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

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

Unison welcomes £500m commitment to fair pay agreement for care workers, but says ‘substantially more’ needed

Unison, a leading health union, has welcomed today’s announcement that the government is committing £500m towards its plan for a fair pay agreement for adult care workers, but it says “substantially more” will be needed.

In a statement, Christina McAnea, the Unison general secretary, said:

The best way to begin getting a grip on this complex, fragmented sector in crisis is to improve wages through a fair pay agreement, backed by proper funding.

The higher wages that result will help make staff feel more valued, boost recruitment and encourage care workers to stay in their jobs for longer.

The funding announced is a start, but substantially more will be needed to deliver the national care service the public deserves.

In its announcement, the Department of Health and Social Care says:

A new body to negotiate changes to pay and terms and conditions for care workers will be set up including both employers and trade unions.

The body will aim to improve recruitment and retention, giving staff better recognition for their important work and this initial investment will mean that by 2028, care workers will expect to see a boost in their yearly wages.

The cash injection follows the government’s immediate actions to boost the social care sector, including a £2,000 uplift in the carers’ allowance and an increase in the Disabled Facilities Grant to provide 15,000 more home adaptations.

A public consultation to gather views on the design of the Fair Pay Agreement process has also been launched today by government.

Following this, the Adult Social Care Negotiating Body will be established through regulations in 2026 – with the first Fair Pay Agreement coming into force in 2028.

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