Resident doctors begin five days of strikes in England over pay – UK politics live | Politics


Doctors begin five days of strikes in England

Hello and welcome to our rolling UK political coverage, with this morning’s headlines dominated by new industrial action hitting the NHS.

Resident doctors in England have begun strike action after the British Medical Association and government failed to reach an agreement over pay restoration.

Up to 50,000 people went on strike at 7am, with the action intended to last for five days until 7am on Wednesday 30 July.

The public have been urged to keep coming forward for NHS care during the strike. GP surgeries are open as usual and urgent care and A&E will continue to be available, alongside 111, NHS England said.

Keir Starmer made a last-minute appeal to resident doctors, saying the strikes would “cause real damage”.

The health secretary, West Streeting, had warned that the industrial action “enormously undermines the entire trade union movement”.

In an article for the Guardian on Thursday, Streeting said the decision by the BMA to push for new strikes immediately after receiving a pay rise of 22% to cover 2023-24 and 2024-25 was unreasonable and unprecedented.

We’ll bring you all the latest news on the strike, and other political stories, throughout the day.

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Key events

Louise Stead, group chief executive of Ashford and St Peter’s and Royal Surrey NHS Foundation Trusts, was asked about NHS trusts refusing catch-up shifts for striking doctors and fellow consultants, which enables them to earn extra cash.

It has been suggested the NHS England move to keep as much pre-planned care going as possible means there will be fewer catch-up shifts needed, and therefore doctors will not be able to top up their pay.

She told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme:

There is a finite amount of money. We’ve been told very clearly that we need to manage within the budget we’ve got, and we do need to try and make sure that we reduce the waiting list, which I think you’ll see have come down, so we will not be having the resources in order to do a massive amount of catch-up lists. We absolutely won’t.

It will be around re-diverting resources we’ve got in a different way, making the best decision we can.

Asked if she was not going to be prepared to pay extra, because the money simply is not there, she said:

Absolutely.


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