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Votes for populist parties in May elections will put NHS at risk, Streeting says

about 6 hours ago
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Voters in May’s local and devolved elections risk putting the NHS in jeopardy if they vote for populist parties, Wes Streeting has said, as he sought to make the health service a key battleground,“The founding principles of the NHS are at greater threat than at any time since the NHS was founded in 1948,” the health secretary said,He warned that there was “a particular jeopardy” for the NHS in Wales, where Labour faces electoral wipeout at the hands of Reform UK and Plaid Cymru, with the latter pitching itself to voters as the best “stop Reform” option,Streeting called Labour’s progressive rivals “rookies” and said he “refuse[d] to believe that many people in Wales would vote for Reform if they knew where Nigel Farage stood on the NHS”,Streeting argued that the NHS in Scotland was weaker after almost two decades of SNP governance, while in England Labour-run councils would work more efficiently with Labour in government.

“The choice that the voters need to make is who do they want to be in government in Scotland after 20 years of SNP failure?” he said.“In Wales, do they really want to take the risk of the rookies, Plaid Cymru, or the disaster zone that is Reform, when they could have a Welsh Labour government working in partnership with a UK Labour government to deliver for Wales?“And in councils across England, where Labour councils have managed to deliver against a Tory government, we need to keep those councils Labour so they can deliver in partnership with a Labour government.”The intervention comes as new polling by More in Common for the Sunday Times suggested that 16 out of 22 cabinet ministers – including Rachel Reeves, Yvette Cooper, Ed Miliband and John Healey – would lose their seats if a general election were held today, with 12 seats going to Reform, three to the Greens and one to an independent.In an interview with the Guardian before a speech to the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) on Monday, Streeting said the NHS was a “key battleground” in May’s elections and accused Farage of wanting to “dismantle” the NHS and of failing to set out his plans on healthcare.“The idea that the country that gave birth to Bevan and the NHS would elect into government in Wales a party that would dismantle it just sends shivers down my spine,” Streeting said.

Before the 2024 general election, Reform pledged to offer tax relief of 20% on all private healthcare policies if it won power.During Reform’s Welsh conference in 2024, Farage called for a “fundamental rethink” to fix the Welsh NHS, which has significantly longer waiting lists than Scotland and England.Earlier this year, he told LBC he was “open to anything” and would consider a “French-style” NHS insurance system.A Reform spokesperson said: “We will always keep the NHS free at the point of use for British citizens.”Streeting said Farage and fellow Reform MPs such as Richard Tice did “not believe in the NHS” but were “being uncharacteristically shy” in order not to lose votes.

“They hope voters will go into these elections thinking Reform is a safe protest vote,They are not,They are a risk to the NHS,” he said,Streeting said a recent Guardian article that said the NHS was on course to miss key targets to shorten waiting times for help at A&E, cancer care and planned hospital treatment was based on out-of-date data,He said the government had a “fighting chance” of meeting waiting times reduction target for the end of March despite strikes by resident doctors, adding: “We’re seeing significant and sustained reductions in the NHS waiting lists.

”Streeting, reflecting on the breadth of the challenge facing Labour before the May elections, also took aim at the Green party, which he called “uncredible”,He said: “We have done really good progressive Labour things,My frustration is that we’ve had our heads down getting on with doing those things,We need to do a lot better at looking up and telling the country what we’re doing,”While Streeting is widely believed to harbour leadership ambitions, he insisted that if Labour fared poorly in May, he would urge fellow MPs not to attempt to oust Keir Starmer.

