Hospital consultants gearing up to join resident doctors in striking over pay

A picture


Hospital consultants are gearing up to join resident doctors in striking over pay in a move that could cause huge disruption for the NHS and present ministers with a major new headache.In addition, resident doctors – who will tomorrow embark on their latest strike – have decided to adopt a more militant approach in pursuit of their 26% pay claim in which they strike every month, to put pressure on the government.In a hardening of their tactics, resident – formerly junior – doctors will stage a walkout every month in 2026 if, as they expect, they get a fresh legal mandate to continue their long-running campaign of industrial action.They went on strike 11 times in 15 months between March 2023 and June 2024 but only once since, in July this year.Thousands of them will take part in what will be the 13th strike of their campaign, starting at 7am on Friday and running until 7am on Wednesday 19 November.

Consultants now look likely to add to ministers’ already acute difficulties over NHS pay, the Guardian can reveal,The British Medical Association’s consultants committee has been in talks since September with the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) about its demand for more than the 4% rise imposed on them for 2025/26,They believe their salaries should rise this year by 5,5% – a further 1,5% – given the importance of their work.

But the consultants committee is frustrated at what BMA sources say is the lack of progress.They have given Wes Streeting, the health secretary, a deadline of 31 December to reach a deal for more money.Unless agreement is reached by then it plans to hold a ballot for industrial action in January and – if it gets the 50% turnout and 50% agreement required in law – start striking soon after.Strikes during the first half of 2026 by both the NHS’s main groups of medics in England would cause havoc and derail the government’s totemic pledge to “fix the NHS” by cutting treatment delays.One NHS leader warned that a potential series of walkouts by consultants – senior doctors – would be “a bitter pill” for already-embattled health service staff to swallow, especially during the winter.

One BMA insider said: “The consultants committee has given its negotiators until 31 December to negotiate with Wes Streeting and his team for meaningful changes to consultant pay.I don’t think that’s going to be meaningful.So we’ll be balloting in the new year.We’ll be gearing up, potentially towards industrial action in the new year.”Two-thirds of consultants have already indicated their willingness to strike in pursuit of better pay, although that was in a purely indicative ballot in which turnout was below 50%.

They claim that the real terms value of their pay has been eroded by 26% since 2008/09 as a result of inflation and years of low annual pay settlements.Almost all the 69 voting members of the BMA’s resident doctors committee (RDC) back switching to the more hardline approach of monthly strikes, which may also involve longer walkouts – the previous longest was six days in January 2024 – union insiders say.The BMA’s ruling council has already approved a request from Dr Jack Fletcher, the RDC’s chair, for it to reballot its 60,000 resident members when its current mandate expires on 6 January.If successful, resident doctors could strike as often as they decide for six months.“Consultants voting to down tools would be a bitter pill to swallow for NHS staff who are working hard to recover performance and reform services.

More strikes over winter would cause huge disruption to patient care during the busiest period of the year for the NHS,” said Matthew Taylor, chief executive of the NHS Confederation.“Further strikes would jeopardise the good progress being made in cutting waiting lists and would divert more money from what are already very stretched budgets.We urge the BMA to avoid any further strike action, especially during the winter months.”Strikes since 2022 by doctors, nurses, ambulance crews, radiographers and other NHS staff have forced the NHS in England to reschedule at least 1.7m outpatient appointments and operations.

Helen Morgan, the Liberal Democrat spokesperson on health and social care, said: “This is hugely worrying for patients who are suffering historic waiting lists and deteriorating care – and now face yet more disruption.”A double whammy of doctor strikes would be a serious setback for Streeting.He this week bitterly attacked the union over the resident doctors’ strike campaign, accusing the BMA of acting like a “cartel”, being a threat to the NHS’s future and pushing unreasonable demands.More strikes would undermine his promise to ensure patients once again get planned hospital treatment within 18 weeks by the end of this parliament in 2029.The waiting-list fell slightly in September to 7.

39m, involving 6,24m patients, NHS figures published on Thursday showed,He highlighted that resident doctors have seen their pay rise by 28,9% since 2022 and he came close to accusing them of being greedy in a speech to a gathering of NHS bosses,Consultants earn £127,540 on average while resident doctors’ basic pay, before overtime, ranges from £38,831 to £73,992.

The BMA made clear its view that all types of doctors, not just residents, deserve to have the value of their salaries restored.“The BMA is led by our 200,000-strong members who set policy and the council of elected members advises and supports the implementation of these policies.“Campaigning for full pay restoration for all doctors is such a policy,” a spokesperson said.Consultants will not go on strike, the DHSC said.“The BMA’s indicative ballot showed that the vast majority of their consultants aren’t prepared to go on strike, and rightly so,” a spokesperson said.

