Climate demonstrators interrupted the Minister of Health Wes Street on Saturday, in which he urged advanced to fight the “populist right” “cynicism”.
Two women shouted over her when she used a speech to the Fabian Society to demand a center left to challenge a “miserable, degenerative view”, which she said she had, among other things, to the Reform UK leader Nigel Farage.
The protesters who both quickly removed the security of London from the Guildhall conference said they had voted the Labor Party in 2024, but protested against the continuous support of the Drax power plant in Northern Yorkshire.
Streeting said that the government is implementing a policy to bring about change, including hiring more doctors, stopping strikes and cutting NHS queuing lists, and adding, “And it is much better than shouting from the side.”
One of the protesters, Zoe Courtney-Bodgener, told the PA news agency: “The Workers’ Party promised a change and we voted for them because we wanted to change and continue to support.
“We still believe they have time to influence, but they must stop the subsidies now.”
In his keynote speech at the Fabian Society’s New Year’s conference, Mr. Street pursued Mr Farage from a offer, which he described as “ambition to poverty” to Britain.
It comes after the Farage Party was at the forefront of the national opinion poll for the first time by 26 % of the votes in a study by Find Out Now magazine on Wednesday.
In the most straightforward attack by the government minister, against Mr. Farage after the Labor Party entered the government, Streeting said, “The essence of Farage’s claim is this possible in the 20th century, is not possible in the 21st century.
“It’s a miserable, degraded vision of the future of Britain.
“People should not have to choose a health care service that will take care of them in time, and at the NHS free access point sometimes.
“It is our country’s ambition, and the Labor Party completely rejects it.”
Mr. Farage told me The Times Earlier this month: “We need to find a health care financial system that is more effective than the current one and at the same time carry those who cannot afford to pay.”
The health secretary said at the event: “I can’t imagine a more effective antidote to Farage’s misery than to prove the cynicism and get NHS to provide patients with world -class treatment every time.”
He said that the Labor Party should not expel the state’s failure and said that “Western liberal democracy is full of the body of progressive political parties that had to defend defense.”
“Populist rights come to us, and we have to be serious about their hitting,” he said.
“We have to do three things: to suppress their conspiracy with the honesty, overcome their cynicism by producing a real change, and taking their arguments to overcome the battle of ideas.
“Hitting a populist right requires that we are honest with ourselves – sometimes the center left can forget our purpose.”
He accused the conservatives and reform of the Labor Party “running to the NHS failure” and added, “They want us to fail, because if we do not translate NHS, they will have the opportunity to win us a voting rate and cancel 76 years of public health care, publicly funded, free. “
In the message, Mr. Farage replied on the social media site X and said, “Wes Streeting is so afraid of reform that he has now resorted to lying about our plans for NHS.
“I want to make it clear that NHS is always free at the delivery point during the reform government.”
Only a few days after the US President Donald Trump’s inauguration, Streeting also said that the government also feels that it is “responsible in history” to be “a” light on a hill for advanced around the world. “
He said that the Labor Party’s administration is approaching its transatlantic relationship, as every government in the United Kingdom has recognized “the deep and existential nature of the union”, but that it felt that he was “confident in our policy”.
When asked if Trump’s victory makes him reflect on how important the advanced values are for the general public, Streeting replied, “No.
“I believe we know in the Starmer government that our duty is currently in history to be light for advanced around the world.”
He said that Trump’s withdrawal from the World Health Organization (WHO) would “bring his challenge”, but “it is not a surprise, and to be honest with President Trump, he was clear before the election that he would do.” “.
Mr. Streeting added, “I disagree with it. I respect their right to make a different decision.”