Streeting refuses to rule out bid to become PM - as he criticises UK tax burden
He may be dealing with strikes in the NHS and huge reforms of the health service, but the health secretary has found some time for a chat with The Observer.
And as you would expect, one of main questions on the lips of his interview was about his ambitions to succeed Sir Keir Starmer as prime minister.
Wes Streeting said: "The closer I see that job and the pressure on Keir and the demands of that job, the more I wonder why anyone would want it, which is definitely not the answer I would have given as a 15-year-old when I joined the Labour party."
But he immediately clarified to journalist Rachel Sylvester that he is not ruling himself out.
"I'm diplomatically ducking the question to avoid any more of the silly soap opera we've had in the last few months," Streeting said.
Asked if thinks Britain would vote for a gay prime minister, he said: "One of the things Iʼm proud of about this country, is that we have an atheist prime minister with a Jewish wife who succeeded our first Hindu prime minister who succeeded a number of women.
"I think this country is an inclusive, welcoming, decent and kind country."
Pushed for a yes or no, Streeting said: "Yes, but I want to make it explicitly clear that this is not a pitch or a job application. The prime minister's got my absolute support."
The health secretary was also about the prospect of joining the customs union with the EU - something Sir Keir Starmer has ruled out.
He said: "We've taken a massive economic hit leaving the European Union.
"I'm really uncomfortable with the level of taxation in this country. We're asking a lot of individual taxpayers, we're asking a lot of businesses."
Noting the size of the national debt, Streeting argued that the best way to grow the economy is "a deeper trading relationship with the EU".