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Ministers brace for NHS strikes after doctors denounce ‘derisory’ pay rise

1 day ago
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Ministers are bracing themselves for a potential wave of NHS strikes in England after doctors denounced pay rises of up to 5.4% this year as “derisory” and threatened to take action in protest.Teaching unions, after teachers were awarded a 4% increase, also responded angrily at the government’s refusal to fully fund the deal and warned that it would damage the quality of education that pupils received.The largest union said it planned to take the first step towards possible industrial action.The decision to award 1.

4 million NHS staff including nurses, midwives and ambulance workers a smaller rise – 3.6% – also provoked criticism.The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) said it was “grotesque” to hand doctors a bigger increase than nurses who earned less than them.Wes Streeting, the health secretary, and Bridget Phillipson, the education secretary, sought to promote the rises by highlighting that they represented the second time public sector personnel had received above-inflation pay rises since Labour took power last July.Inflation rose sharply from 2.

6% in March to 3,5% in April – the highest level since January 2024,The pay rises are bigger than the 2,8% ministers had previously maintained was the most they could afford for 2025-26,They are broadly the amounts recommended by the independent public sector pay review bodies.

But the British Medical Association (BMA) said increases of 4% for consultants, GPs, specialists and speciality doctors and 4% plus £750 for resident doctors (formerly known as junior doctors) were “woefully inadequate” and showed ministers’ “lack of commitment to restoring doctors’ lost pay”.The BMA told Streeting he needed to open talks and explain how he would end the significant erosion in the real-terms value of salaries that doctors had experienced since 2010.“The health secretary can avert strike action by negotiating with us and agreeing a route to full pay restoration,” said Prof Philip Banfield, the union’s chair of council.The 4% plus £750 deal offered to the BMA’s estimated 55,000 resident doctor members was inadequate because it did too little to reverse historic pay erosion, the union added.The BMA recently initiated a ballot of resident doctors on their willingness to strike for better pay, even before they received details of the offer.

Sources close to Streeting said that resident doctors’ leaders had recently said 5% was the minimum rise for this year they would find acceptable, but were rejecting one that equated to a 5.4% rise.He was frustrated that they were “moving the goalposts” with their public comments, they said.The BMA denies that the resident doctors’ committee made any such assertions [see footnote].The Hospital Consultants and Specialists Association said the 4% for consultants was “a real-terms pay cut for senior doctors compared to inflation”.

It will hold a consultative ballot to assess its members’ readiness to take industrial action over their salaries, as will the RCN and GMB unions.The National Education Union (NEU) warned it would “register a dispute” with the government unless it agreed to fully fund the award for teachers.As things stand schools in England will have to find £400m of savings from their existing budgets, with Phillipson providing £615m extra to cover the bulk of the cost.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 promotionLuke Sibieta, a research fellow at the Institute for Fiscal Studies, said the £400m equated to about 1% of schools’ budgets.“This is a bit less than was assumed a few months ago in the government’s proposals to the pay review body, which will probably come as a slight relief to schools,” he added.

Daniel Kebede, the NEU’s general secretary, said in many schools the 1% would result in “cuts in service provision to children and young people, job losses, and additional workloads for an already overstretched profession”.He said: “Unless the government commits to fully funding the pay rise then it is likely the NEU will register a dispute with the government on the issue of funding, and campaign to ensure every parent understands the impact of a cut in the money available to schools, and that every politician understands this too.”Phillipson defended forcing schools to part-fund the award, saying the government was “taking tough decisions” on spending and value for money.“School leaders must meet the challenge too.That’s why we are asking schools to fund the first 1% of the pay rise through improved productivity and smarter spending,” she said.

“We know this is achievable,There are schools already driving down their costs and making the savings needed,”Pepe Di’Iasio, the general secretary of the Association of School and College Leaders, welcomed the 4% increase and that the award had been announced earlier than in previous years, but he also criticised the failure to fund it,“If the government really thinks it will be possible to bridge this funding gap through ‘improved productivity and smarter spending’ then it is mistaken,Schools have already spent many years cutting costs to the bone and beyond,” he said.

