Streeting says Labour has not done enough to win over voters

Wes Streeting, Labor, has not been able to tell a “consistent story ında about the change he had made since last year’s general elections.
Health Secretary, Sir Keir Starmer’s party last July since he came to power “many achievements,” he said, but voters made the country better enough to convince, he said.
When Nigel Farage’s reform reform Britain rise and Sir Keir’s approval ratings reached a record level, Mr. Streeting, Falling NHS waiting lists, said that positives, such as falling NHS waiting lists, have not yet cut off with voters.

While talking about Political currency Former Conservative Chancellor George Osborne and Podcast said, “We have had a lot of success in Turkey. And I think of what we have given in our first year, for example, NHS poverty, for example, the decision we take to illegal school meals will remove 100,000 children.
“The last workers’ government, who was praised for the record of child poverty, made 400,000 for 13 years. This is not a bad start.
“You have a great public service reform agenda in justice, but… It has not embraced a sufficiently consistent story about the change we have brought.”
The health secretary also said that Britain’s British politics has been afraid of a “reorganization of a big party ve and that the conservatives of reform began to change Labour’s main rivals.

“Although conservatives are much larger in number, they feel increasingly less relevant in the Parliament, Star said Streeting.
However, he called on Sir Keir not to allow Mr. Farage not to determine the agenda and added that “the most successful moments of our most successful moments in the last 12 months were the place we set the agenda”.
He said: “People want to feel change. They want to feel that the government has taken the country forward.
“We shouldn’t fall into the trap of Farage to allow us to determine the conditions of the discussion for us.”

Mr. Farage has organized a series of press conferences on immigration and law and orders in recent weeks and tried to put pressure on small boats and crimes on Sir Keir.
In addition, he opposed the use of hotels that host asylum seekers in communities all over the country and called for a wave of protest after a council’s successful legal difficulty against EPPING.
Although he struggled to meet the message message, Mr. Streeting praised Sir Keir’s leadership, and the Prime Minister’s ministers always called to “go harder, go faster, to be more brave”.
While the workers’ deputies are increasingly discussing whether the change of leadership will increase the leverage of the party, Mr. Streeting said: “Keir was underestimated in the opposition and written in the opposition and mixed critics.”