Podcast: Who Who Is Wes Streeting and Why Is He Like That?

Last month I returned to the fabulous Red Medicine podcast to talk all things Wes Streeting. I joined the socialist writer Jonas Marvin and host Sam Kelly to discuss the UK Secretary of State for Health and Social Care’s political background, possible motivations, and current challenges.

Red Medicine always offers a great deep dive into health-related topics of the day. Streeting’s alignment with transphobic pseudoscience and conversion proponents means that obviously I had a lot to say about his impact on trans healthcare. However, our conversation was offered a great opportunity to grapple with the wider context of Streeting’s ideology and actions, discussing wider matters such as class, party politics, and trade unionism: highly relevant given current discourse around the proposed strike by resident doctors! I also talk a little about my encounters with Streeting in the 2000s, back when I was a campaigner with the National Union of Students’ LGBT and Women’s Campaigns.

You can listen to Red Medicine through all the major podcast platforms – or through the link below.


You can also hear me talking about the Cass Review on a previous episode of the podcast in June 2024.

Podcast: Reviewing the Cass Review

I am featured in the most recent episode of Red Medicine, a podcast about the politics of health, medicine, and the body.

The interview features a deep dive into the Cass Review, including the contexts of trans healthcare and the anti-trans moral panic, as well as the underlying assumptions and methodological shortcomings of Review’s final report on healthcare for trans and gender-questioning young people. We explore how the Review is constructed as credible in spite of its flaws, plus how and why that is dangerous both for young trans people and for good science.

You can listen to the report through the Simplecast link above, or alternatively through Apple Podcasts or Spotify.

More information on the topic is available in my post What’s wrong with the Cass Review?