This article was amended on 23 May 2025 to reflect the position of the BMA, which contacted the Guardian after publication to deny that its resident doctors’ committee had ever expressed that it would find a 5% pay rise this year acceptable.
cultureSee all
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The Guide #192: How reality TV and streaming has shaped 21st-century TV

To try to get our heads round the fact that we’re somehow a quarter of the way into the 21st century, the Guide is running a miniseries of newsletters looking at how pop culture has changed over the past 25 years. We tackled music last month and we’ll be looking at the state of film next month, before sharing our favourite culture of the century so far, and asking for yours too, in July.Today, we’re taking the temperature of TV. Like the music industry, television has seen its entire business model upended by the streaming revolution this century. That has meant what was once a universal activity – an entire nation sat around the glow of the old cathode ray tube – has been replaced by people watching a galaxy of different shows, or watching the same show but at completely different times

about 17 hours ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Trump’s tax bill: ‘If this is the beautiful bill, I’d hate to see the ugly one’

Late-night hosts tore into the House’s all-nighter session to pass Donald Trump’s so-called “big, beautiful bill” of Republican talking points.Thursday marked “another wildly destructive day in Washington DC”, said Jimmy Kimmel that evening. “They pulled another all-nighter in the House last night, where they passed Trump’s big, beautiful bill. And man oh man, if this is the beautiful bill, I’d hate to see the ugly one.“I’m not sure which part of the bill is the most beautiful – the part where we take food from hungry kids?” he continued

about 18 hours ago
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Sónar festival hit with artist boycott over alleged links to Israel

Sónar, one of Europe’s leading electronic music festivals, is under threat after dozens of musicians and DJs announced a boycott over the event’s parent company KKR’s alleged links to Israel.More than 70 artists signed an open letter to the festival, which is due to take place in Barcelona from 12-14 June, stating that “we oppose any affiliation between the cultural sector and entities complicit in war crimes”.The boycott from artists such as Kode9, Lolo & Sosaku, Juliana Huxtable and Sunny Graves comes amid claims that KKR is linked to housing developments in the illegally occupied West Bank, in addition to other business interests in Israel. This claim is based on the fact that KKR is a major investor in the German media company Axel Springer, which runs ads for developments in the occupied territories on Israel’s Yad2 classified ad site, owned by Springer.In June 2024, KKR, a US investment company with an estimated $710bn (£526bn) in assets, paid €1

about 18 hours ago
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Jimmy Kimmel on Republicans’ mega-bill: ‘Takes from the poor and gives to the rich, brazenly’

Late-night hosts dug into Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful” mega-bill and the US homeland security secretary, Kristi Noem, not knowing the meaning of habeas corpus.Republicans are “hard at work in Washington right now”, said Jimmy Kimmel on Wednesday evening, “working late, struggling to pass Trump’s big, beautiful budget bill”.“He’s even having a hard time getting the Republicans onboard with this one,” Kimmel noted, as according to the congressional budget office, the bill would add trillions of dollars to the national debt. “But Trump has a plan for that too,” said Kimmel. “He’s going to fire all the people who keep track of the national debt

1 day ago
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Stephen Colbert on Trump’s ‘big, beautiful bill’: ‘Like the husky guy at a male strip club’

Late-night hosts talked congressional Republicans squabbling over Donald Trump’s “big, beautiful” mega-bill and Trump’s two-hour phone call with Vladimir Putin.On Tuesday, Stephen Colbert took a break from Donald Trump to focus on “all the terrible stuff they’re doing in Congress”. This week, congressional Republicans are fighting over “his heartless tax cut boondoggle”, which Trump has been calling his “big, beautiful bill”.“It really sounds less like legislation and more like the husky guy at a male strip club – ‘OK, ladies, coming up on the main stage is Big, Beautiful Bill,’” the Late Show host joked.The bill’s tax cuts for the wealthy would add roughly $3

3 days ago
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‘I’m still standing’: Kevin Spacey makes his comeback at chaotic Cannes gala

Kevin Spacey’s Cannes comeback is a discreet, low-key affair. The promenade is home to a gaggle of evening sunbathers while the steps to the beach club contain neither fans nor protesters. It is what is known in the trade as a soft relaunch.Spacey is guest of honour at the Better World Fund’s gala dinner, where he is receiving a lifetime achievement award for “excellence in film and television”. It marks a return to the limelight for the two-time Oscar-winner, whose career stalled after allegations of sexual assault and misconduct by more than 30 men

3 days ago
foodSee all
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How to turn the dregs of a tahini jar into a brilliant Japanese condiment - recipe | Waste not

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Pistachio tiramisu and mango shortcakes: Nicola Lamb’s recipes for spring desserts

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Australian supermarket cucumber pickles taste test: ‘I didn’t think any would be this powerful’

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Layer up: spring fillings for filo pies

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Rukmini Iyer’s quick and easy recipe for gildas in carriages | Quick and easy

5 days ago
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‘For indulgence, brioche is king’ – the sweet, buttery bread stealing sourdough’s crown

5 days ago