Rishi Sunak will vow to get a grip on the NHS crisis and try to show he has a plan to revive the UK’s fortunes in his first big speech as PM today.

Trying to get on the front foot in 2023 amid a crippling wave of strikes, Mr Sunak will acknowledge the massive pressures facing hospitals and lay out his broad approach to improving public services.

He will also bid to demonstrate he has a wider vision for Britain’s future, announcing his ambition for everyone to study maths until at least the age of 18.

The premier has been given a glimmer of hope in a new poll. Although Labour has an eye-watering 20-point lead overall, the Redfield & Wilton research found that Mr Sunak has leapfrogged Keir Starmer as the public’s preferred PM.

The Tory leader was the choice of 38 per cent, compared to 36 per cent for Sir Keir – in an apparent sign that he is stabilising the government following the disastrous Liz Truss era.  

However, the Conservative infighting that blighted 2022 has already resurfaced, with Ms Truss’s allies making clear their anger that Mr Sunak has ditched her proposals for a radical childcare overhaul.

Mr Sunak will set out his broad approach to resolving the pressure on the health service, including a renewed focus on tackling the delayed discharges clogging up hospital beds

Mr Sunak will set out his broad approach to resolving the pressure on the health service, including a renewed focus on tackling the delayed discharges clogging up hospital beds

The premier has been given a glimmer of hope in a new poll. Although Labour has an eye-watering 20-point lead overall, the Redfield & Wilton research found that Mr Sunak has leapfrogged Keir Starmer as the public's preferred PM

The premier has been given a glimmer of hope in a new poll. Although Labour has an eye-watering 20-point lead overall, the Redfield & Wilton research found that Mr Sunak has leapfrogged Keir Starmer as the public’s preferred PM

Rishi Sunak’s ‘big idea’ of compulsory maths to the age of 18 is mocked as a ‘distraction’ 

Rishi Sunak‘s ‘big idea’ of making maths compulsory to the age of 18 was mocked today as a ‘dead cat’ to distract from the NHS crisis and winter of discontent.

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In his first major speech as PM this afternoon, Mr Sunak will promise to equip children for the ‘jobs of the future’ by combating high rates of innumeracy in the UK.

Young people will be forced to take ‘some form’ of maths delivered either through new courses or existing qualifications such as A-levels, T-levels and Core Maths. For most the drive is likely to involve practical skills rather than algebra.

But Opposition parties dismissed the initiative as ’empty’ and an ‘admission of failure’ – while Tories urged Mr Sunak to focus on tackling illegal immigration instead.   

Nigel Farage swiped that ‘quadratic equations’ would not help fix ‘broken Britain’. 

In his speech, Mr Sunak will signal a renewed focus on tackling the delayed discharges clogging up hospital beds.

He will pledge to bring forward an ‘urgent care recovery plan’ later this month, coupled with a recovery plan for primary care to improve access to GPs.

The PM will warn the country cannot afford the double-digit pay rises demanded by militant union bosses, and also confirm plans for ‘tough’ measures to limit strike disruption.

But he will also set out his strategy for building a better Britain, including plans to make maths compulsory to the age of 18 in order to boost skills and productivity.

He will say the UK is an outlier and it is time to ‘reimagine our approach to numeracy’ – and warn that the current approach to maths is ‘letting our children down’.

He is expected to say: ‘This is personal for me. Every opportunity I’ve had in life began with the education I was so fortunate to receive.

‘And it’s the single most important reason why I came into politics: to give every child the highest possible standard of education.

‘Thanks to the reforms we’ve introduced since 2010, and the hard work of so many excellent teachers, we’ve made incredible progress.

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‘With the right plan – the right commitment to excellence – I see no reason why we cannot rival the best education systems in the world’.

Mr Sunak will concede that introducing maths to 18 will take longer than the two years remaining in this Parliament.

He will put emphasis on the importance of numeracy, stressing ‘our children’s jobs will require more analytical skills’.

The Prime Minister will say: ‘One of the biggest changes in mindset we need in education today is to reimagine our approach to numeracy.

‘Right now, just half of all 16 to 19-year-olds study any maths at all. Yet in a world where data is everywhere and statistics underpin every job, our children’s jobs will require more analytical skills than ever before.

‘And letting our children out into the world without those skills, is letting our children down’.

The Government does not apparently envisage making maths A-level compulsory for all 16-year-olds and further detail will be set out in due course.

Ministers are instead exploring existing routes, such as the Core Maths qualifications and T-Levels, as well as more innovative options.

Whitehall sources said the NHS crisis has risen to the top of Mr Sunak’s domestic agenda in recent weeks and he is now involved in intensive daily meetings to ‘get under the bonnet’ of the NHS.

‘It is something he will be very focused on this month, and probably next month as well,’ a source said.

The speech comes against a bleak backdrop of problems in the NHS following the pandemic. A string of hospital trusts and ambulance services have recently declared critical incidents as they struggle to deal with the combination of record backlogs and surging flu and Covid cases.

Some health chiefs have claimed delays are leading to 500 excess deaths a week.

Downing Street said ministers had been ‘upfront’ with the public that the NHS would face an ‘extremely challenging winter’ following the pandemic.

Mr Sunak’s official spokesman said the PM was ‘confident’ that the health service had the funding it needed, but acknowledged that some people would face long delays for treatment.

‘We expected to see backlogs and waiting times go up… that is what we are seeing play out,’ said the spokesman.

‘We are confident we are providing the NHS with the funding it needs to deal with these issues,’ he added. Asked if the NHS is in crisis, he said it was ‘an unprecedented challenge’.

Health Secretary Steve Barclay said the Government is focused on ‘getting the people out of the hospital who don’t need to be there’ in order to ‘speed up the ambulance handover delays’.

Mr Sunak’s plans will involve a big focus on improving social care to make it easier to discharge elderly patients

DailyMail

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