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Tom Dolphin: BMA’s new chair who’s taking on government despite bid to be Labour MP

1 day ago
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If things had turned out differently, Tom Dolphin would now be a Labour MP, sitting on the government’s backbenches and supporting Wes Streeting, the health secretary,Instead he is the newly elected chair of the British Medical Association, the UK’s main doctors union,Its almost 55,000 resident doctor members in England, gave the government a huge headache this week by voting to strike for up to six months in pursuit of a 29% pay rise, starting with a five-day walkout from 25-30 July,In his first interview this week, Dolphin staunchly defended that 29% figure and said that strikes may go on for a very long time,Despite his Labour background he does not look set to be a pushover for a government desperate to avoid more hospital picket lines.

“They didn’t even shortlist me,” says Dolphin, a consultant anaesthetist, reflecting on his application to Labour to be a candidate in last year’s general election.He had relevant experience for a career on the green benches.He had acted as the agent for Dawn Butler, the Labour MP for Brent East, at the 2017, 2019 and 2024 general elections.He had chaired Butler’s constituency Labour party.And he had also chaired the BMA’s resident doctors committee in 2010-12, during a fractious period caused by Andrew Lansley’s ill-fated NHS shake-up.

How did he feel when Labour didn’t select him? “I was disappointed because it would have been a good opportunity to do good in the world.But at the same time I wasn’t terribly surprised because there were a large number of people applying who were extremely well qualified to be MPs who had spent a lot more time in the Labour party putting their time in.”That he had only joined Labour in 2012 and, unlike others, had never been a councillor may have counted against him, he thinks.But he explains that before 2012 he devoted his time and political energy to the BMA.“So I’m not surprised,” he adds philosophically.

“My politics are to the left; that’s not a secret”,Which politicians does he most admire? “I admire Barack Obama because of the way he mobilised from a position of being basically nowhere really in the Democratic party to mobilising a huge movement that took him to the White House,“And having seen her up close and seen the values she lives her life by and the effort she puts into things, I think Dawn Butler, my own MP, is a great MP,”That said, he is keen to stress that he is no Labour lackey,“Sometimes people draw a connection between the Labour party stuff I’ve done in the past and say ‘the BMA is a trade union’.

But the BMA is nonpartisan.It’s not part of the TUC and we don’t provide donations to parties.“The role I’m in now, it’s an apolitical role – a nonpartisan role I should say.As in, I don’t have any political affiliation as [the BMA’s] chair of council.”Who is the previously low-profile Dolphin? Most of the 47-year-old’s clinical work is as part of a team at St Mary’s hospital in west London that does trauma surgery: “A fair amount of stabbings, occasional shootings, assaults [and] falls from height.

”His new role means he will step down as the chair of the local negotiating committee that represents his NHS trust’s 2,000 doctors of all levels in discussions on terms and conditions.His hinterland? “I go to the cinema a lot.I don’t have a lot of time to do other things.I did skydiving.The BMA has expanded to fill most of my time.

I enjoy dinner with friends, [especially] friends I know will not talk about medicine the whole time,”He is married, with a husband,He grew up in Essex,His father was a paramedic, his mother a primary school teacher,Dolphin is a firm supporter of trans rights.

In 2020 he warned that trans people were “being subjected to a moral panic” akin to that previously experienced by the gay community.He opposed the ban on puberty blockers and sparked controversy within the BMA last year when he co-authored a motion that led the union to decide to undertake a “critique” of Dr Hilary Cass’s landmark review of the care of gender-questioning under-18s in England.The BMA review, which has prompted strong criticism from many doctors, remains unfinished.After 44 days of strikes in 2023 and 2024 that hugely disrupted NHS services, Streeting gave junior doctors – since renamed resident doctors – a 22% pay rise for 2023-24 and 2024-25.Now the same medics want another 29%, or 26% if the minister’s 5.

4% award for this year is taken into account – only this time public support seems to be ebbing away.With new strikes looming, what lessons does Dolphin draw from that campaign; that strikes succeed? “That being united and showing solidarity is a powerful thing that can even out the imbalance in power between you and your employer.If people stick together and show a united front, that’s powerful in terms of sorting out problems.”Dolphin, Streeting’s would-be colleague turned adversary, is in this for the long haul.
politicsSee all
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Genocide prevention could become legal priority for UK government

Clearer legal obligations on the British government to prevent genocides, and to determine if one is occurring rather than leaving such judgments to international courts, are to be considered by a cross-party group of lawyers, politicians and academics under the chairmanship of Helena Kennedy.The new group, known as the standing group on atrocity crimes, says its genesis does not derive from a specific conflict such as Gaza or Xinjiang, but a wider concern that such crime is spreading as international law loses its purchase.The move will also be seen as part of a wider drive to push back against those trying to downgrade the status of international law in the UK, often using criticism of the attorney general, Richard Hermer, as a lever.The aim is also to encourage the government to make atrocity prevention a clearer priority for the Foreign Office. The Foreign Office has established an atrocity prevention unit but its profile and funding are small

about 17 hours ago
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‘It’s very personal to me’: Darren Jones on his £500m plan to fight child poverty

