The prime
minister has defended her record and set out her plans for the coming year, as
she prepares to reshuffle her cabinet.
Speaking on
the Andrew Marr Show, she defended NHS funding amid questions over the handling
of winter pressures.
Mrs May also
defended rail fair rises and pledged parole reform after the decision to
release sex attacker John Worboys.
On the NHS,
Labour said the PM lacked a plan to get "people off the trolleys".
Theresa May
confirmed a cabinet reshuffle was imminent, but refused to give any detail.
She is
expected to replace Damian Green, who was sacked as first secretary of state in
December, but keep key figures such as Chancellor Philip Hammond and Foreign
Secretary Boris Johnson.
In a
wide-ranging interview, Mrs May also:
Set out
plans to create a new Northern Forest stretching from Liverpool to Hull
Warned Toby
Young about his language amid calls for him to be sacked from his job at
university regulator for tweets about women
Said she
knew one of John Worboys' victims, and she wanted to bring "greater
openness" to the parole system
Dropped a
manifesto pledge to hold a vote on the fox-hunting ban during this parliament
Confirmed
President Trump would be coming to the UK
Said she
wanted to fight the next general election, due in 2022
'More to do'
On the NHS,
Theresa May said thousands of cancelled operations in January were "part
of the plan" for coping with pressures on the health service.
She said she
wanted cancelled operations to be "reinstated as soon as possible,"
but added the government was "making sure that those who most urgently
need care" get it quickly.
Mr Marr
disputed the idea that urgent care was being delivered in time, raising the
case of Leah Butler-Smith and her mother, who, having suffered a stroke, waited
an hour in an ambulance and a further four in A&E before seeing a doctor.
"If I'd
been waiting for five hours before I'd seen a doctor after my stroke I would
not be here talking to you. This is about life and death and up and down the
country people are having horrendous experiences of the NHS," he said.
The prime
minister said she had not heard of the specific case and so could not comment,
and insisted that the NHS was delivering more than ever before.
"But of
course nothing's perfect and there is more for us to do", she added.
Mrs May also
defended the rail fair increase announced at the beginning of January, saying
that rises were in line with inflation.
"For
every pound that somebody pays on a ticket in the railways, 97p of that goes
back into investment in the railways." she said.
Presentational
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Susana
Mendonca, BBC political correspondent
Theresa May
wants to reset her premiership after a difficult few months. The message she
wants people to hear is that her government is about more than just Brexit.
So plans to
develop a new forest on land between Liverpool and Hull have been announced and
she's kicking a free vote on fox hunting into the long grass.
But old
problems haven't gone away. The New Year has brought with it another deep
winter crisis in the NHS with tens of thousands of operations cancelled.
Mrs May told
Andrew Marr that postponing operations was all "part of the plan" to
help the NHS cope. But Labour's shadow health secretary Jon Ashworth said that
the current crisis was "entirely predictable and preventable" and
blamed government cuts.
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