
Wes Streeting
Labour Health Secretary who resigned 14 May 2026, potential leadership challenger.
Last refreshed: 8 July 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
Has Wes Streeting actually filed his 81 nominations, or is the challenge still in limbo?
Timeline for Wes Streeting
Endorsed Burnham rather than stand himself
UK Local Elections 2026: 81 MPs decide: coronation or ballotMentioned in: Starmer quits as PM and Labour leader
UK Local Elections 2026Confirmed on 16 May he would stand if a contest is triggered, without evidence of 81 nominations
UK Local Elections 2026: Labour NEC clears Burnham for Makerfield runStated in April that Westminster would refuse a Section 30 order regardless of result
UK Local Elections 2026: Swinney's Section 30 ask, trigger missedMentioned in: Bute House, No 10 split on phone call
UK Local Elections 2026Why did Wes Streeting block the Scottish independence referendum?
Who is Wes Streeting?
What is the UK Government's position on a second Scottish independence referendum?
Background
Wes Streeting is the UK's Secretary of State for Health and Social Care and Labour MP for Ilford North. During the 2026 Scottish election campaign, he rejected SNP First Minister John Swinney's public request for Westminster to commit to granting a Section 30 order after 2028, saying the government's position remained that now is not the time.
Streeting, Born in Stepney, London, in 1983, was educated at Westminster City School and read history at Selwyn College, Cambridge. He served as President of the National Union of Students (2008-2010) and on Redbridge Council before being elected MP for Ilford North in 2015. He was shadow Health Secretary from 2021 to 2024 before Labour's general election victory. He nearly lost his seat in 2024, winning by only 528 votes against an independent British-Palestinian candidate. As Secretary of State, he published a ten-year NHS plan centred on shifting care from hospitals to community settings.
Streeting's Scotland Section 30 rebuff strengthens the SNP's argument that a Holyrood majority is required to force Westminster's hand on a referendum, a dynamic that has shaped the SNP's 2026 manifesto framing.
Streeting resigned as Health Secretary on 14 May 2026, the first Cabinet-level departure of a week that saw six ministerial resignations in total. His letter stated: "Where we need vision, we have a vacuum. Where we need direction, we have drift," and declared it was "now clear that you will not lead the Labour Party into the next general election."
He is reportedly within reach of the 81-nomination threshold (20 per cent of the PLP) required to trigger a formal Labour leadership contest under the Collins-era rules, but had not filed them with the General Secretary by Thursday evening. The Telegraph reported he was among six Cabinet ministers who privately urged Starmer to oversee a managed transition before the resignation. Survation polling for LabourList shows him losing a head-to-head with Starmer among Labour members, in contrast to Andy Burnham's 61-39 lead. The contest's outcome will depend partly on whether the NEC grants Burnham a Makerfield by-election candidacy.
Streeting endorsed Andy Burnham rather than entering the Labour leadership contest himself, part of a bloc with Douglas Alexander, Darren Jones and David Lammy that Left Burnham the only serious contender as the NEC's nomination window ran from 9 to 15 July 2026.