“As a highly valued part of the NHS workforce, new full-time consultants have seen their basic pay increase by 24% over the past three years, with an average salary of £145,000 a year,For the first time in over a decade, the NHS is finally on the road to recovery,NHS doctors now have a government that values them and wants to work with them to enhance their working conditions and rebuild our NHS,”
cultureSee all
A picture

‘I really enjoyed it’: new RSC curriculum brings Shakespeare’s works to life in UK classrooms

Act 1. Scene 1. A classroom in a secondary school in Peterborough. It is a dreary, wet afternoon. Pupils file into the room, take their seats and face the front

A picture

Jon Stewart on government shutdown deal: ‘A world-class collapse by Democrats’

Late-night hosts unleashed on Senate Democrats for caving on the longest-ever government shutdown with no assurance on healthcare subsidies from Republicans.Jon Stewart minced no words for congressional Democrats on Monday evening, hours after a coalition broke from the party and voted with Republicans to extend government funding through January with no assurances on the healthcare tax credits at the center of the 41-day stalemate. “By the way, tonight’s show will be brought to you by: I can’t fucking believe it,” Stewart fumed at the top of The Daily Show. “I can’t fucking believe it: for when the ‘I can’t believe it’ Edvard Munch scream emoji doesn’t quite convey how much you cannot fucking believe it.”“They fucking caved on the shutdown, not even a full week removed from the best election night results they’ve had in years,” he continued

A picture

Old is M Night Shyamalan at his best: ambitious, abrasive and surprisingly poignant

In August 2002, Newsweek boldly anointed the stern-faced man pictured on the cover of its splashy summer issue as “The Next Spielberg”. While some might have called this an unfair comparison to one of cinema’s most legendary figures, for a then 31-year-old M Night Shyamalan, it was a childhood dream come true. The Indian-born, Pennsylvanian-raised film-maker had whetted his cinematic appetite on the images of Jaws and Raiders of the Lost Ark, and for better or worse, would find himself chasing that same level of stratospheric fame in the early days of his career.Despite the initial acclaim of The Sixth Sense, though, Shyamalan’s reputation and audience goodwill would soon begin to nosedive as his idiosyncratic directing style rubbed against the grander ambitions of his movies. But after a temporary exodus from Hollywood and a retreat to his roots in independent cinema, Shyamalan finally returned to studio film-making in 2021 with the release of Old, a masterful high-concept thriller that rekindled the director’s longtime fascination with family, parenting and the mystifying possibility of the unknown

A picture

‘Harlem has always been evolving’: inside the Studio Museum’s $160m new home

The iconic museum, which was founded in 1968, has been rehoused in 82,000-sq-ft building providing a new destination for Black art in New York CityCall it the second Harlem renaissance. On Manhattan’s 125th Street, where a statue of Adam Clayton Powell Jr strides onwards and upwards, and a sign marks the spot where a freed Nelson Mandela dropped by, there is bustle and buzz.The celebrated Apollo Theater is in the midst of a major renovation. The National Black Theatre is preparing to move into a $80m arts complex spanning a city block. In September the National Urban League opened a $250m building containing its headquarters, affordable housing and retail space with New York’s first civil rights museum to come

A picture

‘Most of it was the conga preset on Prince’s drum machine’: how Fine Young Cannibals made She Drives Me Crazy

‘Prince’s Purple Rain guitar was in the corner of the studio and his lava lamps were everywhere. You couldn’t help but be inspired’I was in a band in Hull called Akrylykz. When the Beat came to play at the Welly club we gave them a demo tape. Then they invited us to tour with them. Later, after they split up, Andy Cox and David Steele were looking for a singer for a new band and they remembered me

A picture

Groundbreaking British Museum show set to challenge samurai myths

A groundbreaking samurai exhibition that promises to challenge “everything we think we know about Japan’s warrior elite” spanning a millennium of myth and reality is to open at the British Museum next year.Titled Samurai, the blockbuster exhibition will reveal a world beyond armour-clad warriors and epic duels, as popularised by the noble, katana-wielding heroes of Akira Kurosawa’s classic action films and PlayStation’s hit video games.Much of the samurai myth – including even the word “samurai” – was invented long after their heyday, a modern phenomenon linked to mass media and pop culture.The exhibition, which opens in February, will also show that, far from being a male warrior cult, samurai women were educated, governed and even fought.Rosina Buckland, the exhibition’s lead curator, told the Guardian: “This is the first exhibition to tackle the myths