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Streeting hits out at BMA ‘delusion’ as talks to avert resident doctors’ strike fail

4 days ago
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The NHS in England is bracing for the longest strike yet by resident doctors after last-ditch talks failed, prompting Wes Streeting to accuse the medics of suffering from “delusion”.Many thousands of resident – formerly junior – doctors will stage a six-day stoppage over pay and jobs starting at 7am on Tuesday, just after the Easter weekend.A deadline for agreement ended on Thursday.It will be the 16th walkout the doctors have staged since their first strike in March 2023, and there are growing fears that the dispute could drag on for another year.Streeting confirmed in a letter to the British Medical Association that he had withdrawn his offer to create 1,000 extra places in specialist medical training this year, as that was conditional on the BMA accepting the government’s most recent offer, which it rejected last week.

Talks on Tuesday and Wednesday this week failed to reach a deal that would have led to the BMA suspending or cancelling the strike.The union and ministers remain far apart on a number of key issues, including pay.Jim Mackey, the chief executive of NHS England, said he expected the health service to face “a long slog” of continuing strikes by resident doctors.Services would increasingly care for patients in ways that reduced the need for resident doctors because bosses could not rely on them being at work, he told the Health Service Journal.Streeting cast doubt on ever reaching a negotiated settlement with the BMA’s resident doctors committee.

Some senior doctors believe the dispute is insoluble given the committee’s demand for a 26% pay rise and the state of the public finances making that an increase ministers cannot approve,In a letter, Streeting told the committee’s chair, Dr Jack Fletcher, that after it rebuffed the offer “I had expected the … committee to at least come back with a counterproposal to end these strikes, given your stated commitment to reaching a negotiated settlement,You could not agree one,“If members of your committee cannot reach an agreed position among themselves, it is hard to see how the government will be able to reach an agreement with your committee,”He ridiculed the union for wanting the 1,000 extra training places to come on-stream as planned this year despite its failure to agree a settlement.

“The BMA seems to be labouring under the delusion that you can reject the deal but claim the benefits of the offer.But we have been clear with you and your officers the jeopardy involved on jobs and pay,” he wrote.Streeting had pledged the 1,000-place increase in specialist medical training to help meet the BMA’s demand for an expansion of such roles to rid the NHS of “bottlenecks” that are preventing fully qualified doctors from moving on in their careers.The estimated £250m cost of each strike and imminent deadline for doctors to apply to start their specialist training this August meant “it is simply not operationally or financially possible” to deliver those 1,000 additional slots, Streeting told Fletcher.He was responding to a four-page letter Fletcher sent him on Wednesday in which the chair blamed Streeting and Keir Starmer for reducing the chances of a deal.

Mike Prentice, NHS England’s national director for emergency planning and incident response, told the service’s 205 trusts this week that the strike’s timing meant it would be “challenging” to cope with, given many staff would be away on Easter holidays.“This will represent a significant strain on staffing resources to provide safe cover,” he said.
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Higher energy costs from Iran war could threaten fragile economics of AI boom | Heather Stewart

Donald Trump’s most immediate concern in demanding Iran reopen the strait of Hormuz may be rocketing US gasoline prices, but if the conflict drags on, higher energy costs will be felt far beyond the pumps.Systemically higher power prices and fractured supply chains will squeeze industries and consumers worldwide. For the US, one consequence may be to threaten the fragile economics of the AI boom.Many oil-importing economies, especially in the global south, are having to contemplate outright shortages of oil and its products. Shops in Egypt face curfews, Indonesia has imposed work from home Fridays and the Philippines has declared a national energy emergency

about 23 hours ago
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Former Co-op boss was paid almost £2m before leaving after group’s difficult year

The former boss of the Co-op collected almost £2m before her sudden departure last month despite a difficult year when the retailer was pushed into the red by a damaging cyber hack.Shirine Khoury-Haq’s total annual pay package amounted to £1.9m in 2025, including a £165,000 “rewarding growth” bonus that was approved by the mutual’s board despite falling sales and the slide to an underlying loss of £125m.Khoury-Haq and other executives did not receive their regular annual bonus as the board said the company had not met an “affordability underpin” to make the payout. However, Khoury-Haq’s total pay did include a long-term performance bonus linked to earlier years

1 day ago
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Fair Work Agency’s priorities criticised days before its launch

The government has asked its new employment rights watchdog to reduce the regulatory burden on business, it has emerged, a request that worker advocates said risks turning the agency into “a dead duck”.The Fair Work Agency (FWA), which is being launched on Tuesday, is a cornerstone of Labour’s Employment Rights Act. It will bring together several existing labour enforcement bodies and its responsibilities will include policing the minimum wage, holiday pay and modern slavery.At a recent meeting with civil society groups, Matthew Taylor, its incoming chair, listed the five priorities the Department of Business and Trade had laid out for the FWA in its first year. These included “thought leadership” and “reducing regulatory burdens”

1 day ago
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‘It’s all fear and headlines’: energy traders race to keep pace with volatile oil markets

On the weekend that US-Israeli drones first began to rain down on Tehran, energy traders across the world’s major financial centres began to redraw their strategies.When they returned to their trading desks on that March Monday morning, they found oil and gas prices spiking amid a market nightmare made real: the unprecedented shutdown of the vital trade route through the strait of Hormuz.“I had been telling our oil trader for weeks to be ready for a war with Iran,” said one trading analyst at a major European energy company.“But he didn’t see it. The market was oversupplied, and prices were already looking higher than they should, so he shorted the market

1 day ago
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Trussonomics still haunts parties’ economic promises in run-up to UK local elections | Phillip Inman

As local and regional elections across the UK loom into view, it is clear the spectre of Trussonomics lives on. The Greens, Reform UK, Your Party, Restore Britain, the Conservatives and even the Liberal Democrats cannot help making extravagant spending promises, often paid for by cutting something or borrowing more that, they argue, will have no negative economic consequences.Or if they do, the costs will be borne by people and businesses they do not care about.Only Keir Starmer and his cabinet colleagues seem to be immune to the hysterical demands for the UK government to somehow reconfigure the way the economy operates without any spillovers, unintended consequences or extra costs that nullify the supposed gains derived from the original policy.Liz Truss promised huge tax cuts worth £45bn paid for with extra borrowing and welfare “efficiencies”

2 days ago
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House swaps: why exchanging home could be a ticket to a dream holiday

About six miles from Reims, beside a golf course, is a house with a heated pool and space to sleep 10 people that would probably be perfect for many of those planning to book a family holiday in France.An hour’s drive from Disneyland Paris, the four-bedroom property is quiet, located near a village with a bakery, has an electric gate that provides security, and is on almost half an hectare (one acre) of land.The cost? Nothing, if you are prepared to sign up to a “house swap holiday”, whereby you exchange your home with that of another person.Some regular home swappers claim they saved tens of thousands of pounds over the years.There are many websites where you can search for the perfect swap with (see end of story)

2 days ago
technologySee all
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Court dismisses former WhatsApp security chief’s lawsuit against Meta

4 days ago
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Goodbye mrbrightside416: Google allows users to alter quirky Gmail addresses

4 days ago
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Pupils in England are losing their thinking skills because of AI, survey suggests

4 days ago
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Claude’s code: Anthropic leaks source code for AI software engineering tool

5 days ago
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SpaceX confidentially files to go public at $1.75tn, reports say

5 days ago
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‘System malfunction’ causes robotaxis to stall in the middle of the road in China

5 days ago