the right hon. Gentleman suggests would undermine sustainable workforce planning. It

healthlabour-marketimmigration
297
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

My hon. Friend is right about the measures in the Bill. He is also right about the importance of our relationship with Malta, which is long-standing and deep, and this Government place enormous value on that. We will, of course, keep the workings of the measures in the Bill under review. He is also right to say that th

healthlabour-marketimmigration
74
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

I can give the hon. Member that assurance—that is exactly what the Bill does. Madam Deputy Speaker, I cannot, however, resist the enormous temptation to say that while I welcome the support of the hon. Member and her party, I hope that her party’s position will not change now that it has adopted so many of the formerly

healthlabour-marketimmigration
316
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

I will take an intervention from the hon. Gentleman. I will come to my right hon. Friend in a moment.

healthlabour-marketimmigration
20
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

As I have said, the position we have set out is founded on fairness. The basis on which people have applied to these universities has made it clear that the universities cannot guarantee places and that overseas applicants studying at UK universities’ overseas campuses can still apply. There is nothing to prevent those

healthlabour-marketimmigration
89
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

My hon. Friend is absolutely right about the contribution that international medical graduates make, and I have no doubt that that will continue to be the case for many years to come. I hope it is clear to those going through medical school or aspiring to a career in medicine that, in terms of the future of healthcare

healthlabour-marketimmigration
154
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

I will give way to the hon. Lady and then to my right hon. Friend the Member for Oxford East (Anneliese Dodds).

healthlabour-marketimmigration
22
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

I absolutely give the hon. Member that assurance—the Bill covers medical graduates from the UK and Ireland, for very obvious reasons. I welcome the broad support that the Bill appears to have across the House, because for the changes to benefit applicants in the current round—for posts starting this August—it must achi

healthlabour-marketimmigration
140
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

With respect, I think the hon. Gentleman has got his chronology slightly wrong. As shadow Health Secretary, I proposed that we should double the number of undergraduate medical school places. That policy was poached by the then Conservative Government, who made modest progress with it. We then came into government, loo

healthlabour-marketimmigration
98
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

That is a fair question from the Chair of the Health and Social Care Committee. We are taking longer than I would have liked with the workforce plan. I hope it reassures the hon. Member and the House that we have taken more time because that is what the royal colleges, trade unions, and clinical and NHS leaders asked u

healthlabour-marketimmigration
91
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

I agree with my hon. Friend. For context, I say to members of the BMA and resident doctors that to bring forward legislation in this way and at this pace is not easy. We have a packed legislative programme. The clock is ticking on getting everything through that we want to get through in the time that we have available

healthlabour-marketimmigration
790
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

I give way to my hon. Friend with significant NHS experience.

healthlabour-marketimmigration
11
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

I am clear that this is about whether the system will be ready to implement the measures in the Bill. I must say that I view the Conservatives’ amendment on this issue with a degree of cynicism. Not so long ago, they were accusing me of being too kind to resident doctors when it came to making changes to pay or conditi

healthlabour-marketimmigration
431
← PreviousPage 5 of 67 · click a debate to open the transcript with this MP’s speeches highlightedNext →
Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.