Life Style & Wellness

Streeting praises health staff from overseas and says Reform UK would be ‘disaster’ for NHS – UK politics live | Politics


Wes Streeting rejects reports that Reeves will impose VAT on private healthcare in budget

Good morning. Keir Starmer is delivering his speech to the Labour conference later, and it is arguably the biggest personal fightback opportunity he will get this year. Pippa Crerar has written up the overnight briefing we got about the speech from Labour. But a conference speech is primarily just a rhetorical event; a budget is a fiscal event, and a policy event, and that is why the most important moment for Labour between now and the end of the year is the budget on 26 November.

Starmer will address delegates with the media already braced for big tax rises this autumn, prompted by what Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, told the conference yesterday. Some of the papers are focusing on the general likelihood of tax increases.

Photograph: FT
The front page of the Daily Express with a headline reading ‘It’s the same old tax rise pain with Labour’
Photograph: Daily Express
The front page of the i paper, with a headline reading ‘Reeves signals tax hikes - as workers face stealth rise of over £600’
Photograph: The i paper
The front page of the Metro, with a headline reading ‘Things can only get bitter’
Metro splash Photograph: Metro

But one newspaper has a more specific claim. The Daily Mail says that the governent is considering putting VAT on private healthcare in the budget. It says:

And Whitehall sources told the Daily Mail that the Treasury was examining options for adding VAT to services that are currently exempt – with private healthcare and financial services said to be in the firing line.

Putting VAT on private healthcare could raise £2bn for the Treasury, but would hit up to 8m middle-class families.

The front page of the Daily Mail, with a headline reading ‘Reeves plots a VAT attack on private health’
Photograph: Daily Mail

Wes Streeting, the health secretary, has been doing the morning interview round. Normally ministers do not comment on budget matters. But Streeting could not have been clearer when he was on BBC Breakfast this morning. The presenter, Jon Kay, said he did not expect Streeting to comment directly on the story, but asked if he would say anything about the principle of taxing private healthcare. Streeting replied:

I’m going to shock you. It’s not happening.

Asked if he could guarantee that, Streeting said:

Yup. Not happening.

Streeting has been talking, among other things, about two big health-related announcements this morning.

  • NHS England is setting up what it calls an online hospital – NHS Online. It says: “The innovative new model of care will not have a physical site, instead digitally connecting patients to expert clinicians anywhere in England. The first patients will be able to use the service from 2027.” There are more details here.

I will post more from the Streeting interviews soon.

Here is the agenda for the day.

9.30am: The conference opens. Speakers during the morning include Tracy Brabin, the mayor of West Yorkshire, at 10am, Hilary Benn, the Northern Ireland secretary, at 10.10am, Heidi Alexander, the transport secretary, at 10.20am, and Wes Streeting, the health secretary, at 11.50am.

11.30am: Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, takes part in a Q&A event at a Centre for Social Justice fringe.

2pm: Keir Starmer delivers his speech to the conference.

4pm: Lisa Nandy, the culture secretary, takes part in a Sky Sports Q&A event at the fringe.

5pm: Shabana Mahmood, the home secretary, takes part in a Tony Blair Institute Q&A event at the fringe.

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Key events

‘Farage says go home, I say you are home’ – Streeting praises foreign health staff as he calls Reform UK ‘disaster’ for NHS

Wes Streeting, the health secretary, told LBC this morning that Reform UK’s plan to rescind indefinite leave to remain as an immigration status, including from people who have already been told they can remain in Britain for good, would be a “disaster” for the NHS.

Asked what impact it would have, he said:

It would be a disaster.

There are doctors, nurses, care workers, NHS staff earning less than £60,000 a year, who have come to this country, who have given back, not just through their taxes, but through their service to our country.

If we were to send those people back, I think that would be a disaster.

And my message that I’m giving in my speech Labour party conference today is, to those of you listening who are in that situation, who are fearing for your future now in the way that you weren’t some weeks ago, [Nigel] Farage says ‘go home’, I say ‘you are home’, and I’m grateful for the service that you give to our national health service, to our social care system and to our country.

Streeting also said that Reform UK posed another threat to the NHS, because Farage has in the past expressed support for the idea of moving to an insurance-based health system. He went on:

That’s a system that would check your pockets before your pulse. That’s a system that could ask for your credit card before you get your care.

That’s not a future I think people in this country want. And I think if more people knew about Reform’s policies on the NHS, the less confident they would be.

Streeting also said he was “shocked” by Farage’s disregard for science.

When Nigel Farage was asked in the context of that row about paracetamol, and whether or not it posed a risk to pregnant women and their children, despite what all of the medical science and all of our doctors were saying, when he was asked whose side he was on, he said, ‘I don’t have a side.’

Well, that’s not someone I think should be trusted with healthcare in our country.

And the fact that he chose to give a platform at his conference to someone who said the Covid vaccine gave the royal family cancer says you can’t trust this man with your health.

Streeting ended with a personal jibe.

If that’s the sort of health advice Nigel Farage is taking, maybe that’s why he’s the same age as Brad Pitt but looks 20 years older.

Wes Streeting being interviewed this morning. Photograph: Paul Ellis/AFP/Getty Images
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