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Spending Review Health and Social Care 2025-06-12

12 June 2025

Lead MP

The Minister for Secondary Care

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

NHSSocial Care
Other Contributors: 30

At a Glance

The Minister for Secondary Care raised concerns about spending review health and social care 2025-06-12 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

NHSSocial Care
Government Statement
This Government were elected on a manifesto to fix our broken NHS and make it fit for the future. In her autumn Budget, my right hon. Friend the Chancellor took necessary decisions to give health and social care a record uplift in day-to-day spending at the conclusion of the first phase of the spending review. The Department for Health and Social Care received a cash injection of £26 billion covering day-to-day spending and capital investment in 2025-26, compared with the 2023-24 out-turn. We have also given pharmacies the biggest funding uplift in years, ensured that women across the country can access the morning after pill free of charge, frozen prescription charges for the first time in three years, and enabled an extra 3.5 million appointments for operations, consultations, diagnostic tests and treatments—reaching and surpassing our manifesto pledge seven months early. We have increased day-to-day spending on health to £232 billion by 2028-29, with a record capital investment of £13.6 billion in 2025-26. The settlement will drive us further towards the goal of ensuring that by the end of this Parliament 92% of patients will not have to wait more than 18 weeks for elective care. We will continue the delivery of 25 new hospitals; invest £30 billion in maintenance and repairs, with £5 billion addressing critical building repairs; and reduce by half the number of hospitals containing RAAC over this Parliament. The spending review also includes an increase of over £4 billion for adult social care in 2028-29 compared to 2025-26.

Shadow Comment

Edward Argar
Shadow Comment
Yesterday, we saw the Chancellor default to high spending, more borrowing and higher taxes, leaving the public finances vulnerable. The Minister has spoken of additional funding for the NHS but without real detail or plan. Despite pledges last September that there would be no more money without reform, the Government have yet again provided funds without a clear plan for reform. We wish the Government well in achieving their 18-week target for hospital waiting times within this Parliament, but The Times reported yesterday that internal departmental modelling showed they are not on track and could only come close to meeting the target with 'implausible' and 'over-optimistic' assumptions. Can the Minister set out how the Government will meet that target?
Assessment & feedback
Summary accuracy

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