The Westminster lensArchive · §02 Speeches · 95 contributions

Speeches by Andrew.

Every Hansard contribution by Stuart Andrew this parliament, most recent first. Back to the MP page for the headline figures and analysed positions.

Showing 2140 of 95 contributions · most-recent first

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DateDebate & contributionWords
24 Feb 2026Topical Questions

Another leadership ambition, I see. On 29 September, I wrote to the Secretary of State regarding the late Dr Susan Michaelis’s campaign for better research into lobular breast cancer, but sadly I still have not had a reply. She established the Lobular Moon Shot Project and the last Government committed to support its a

healthlabour-market
107
5 Feb 2026 National Cancer Plan

I thank the Minister for advance sight of her statement. May I say right at the outset that we share the ambition to improve cancer survival and outcomes? Almost every family in Britain has been touched by cancer, and patients deserve timely diagnosis, treatment and proper support. I also recognise the Minister’s perso

healtheconomy-jobslocal-government
809
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

I absolutely agree with my right hon. Friend. I said right at the outset that we would be constructive, but we have heard from many who are anxious about their future and do not know what will happen. The sooner that we can give them that certainty, the better. That was the premise on which we offered to support the Bi

healthlabour-marketimmigration
184
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

Let me start by saying at the outset that—

healthlabour-marketimmigration
9
27 Jan 2026Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill

No, I am most definitely not defecting. In the spirit of being constructive, I will start by saying that the Opposition support the principle behind the Bill. Doctors trained in Britain and funded by the taxpayer should have a fair, clear and consistent route to progress in our NHS. Britain trains some of the best doct

healthlabour-marketimmigration
1,211
13 Jan 2026Topical Questions

With one in five hospice beds no longer available because of increased costs such as national insurance contributions, it is hardly surprising that doctors are raising concerns about the increase in the number of end-of-life patients in our hospitals. It is therefore concerning to hear that the palliative care modern s

healthsocial-carelocal-government
77
13 Jan 2026Topical Questions

Capital funding is welcome, but we cannot pay doctors and nurses with bricks and mortar. Hospice UK has said that without additional support, there will be “more unnecessary hospital admissions, more unneeded A&E attendances and more patients not getting the care” they need, so I push the Secretary of State again t

healthsocial-carelocal-government
92
15 Dec 2025NHS: Winter Preparedness

This winter, a serious flu wave and rising respiratory syncytial virus infections are pushing the NHS to its limits. Flu admissions, as we have heard, are up 55% in a week, and RSV cases are rising, especially in older people. However, the Government have failed to prepare, as we pointed out earlier in the year. In Jul

healthlabour-market
325
15 Dec 2025NHS: Winter Preparedness

(Urgent Question): To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care if he will make a statement on winter preparedness in the NHS.

healthlabour-market
25
10 Dec 2025 Resident Doctors: Industrial Action

I thank the Secretary of State for advance sight of his statement, and sincerely thank him for making me aware last night of his intention to come to the House today and make a statement. Given that the next set of planned industrial action is due just a few days before Christmas, and at a worrying time when winter pre

healthlabour-marketeconomy-jobs
626
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

I am asking the question of who is going to pay for it. There is no detail in anything this Government do. They are full of plans and no delivery. The sectors I have been meeting are asking those questions—where is the money coming from?

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
45
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

This Government are trying to tell the public that this Budget was all about taking tough decisions to deliver change, about raising taxes to support the NHS and about pursuing growth and backing business. Those are commendable aims, but it is simply not the reality of what was delivered in the autumn Budget. This was

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
1,033
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

Well, we did not spend tens of billions of pounds in pay rises just for the same old problem to come back. There should have been proper reform, and conditions for those pay rises, but the Government did not make that happen, and here we are again. The NHS Confederation has also warned that local services cannot contin

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
335
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

We will see what happens. It would be interesting to know exactly where the money will come from. [Interruption.] The Secretary of State just said that if the prices go up, there will be no cuts to the NHS budget, but where will the money come from? Which other part of the national health service and social care will t

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
290
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

My right hon. Friend is absolutely right. Let me tell the House, from 16 years of working in the hospice movement, primarily as the head of fundraising, that if you are suddenly asked to find nearly £100,000 overnight, it is almost impossible. It is therefore not surprising that hospices up and down this country are cu

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
97
2 Dec 2025Budget Resolutions

I understood from the Secretary of State’s 10-year plan that he wants more involvement from the private sector. Perhaps the hon. Member needs to have a conversation with the Secretary of State and see how that goes. In fact, if he wants, he can invite me along, because I would be quite happy to observe that conversatio

fiscal-policyhealthsocial-care
390
25 Nov 2025Topical Questions

But, Mr Speaker: “The power to stop these strikes is in the Government’s hands.”—[Official Report, 6 February 2023; Vol. 727, c. 660.] “They need to sit down and negotiate to end the strikes, but Ministers are too busy briefing against each other.” Those are not my words, but the Secretary of State’s words when he was

healthsocial-caretechnology
136
25 Nov 2025Topical Questions

On a point of order, Mr Speaker. I know that you have been incensed by the unprecedented briefings we have seen by the Government in the run-up to the Budget. It beggars belief that, despite your clear statements on this issue, they have done it again today by announcing that the Chancellor will announce £300 million f

healthsocial-caretechnology
168
25 Nov 2025Topical Questions

Thank you, Mr Speaker. Can I ask the Secretary of State why he has not sorted out the strikes and disputes?

healthsocial-caretechnology
21
20 Nov 2025Unpaid Carers: Inequalities

It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship this afternoon, Ms Vaz. I am pleased to respond to this important debate on behalf of the Opposition, and I thank the hon. Member for Shipley (Anna Dixon) for securing it and for her long-standing leadership on carers’ rights. I acknowledge the contributions made by hon

social-carecost-of-livinghealth
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Sources
SourceHansard · official report
MethodEach row is one contribution (intervention or speech). Word count from the official text.