Darren Jones has spent much of the past few months doing the traditional, hard-nosed job of a Treasury chief secretary – fighting line-by-line budget battles with ministers. But with last month’s fraught spending review over, he has turned his attention to an issue closer to his heart for his latest policy.“The council estate I grew up on was one of the neighbourhoods that was picked by the New Labour government because it was so deprived, essentially, in terms of income and educational outcomes,” he says.The 38-year-old MP for Bristol North West grew up in a flat on the Lawrence Weston estate. His mother was a hospital administrator and his father a security guard, and he has previously spoken about how money was sometimes tight at home

1 day ago
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Charlotte Church joins unions and campaigners in opposing ban on Palestine Action

The singer Charlotte Church and veteran peace campaigners are among hundreds who have signed a letter describing the move to ban the group Palestine Action as “a major assault on our freedoms”.Trade unionists, activists and politicians have also added their names to the letter opposing the group’s proscription under anti-terrorism laws last week.Church said: “I sign this letter because history shows us that when people stand up to injustice, those in power often reach for the same old playbook: label dissent as dangerous, criminalise protest, and try to silence movements for change by branding them as extremists or terrorists.“From the suffragettes to the civil rights movement, what was once condemned as radical disruption is now celebrated as moral courage. We must remember this pattern – and refuse to let our rights be eroded by fear

1 day ago
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UK government announces £63m funding for EV charging infrastructure

The transport secretary has promised to make it “easier and cheaper” to buy electric cars, as the government announces £63m worth of funding to help build charging infrastructure.Heidi Alexander said on Sunday she wanted to make it more affordable to switch to electric vehicles as she announced new money for councils and other bodies to spend on facilities to charge cars.She announced £63m worth of funding for EV charging, with officials also finalising plans for a £700m package of subsidies to bring down the cost of buying a new electric car.The money still falls short of the £950m pledged by the Conservatives for motorway charging points, however, which the Labour government scrapped last month, accusing the previous government of having failed to set aside funding for it.UK-made EVs are expected to receive the most generous subsidies under the scheme, which would probably benefit the Japanese carmaker Nissan, which is gearing up to produce a new version of its Leaf electric car in Sunderland

1 day ago
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Why Labour should target happiness alongside economic growth | Heather Stewart

Every parent who battled their way through home schooling during the long months of lockdown, and every vulnerable person forced to shield themselves away, can have had little doubt that the Covid pandemic was an unhappy time.But research by the non-profit consultancy Pro Bono Economics (PBE), suggests that the nation’s wellbeing has never fully recovered from the plunge it took in mid-2020.Happiness – or wellbeing, or life satisfaction – seems a slippery concept to measure, but economists have been studying and tracking how the public are feeling about their lives for decades.In the UK, the Office for National Statistics (ONS) has done this since 2011 by asking four questions, including: “Overall, how satisfied are you with your life?” and: “Overall, how anxious did you feel yesterday?”As the first lockdown took hold, the anxiety measure spiked, not surprisingly, while the other three, which track respondents’ satisfaction, happiness and sense of purpose, all had marked declines.Given the shadow the pandemic cast over so many people’s lives, it feels intuitively right that on none of these four metrics has wellbeing in the UK returned to the pre-Covid equilibrium

1 day ago
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Most people in France, Germany, Italy and Spain would support UK rejoining EU, poll finds

A decade after MPs voted to hold the referendum that led to Britain leaving the European Union, a poll has found majorities in the bloc’s four largest member states would support the UK rejoining – but not on the same terms it had before.The YouGov survey of six western European countries, including the UK, also confirms that a clear majority of British voters now back the country rejoining the bloc – but only if it can keep the opt-outs it previously enjoyed.The result, the pollster said, was a “public opinion impasse”, even if there seems precious little likelihood, for the time being, of the UK’s Labour government, which this year negotiated a “reset” with the bloc, attempting a return to the EU.YouGov’s EuroTrack survey showed that at least half of people asked across the four largest EU nations – France, Germany, Italy and Spain – supported the UK being allowed to rejoin, with percentages ranging from 51% in Italy to 53% in France, 60% in Spain and 63% in Germany.Asked whether Britain should be allowed back in on the conditions it enjoyed when it left, however, including not having to adopt the euro currency and remaining outside the Schengen passport-free zone, the numbers changed significantly

1 day ago
foodSee all
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Lapin, Bristol: ‘We’re not in Cafe Rouge now’ – restaurant review | Grace Dent on restaurants

2 days ago
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It’s sexy! It’s Swedish! It’s everywhere! How princess cake conquered America

2 days ago
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Benjamina Ebuehi’s recipe for passion fruit jaffa cakes | The sweet spot

4 days ago
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Born a star: the juicy history of the passion fruit martini

5 days ago
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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for roast summer vegetable, herb and pearl barley salad | A kitchen in Rome

5 days ago
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Australian supermarket chicken nuggets taste test: from ‘mushy’ to ‘super good’

5 days ago