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Partygate has added to country’s mental health stress, says Starmer

The Labour leader made the remark as he laid out his vision for reforming the NHS.

Patrick Daly
Saturday 15 January 2022 12:30 GMT
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer told the Fabian Society of his plans for reforming the health service (Dominic Lipinski/PA)
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer told the Fabian Society of his plans for reforming the health service (Dominic Lipinski/PA) (PA Wire)

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The No 10 “partygate scandal” has worsened the public’s mental health, Sir Keir Stamer said as he laid out plans to reform the NHS under a Labour government.

The Labour leader, in a speech at the Fabian Society conference in London, said young people had been particularly hard hit with mental health struggles during the coronavirus pandemic.

As part of his vision for the NHS, he pledged a Labour administration would install a mental health care facility for young people in every community and provide specialist support in schools.

I think the last few weeks in relation to partygate has made the situation worse

Sir Keir Starmer

Taking questions about the policy after his speech, Sir Keir said the revelations about coronavirus rule breaches in Downing Street had exacerbated issues people are facing with their mental wellbeing.

He said: “I think, by the way, the scandal of partygate, for want of a better word… what’s happened in recent weeks, where it has become obvious that while the vast majority of the British public were obeying the laws the Government made, the Government and the Prime Minister were partying in Downing Street.

“I think that has added to mental health stress because so many people are now asking themselves, ‘Why on earth did I do that then, while they were doing what they were doing?’.

“So I think that, before the pandemic, we had mental health issues which have got worse during the pandemic in greater ways than we’ve really understood, particularly in young people.

“And I think the last few weeks in relation to partygate has just made the situation worse.”

During his speech on Saturday, the opposition leader pledged that a Labour administration would ensure those requiring mental health treatment were seen to in “less than a month”.

“We’ll recruit over 8,500 more mental health professionals to support a million more people every year,” he added.

“Every school will have specialist support, every community will have an open access mental health hub for young people.”

He accused the Prime Minister of being “too preoccupied defending his rule breaking” to turn NHS fortunes around, calling for the health service to focus more on preventing people from getting ill and to adopt a “home first” policy for care.

“We must devise new methods of care to help with long-term conditions, we need to think about mental as well as physical health, and we need to think not just how we treat patients, but how we prevent them from falling ill in the first place,” he told the conference.

The former director of public prosecutions accused the Conservatives of making a “mess” of the NHS.

He said: “The first task of a Labour government would be to clear up the mess that Tories have made of the NHS.

“The last Labour government brought waiting times down from 18 months to 18 weeks. We will need to do the same again.”

He vowed that Labour will “invest properly to bring down waiting lists and we would start by recruiting, training and, crucially, retaining the staff that we need”.

Sir Keir told of his “anger” at the state of the NHS, and said the party would “make wellbeing matter as much as national economic output”.

A clean air act would also be introduced to tackle the “silent killer” of air pollution, he added.

He said the party has a five-point plan for the transformation of social care, with the shadow cabinet taking a “completely different approach” compared with the Government’s National Insurance hike, due in April, to fund social care and reduce the NHS backlog.

Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting will set out in coming days the plan for living with Covid, Sir Keir said.

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