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From bold plan to timely scan campaign imagery showing a man in a suit signing a document and a patient having a scan

 

Turning Point for Cancer

As the summer hots up, the UK Government is getting ready to publish England's NHS 10-Year Health Plan and is currently writing the National Cancer Plan.

Many of you shared your views and lived experiences in the Department of Health and Social Care's call for evidence earlier this year, but we must keep campaigning to ensure that the plan is the turning point for cancer we need.

We're asking everyone to join us by signing an open letter to Wes Streeting, and we need your help!

If we don't act now, we risk a National Cancer Plan that is only a sticking plaster for the problems facing cancer research and care, lacking the ambition and the funding it needs to deliver real change for people affected by cancer, now and in the future. 

Campaign prescription stating its time to act on cancer

 

Get your Turning Point for Cancer campaigning tools

 
Campaigning is about bringing people together, so this summer, we’re harnessing power in numbers to amplify our message. 

We’re empowering you as a community to get as many signatures on the open letter as you possibly can. As regions, you’ll compete for the most signatures. 

Together, as a campaigning force you’ll be a part of making sure the National Cancer Plan is a turning point for cancer.

Click on the campaign pictures to save them to your device and share on social media.

If you need a copy of the campaign toolkit, please email campaigning@cancer.org.uk so we can make sure you have the right link for your team!

Our manifesto for longer, better lives

Cancer cases are increasing, patients face unacceptable waits and unequal access to treatment. Life-saving research faces a £1bn funding gap over the next decade. We need to see action.

This general election, we asked all political parties to commit to the long-term change needed for people affected by cancer, by backing our pledges for longer, better lives:

  1. Back research: Set out a plan to close the more than £1bn funding gap for research into cancer over the next decade. 
  2. End cancers caused by smoking: Raise the age of sale of tobacco and fund a world-leading programme of measures to help people who smoke to quit. 
  3. Drive earlier diagnoses: Implement proven measures, including a lung screening programme, to diagnose cancers early and reduce inequalities in access. 
  4. End the waits: Ensure cancer wait time targets are met across England. 
  5. Lead on cancer: Publish a long-term cancer strategy for England and Establish a National Cancer Council, accountable to the Prime Minister, to drive cross-government action on cancer. 

Our five Turning Point pledges come straight from our 2023 manifesto for cancer research and care that set out the measures and commitments the next government can make to help prevent 20,000 cancer deaths every year by 2040.

Read all about it here 

 

Ambassadors campaigning on an iPad

 

Developing yourself

Your personal reflection record is a helpful guide and place for you to log your objective, learnings, skills and achievements from your time volunteering.

Whether you've been campaigning with us for 10 years or 10 minutes, this pack was designed for you. Add to your skills builder pack directly from your device or print for a paper copy - it's up to you!

 

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Catch up on Policy Presents & other workshops

Watch our most recent Policy Presents to learn more from our experts about policy and campaigning at Cancer Research UK and build your skills as an Ambassador.

 

Politics across the UK

Britain is home to one of the oldest governments in the world - the Palace of Westminster has been a centre of power for over 900 years. Visit the UK Parliament website and you'll learn that nobody set out to create Parliament. It developed naturally out of the daily political needs of the English King and his government. 

In the 21st century, how politics defines our lives depends on where we live. Find out more about politics in England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland below.

This section is in development - for now please follow these links to learn more.