NHS bosses fear fresh resident doctors’ strikes could embolden other staff

A picture


A looming fresh wave of strikes by resident doctors could encourage other NHS staff including nurses to take industrial action over pay, health service bosses fear.Resident doctors, formerly junior doctors, in England are threatening to stage stoppages until January in pursuit of their demand for a 29% pay rise, after 90% voted in favour in a ballot on a 55% turnout.The strikes will bring renewed disruption to the NHS, which has not faced a national strike by any staff since the last of the 11 walkouts by junior doctors ended on 2 July last year, just before Labour won power.The health secretary, Wes Streeting, and the British Medical Association (BMA) are at loggerheads over the strikes, which NHS chiefs say could lead to hundreds of thousands of appointments and operations being cancelled.Face-to-face talks on Tuesday afternoon left the gulf between them as wide as ever.

The BMA urged Streeting to “immediately negotiate a new pay deal” to replace the 5.4% rise he has awarded for 2025-26, but he is adamant that he will not reopen negotiations and stressed that the government is unable to afford to be more generous.Dr Melissa Ryan and Dr Ross Nieuwoudt, the co-chairs of the BMA’s resident doctors committee, said: “Doctors have spoken and spoken clearly.They won’t accept that they are worth a fifth less than they were in 2008.Our pay may have declined but our will to fight remains strong.

”Streeting needed to outline “a credible path to pay restoration”, they said, making up the significant loss in the real-terms value of their salaries over the last 16 years.Streeting said it was “disappointing that the BMA are threatening strike action that would harm patients and set back all the progress we’re making with the NHS”.He urged the union to think again and emphasised that resident doctors’ pay had risen by 28.9% over the last three years, in large part thanks to the 22% he gave them last year – for 2023/24 and 2024/25 – after they went on strike on 44 days under the previous Conservative administration.Other unions are already exploring the possibility of striking in order to get higher pay than their awards for this year.

The chief executive of the NHS Confederation, Matthew Taylor, highlighted “the risk that these strikes heighten tensions within different staffing groups, with nurses and other staff also discussing industrial action”.He also said strikes by resident doctors would imperil the delivery of the government’s key NHS pledge to voters – to restore the target that 92% of people waiting for planned hospital care get it within 18 weeks by 2029.The Royal College of Nursing and Unison – whose members were given 3.6% – are undertaking indicative ballots of their members to assess their willingness to strike.The RCN’s general secretary and chief executive, Prof Nicola Ranger, said: “Nursing staff are similarly voting in strong numbers and telling the government to go faster in repairing a damaged NHS and undervalued workforce.

“Avoiding strikes by talking, negotiating and planning together is the only sensible route open to ministers.”Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionThe chief executive of NHS Employers, Danny Mortimer, called the prospect of doctor strikes “a troubling development” and “the last thing health leaders wanted”.Patients would be left in pain and discomfort, he said.The Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) said that “strikes will have extremely serious consequences for patients.They should only ever be a last resort”.

Whitehall sources pointed out that the 55% turnout in the resident doctors’ ballot was lower than previous two ballots.Its result, however, means the NHS could face coordinated strikes by resident doctors and hospital consultants in the autumn.The latter are threatening to strike over the 4% pay rise they were awarded for this year, which the BMA called “an insult to senior doctors”.It is launching an indicative ballot of its consultant members in England on 21 July to explore their willingness to stage walkouts in pursuit of a higher salary increase.The BMA criticised the 5.

4% award resident doctors were given in May as “woefully inadequate” and “derisory”.It has made clear that resident doctors wanted their salaries increased by 29% over the next few years to make up for the erosion in their value since 2010.But it has stressed that they are seeking the 29% rise over several years and not for 2025-26 alone.A DHSC source highlighted that just under half of all resident doctors balloted had voted to strike.It said: “On a turnout of 55.

32%, with 90.05% in favour, that means only 49.78% voted in favour of strike action.”The potential strikes pose a serious problem for Streeting.If he increases the 5.