“The prime minister is here to stay,” he said.“Keir Starmer won a big majority at the last election and a mandate to change the country.We’ve got to get on with that job, not turning in on ourselves.”
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Wigan edge out Wakefield in thriller to set up mouthwatering Saints semi-final

The winds of change that swept through Super League last year as Hull KR became the dominant force in the game have at stages already in 2026 threatened to become more akin to a hurricane – and no afternoon felt more seismic in defining that mood than this.Super League has been in desperate need of a new challenger for some time, which made Hull KR’s domestic treble last year all the more interesting. But this year, a new force has threatened to rise alongside the Robins, St Helens, Leeds and Wigan: that of Wakefield Trinity.One of rugby league’s grand old clubs historically, Wakefield have been nothing more than also-rans for much of the past 50 years, having not won a major trophy since the 1960s. But after widespread investment, a renovated Belle Vue and a squad that is joint top after the opening quarter of the season, they have all the hallmarks of a team ready to compete at the top again

about 8 hours ago
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Fury only wants Joshua but after 10 years of wrangling will superfight ever happen?

Just before midnight on Saturday, an hour after the first victory of his latest comeback, Tyson Fury paused in the midst of a familiar monologue about a predictable subject. He had just outclassed Arslanbek Makhmudov, the tough but limited Russian heavyweight, over 12 one‑sided rounds. But Fury wanted to talk only about Anthony Joshua and whether or not he and his old British rival would ever fight each other.In the lavish depths of Tottenham Hotspur Stadium, Fury sounded perplexed: “Ten years in the making and still, after all this time, there’s uncertainty if this fight’s gonna happen next. I’ve no idea

about 8 hours ago
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Gout Gout leaves onlookers dumbfounded with record-breaking run drawn from the future | Jack Snape

The sprint sensation was pushed to new heights in the 200m final by an unlikely opponent at the Australian Athletics ChampionshipsIt didn’t look good for Gout Gout. He had started the 200m final at the Australian Athletics Championships relatively well, and was positioned just off the lead at the start of the straight.But, there – who was that? The man wearing all black, two lanes on the inside. An athlete who appeared to match the global phenomenon step by step just when Gout was expected to pull away.It wasn’t Lachlan Kennedy, the 100m champion who has beaten Gout twice over 200m but who pulled out of this event early on Sunday

about 14 hours ago
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Gout Gout smashes 20-second barrier to set new 200m national record

Teenage sprint phenomenon Gout Gout has smashed his own national 200m record and become the first Australian to break the 20-second barrier in legal conditions as he sprinted to victory in 19.67sec at the athletics championships in Sydney.Aidan Murphy pushed the 18-year-old deep into the straight and finished with the second best 200m time by an Australian of 19.88sec, with a tailwind of +1.7m/s

about 18 hours ago
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Rory McIlroy aims for ‘freer’ state of mind in final round of Masters after losing six-shot lead

Rory McIlroy hopes to benefit from a “freer” state of mind on the final day of the Masters, despite the defending champion conceding he will have to improve markedly from round three to retain the Green Jacket. McIlroy saw his six-stroke lead evaporate on Saturday, meaning he enters the fourth round in a tie with Cameron Young at the top of the leaderboard. McIlroy was visibly short of his best during a one-over-par 73.The Northern Irishman can, however, pull upon the glory of 2025 at the same venue. “I’d like to think that I’ll play a little bit freer and I’ll play, like I’ve already got a Green Jacket, which I do,” McIlroy said

about 21 hours ago
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Cameron Young reels in Rory McIlroy with pack on their tails for Masters finale

Rory McIlroy began this Masters in the company of Cameron Young and will finish it in the company of Cameron Young. McIlroy arrived at this tournament as the holder of the Green Jacket. By Sunday night he will …? Goodness only knows. Day three proved predictions are a fool’s errand at the Masters.Such drama played out at Augusta National on Saturday that by close of play it was extraordinary to see McIlroy’s name still atop the leaderboard, albeit now with Young for company

about 22 hours ago
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Votes for populist parties in May elections will put NHS at risk, Streeting says

about 6 hours ago
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Tories would reinstate two-child benefit cap to fund defence, says Badenoch

1 day ago
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UK starts crackdown on EU citizens’ post-Brexit rights

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Reform UK local election candidate was twice disciplined by Tories over ‘racist comments’

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Starmer implies he didn’t tell Trump he was ‘fed up’ about his impact on rising UK energy bills – as it happened

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Not just about Gaza: the Muslim voters turning from Labour to the Greens

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