SNP would set maximum price for essential foods, says Swinney as he fears costs affecting nutrition in Scotland – UK politics live | Politics

Swinney says SNP would set maximum prices for essential food items, using public health powers, on nutrition grounds

Swinney says people are struggling to afford food. That is an “outrage”, he says.

He cannot set prices at the till, he says.

But he says the Scottish government does have powers over public health. He goes on:

double quotation markIt is now impacting on our nation’s nutrition. That is a public health issue and I have public health powers, so I can answer today that, if re-elected, your SNP government will use our public health powers to set a maximum price for essential food items, reducing the price of the weekly shop, putting more money in people’s pockets.

Bread. Milk. Cheese. Eggs. Rice. Chicken. Everyday items that make up a decent diet. Necessities that no one should ever have beyond their means. That’s what you get with a government on Scotland side.

Key events

A&E waiting times in England narrowly miss improvement target for March, despite reaching 5-year low, NHS figures show

The government and NHS has missed its target on four-hour waits in emergency departments in England, the Press Association reports. PA says:

double quotation markHealth secretary Wes Streeting said the target was “within touching distance” and insisted that the NHS is “finally moving in the right direction”.

Data published this morning shows that 77.1% of patients in England were seen within four hours in A&E departments last month, up from 74.1% in February.

The government and NHS England had set an interim target of March 2026 for 78% of patients attending A&E to be admitted, discharged or transferred within four hours.

In recent years, the health service has set interim goals for the four-hour standard to bridge the gap between current performance and the 95% target.

Streeting said: “Despite record pressures and strikes, we have come within a cat’s whisker of the ambitious targets we set ourselves. But it’s not enough. There are still too many patients waiting far too long. The NHS is on the road to recovery, and my foot is pressing down hard on the accelerator.”

Speaking to LBC, Streeting said the target was “within touching distance”, adding: “I’m very competitive, and so I’m frustrated because I wanted to kind of come in ahead.

“But the fact is, I mean, regardless of all of that – and I definitely want to give credit to the staff here – we have nonetheless, got the best ambulance response times we’ve seen in half a decade, waiting lists at the lowest levels in three years, and the best A&E performance in four, so at least the NHS is finally moving in the right direction.”

The waiting list for routine hospital treatment fell for the fourth month in a row, the figures show. (See 10.06am.)

In its news release on today’s figures, NHS England said that, despite the March 2026 target being missed, A&E waiting times were at a five-year low.

Source: theguardian.com

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