4% rise he awarded resident doctors in May, other NHS staff groups such as the RCN may press for higher amounts too.But if he does not budge, then resident doctors are likely to keep striking until they secure a higher award, as they did in 2023 and 2024.The tough public finances situation the government faces means he has limited room for manoeuvre, especially given that 1.5 million people work for the NHS in England, so any increase on sums already announced would be very expensive.
cultureSee all
A picture

Notting Hill carnival to go ahead this year after £1m funding boost

Cash will pay for extra measures to address ‘critical public safety concerns’ identified in independent review of festival Notting Hill carnival will go ahead this year after almost £1m of funding was raised to provide extra safety and infrastructure measures.City Hall, Kensington and Chelsea council and Westminster city council together provided £958,000 for the event following pleas from organisers for support, after a review recommended several changes to make the event safe.The chair of Notting Hill Carnival Ltd, Ian Comfort, who had appealed to the culture secretary, Lisa Nandy, for additional support, said the event’s future was secured just in time.The event always takes place over the August bank holiday weekend – which this year runs from Saturday 23 August to Monday 25 August.“Although this support comes just weeks before the event, it is a much-needed and welcome commitment,” Comfort said

A picture

Jon Stewart on Trump’s sweeping bill: ‘What is Ice going to do when they have real money?’

Late-night hosts delve into Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful bill” and consider his UFC proposal for next Independence Day.Jon Stewart returned to The Daily Show following the Fourth of July holiday in the US, during which Congress and Trump passed the so-called “One Big Beautiful Bill Act”. The legislation will, among other things, cut $930bn from the Medicaid budget, thus putting 11 million at risk of losing their health insurance, end Biden-era green energy credits and cut funding for 3 million kids’ school lunches.“It’s a lot of painful cuts on a lot of vulnerable populations,” Stewart summarized on Monday’s Daily Show. “But, to be fair, at least America will finally make a dent on the deficit

A picture

Is Possession about a harrowing divorce or a woman with an octopus kink? Why not both?

Andrzej Żuławski’s Possession is genuinely unhinged and utterly unforgettable. Żuławski called it “a very true-to-life autobiographical story”, which it is: when he made it in 1981, his own marriage had just collapsed, and as portraits of divorce go, Possession is a pretty spectacular one. But Żuławski also once described Possession as a film about a woman who “fucks with an octopus”, which it is too.A co-production between France and West Germany that was shot in West Berlin by a Polish director, Possession opens as Mark (Sam Neill), a spy, returns home and finds that his wife, Anna (Isabelle Adjani), wants a divorce. She’s having an affair, she reveals, ostensibly with Heinrich (Heinz Bennent) – exactly the kind of lofty weirdo you’d hate your wife to dump you for

A picture

Bayeux tapestry to return to Britain for first time in 900 years

The Bayeux tapestry will return to the UK for the first time in more than 900 years as part of a landmark loan agreement by Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron.The 70-metre embroidered cloth depicts the 1066 Norman invasion and Battle of Hastings, in which William the Conquerer took the English throne from Harold Godwinson and become the first Norman king of England.It will go on display at the British Museum from September next year, in exchange for the Anglo-Saxon treasures of the Sutton Hoo ship burial, the Lewis chessmen and other treasures.The loan is to be officially announced during the French president’s state visit on Wednesday at the British Museum, which has been closed to the public for the day. A blockbuster exhibition offering the chance to see the tapestry up close for the first time on UK soil since its creation is also expected to boost London’s visitor economy

A picture

The Guide #198: Finally, Superman meets his match

As comic book movies go, the Superman reboot is a biggie. It’s the first film from DC Studios, created by Warner Bros in 2022 in an attempt finally to rival Marvel. And it marks the start of the newly rebooted DC Universe, which has seen studio heads James Gunn and Peter Safran merrily culling storylines, cancelling projects, and recasting characters (to much online frothing).So why am I struggling to care? Is it the Russian-doll rebooting? Is it franchise fatigue? No, it’s Superman! The dullest hero of them all! Too good to be interesting, too strong to be truly fallible and definitely too Boy Scouty to be funny, I’ve always found him a less exciting prospect than other supers.But Gunn, who wrote and directed the film, seems to have a plan to make Superman less of a snooze

A picture

‘The army were on the streets – and we were bored’: Stiff Little Fingers on making Alternative Ulster

‘There wasn’t time to sit down and discuss politics and the future of the world, or your aims and aspirations. You just did stuff’I was approached by Gavin Martin, who ran a fanzine called Alternative Ulster. He wanted to put a flexi-disc on the cover and said: “Can we use Suspect Device?” That was going to be Still Little Fingers’ debut single so I told him he couldn’t have that, but I would write him a song.It’s the old adage – write about what you know. The opening line is: “There’s nothin’ for us in Belfast