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BMA chair denies using junior doctors’ strikes to progress political career

1 day ago
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The head of the doctors’ union has denied he is pursuing further strike action to progress his own political career after the Labour party overlooked him as a prospective candidate for parliament.The British Medical Association has announced that resident doctors – formerly known as junior doctors – in England will stage another five-day strike from 7am on 17 December until 7am on 22 December.It will be the 14th strike by doctors since March 2023 and follows a similar five-day action last month, which led to warnings that the NHS may have to cut frontline staff and offer fewer appointments and operations if the strikes continued.The health secretary, Wes Streeting, has called the move a “cynical attempt to wreck Christmas”, while Dr Chris Streather, a regional medical director at NHS England, said it was “highly irresponsible”.Speaking on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Dr Tom Dolphin, the chair of the BMA, denied he was using the junior doctors to pursue a political cause.

Dolphin acted as the agent for Dawn Butler, the leftwing Labour MP for Brent East, at the 2017, 2019 and 2024 general elections, chaired Butler’s constituency Labour party and applied to be a candidate in 2024 but was not shortlisted.“My political career isn’t the relevant thing here,” Dolphin said.“I’m here representing a trade union.Trade unions are a force for good in society.They’re about workers coming together to demand fair treatment.

They’re why we’ve got paid sick leave and paid maternity leave.They’re why we’ve got safety regulations at work.They’re why we’ve even got the weekend.And I’m here representing a trade union.That’s the purpose of me being here.

“We’ve got resident doctors coming together to demand fair treatment, to demand the opportunity to be able to train in the UK and to become specialists, become GPs, and they’re not currently being given that.They have repeatedly asked the government for that and they’re not being given that opportunity.That’s why we’re back on strike again.”Pay for resident doctors has risen almost 30% over the past three years, including by 22% under Labour.The BMA argues doctors need a further 26% increase over the next few years to make up for the erosion in their pay in real terms since 2008.

Earlier on the programme, Streather said the strike would harm patients.“It’s eroding the goodwill towards resident doctors that comes from other staff – from consultant staff, from nursing staff and other clinical staff – but also from the public.And in the long term it’s not going to help the high regard with which the profession’s held by the public.So it’s highly irresponsible,” he said.Dolphin said thousands of doctors had been turned away from internal medicine training posts and there were more than 30,000 doctors competing for about 10,000 places this year.

He said UK medical graduates should be prioritised for training posts in the future.On Monday night, Streeting said the BMA was threatening strikes at the busiest time of the year without having had a single conversation with the government.“These strikes are in no one’s interest and there is no moral justification for them,” he said.“Resident doctors should ignore the BMA’s attempts to turn them into the Grinch who stole Christmas.My door has always been open.

I have never walked away from the table and I stand ready to do a deal that puts patients first this Christmas.”
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The fight to see clearly through big tech’s echo chambers

Hello, and welcome to TechScape. I’m your host, Blake Montgomery. Today, I’m mulling over whether to upgrade my iPhone 11 Pro. In tech news, there’s a narrative battle afoot in Silicon Valley, tips on avoiding the yearly smartphone upgrade cycle and new devices altogether, and artificial intelligence’s use in government, for better and for worse.The encroachment of technology can feel inevitable

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‘The biggest decision yet’: Jared Kaplan on allowing AI to train itself

Humanity will have to decide by 2030 whether to take the “ultimate risk” of letting artificial intelligence systems train themselves to become more powerful, one of the world’s leading AI scientists has said.Jared Kaplan, the chief scientist and co-owner of the $180bn (£135bn) US startup Anthropic, said a choice was looming about how much autonomy the systems should be given to evolve.The move could trigger a beneficial “intelligence explosion” – or be the moment humans end up losing control.In an interview about the intensely competitive race to reach artificial general intelligence (AGI) – sometimes called superintelligence – Kaplan urged international governments and society to engage in what he called “the biggest decision”.Anthropic is part of a pack of frontier AI companies including OpenAI, Google DeepMind, xAI, Meta and Chinese rivals led by DeepSeek, racing for AI dominance

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Charlie Kirk tops Wikipedia’s list of most-read articles in 2025

Wikipedia’s article on Charlie Kirk was the most read on the online encyclopedia this year, as users sought out information on the conservative activist.People viewed the entry on Kirk nearly 45m times, many after he was shot at a university campus debate on 10 September.Although Kirk was a well-known figure in the US as co-founder of the Turning Point USA organisation, his death attracted headline coverage around the world. More than 40% of the views for the most-read article on English-language Wikipedia in 2025 came from outside the US, according to data from the Wikimedia Foundation, the non-profit organisation that operates the website.The second-most read is a regular feature in Wikipedia’s annual list: notable deaths of the year

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Age of the ‘scam state’: how an illicit, multibillion-dollar industry has taken root in south-east Asia

For days before the explosions began, the business park had been emptying out. When the bombs went off, they took down empty office blocks and demolished echoing, multi-cuisine food halls. Dynamite toppled a four-storey hospital, silent karaoke complexes, deserted gyms and dorm rooms.So came the end of KK Park, one of south-east Asia’s most infamous “scam centres”, press releases from Myanmar’s junta declared. The facility had held tens of thousands of people, forced to relentlessly defraud people around the world

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Siri-us setback: Apple’s AI chief steps down as company lags behind rivals

Apple’s head of artificial intelligence, John Giannandrea, is stepping down from the company. The move comes as the Silicon Valley giant has lagged behind its competitors in rolling out generative AI features, in particular its voice assistant Siri. Apple made the announcement on Monday, thanking Giannandrea for his seven-year tenure at the company.Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO, said his fellow executive helped the company “in building and advancing our AI work” and allowing Apple to “continue to innovate”. Giannandrea will be replaced by longtime AI researcher Amar Subramanya

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‘It’s going much too fast’: the inside story of the race to create the ultimate AI

On the 8.49am train through Silicon Valley, the tables are packed with young people glued to laptops, earbuds in, rattling out code.As the northern California hills scroll past, instructions flash up on screens from bosses: fix this bug; add new script. There is no time to enjoy the view. These commuters are foot soldiers in the global race towards artificial general intelligence – when AI systems become as or more capable than highly qualified humans

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Lack of apology for schoolboy ‘banter’ speaks volumes about Nigel Farage | Letters

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MPs launch inquiry into Andrew’s lease arrangements at Royal Lodge – as it happened

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Is David Lammy persuaded by his own jury trials proposal? Not sure. But he said it anyway | John Crace

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UK ministers aim to ban cryptocurrency political donations over anonymity risks

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David Lammy tells of ‘traumatic’ racial abuse in youth after Farage allegations

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Angela Rayner to lay amendment to speed up workers’ rights bill

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