
Resident doctors warn of ‘immensely disruptive' potential co-ordinated strikes
The physicians formerly known as junior doctors are being balloted in England for strike action that could last for six months by the British Medical Association (BMA) following criticism of the Government's recent pay rise offer of an average 5.4% rise for resident doctors.
The threat of co-ordinated action comes after Health Secretary Wes Streeting urged doctors to vote against striking, with polling suggesting almost half of the British public are opposed to the proposed walkouts.
The co-chairs of the resident doctors committee are calling on members to vote for strikes, with Dr Melissa Ryan and Dr Ross Nieuwoudt telling The Sunday Times that consultants and specialty and associate specialist (SAS) doctors are also in pay disputes with the Government, and future industrial action could be co-ordinated across those groups.
Dr Ryan, who works in Nottingham, said: 'We know how much the strikes last time were disruptive to patient care and the waiting list, but we also know exactly how much they cost the government and it was more than what it would cost to get to full pay restoration.
'Resident doctors are balloting for strike action but now you've got the consultant committee and you've got the SAS doctors also in a pay dispute with the Government.
'So last time we ended up co-ordinating some action and it was immensely disruptive for patient care, and we can see that on the horizon for this Government too.'
'We will have a mandate that runs from the end of July to the beginning of January 2026,' she continued.
'I am hoping that we will never get to the point where we have to take strike action but… we have three grades of doctors that are in pay disputes with the Government and there could be terrible disruption if the Government doesn't intervene soon.'
Reality:
I met twice with Resident Doctors in May and at the last meeting I offered to meet their entire committee.
I can't offer a higher pay increase: resident doctors have the highest pay award in the entire public sector.
These are not grounds that warrant strike action. https://t.co/gEid97eUPk
— Wes Streeting (@wesstreeting) June 1, 2025
Dr Nieuwoudt, a resident doctor in Liverpool, claimed Mr Streeting has become unwilling to engage.
'(He) seems to have gone from being the guy that was saying, 'Get in the room; talk it out; solve the problem,' to the guy that's not even willing to have that conversation with us,' he told the newspaper.
On Sunday, the Health Secretary posted on social media that he had met with resident doctors twice in May and offered to meet their entire committee.
'I can't offer a higher pay increase: resident doctors have the highest pay award in the entire public sector,' Mr Streeting said.
'These are not grounds that warrant strike action.'
A recent poll of 4,100 British adults by YouGov found that 48% of Britons oppose resident doctors going on strike, while 39% support them taking action.
YouGov said this 'marks a shift in opinion' of public support of striking junior doctors last summer, when the majority of Britons – 52% – said they supported the action.
It highlighted how Labour supporters were most supportive of strike action, with Conservatives expressing the strongest opposition.
Resident doctors said their pay has declined by '23% in real terms since 2008'.
If they vote to strike, walkouts could begin in July and could potentially last until January 2026.
The Government accepted salary recommendations from pay review bodies earlier this month, resulting in an average 5.4% rise for resident doctors.
A leading patients' organisation said it was 'deeply concerned' about the prospect of strike action in the NHS over the busy winter period.
The Patients Association highlighted how previous strike action from doctors in training led to 1.3 million appointments, procedures and operations being postponed, with the true figure 'likely to be much higher'.
The BMA ballot will close on July 7.

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Scottish Sun
2 hours ago
- Scottish Sun
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South Wales Argus
4 hours ago
- South Wales Argus
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Glasgow Times
5 hours ago
- Glasgow Times
MPs debate decriminalising abortion as opponents warn it would be a radical step
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Ms Packer was cleared by a jury last month after taking prescribed abortion medicine when she was around 26 weeks pregnant, beyond the legal limit of 10 weeks for taking such medication at home. She told jurors during her trial, which came after more than four years of police investigation, that she did not realise she had been pregnant for more than 10 weeks. Nicola Packer was cleared earlier this year of having an illegal abortion (Helle Tumbridge/PA) She has since indicated she will file a complaint with the police, prosecutors and the NHS over how she was treated. The case of Carla Foster, jailed in 2023 for illegally obtaining abortion tablets to end her pregnancy when she was between 32 and 34 weeks pregnant, eventually saw her sentence reduced by the Court of Appeal and suspended, with senior judges saying that sending women to prison for abortion-related offences is 'unlikely' to be a 'just outcome'. Labour MP Tony Vaughan, opening the Westminster Hall debate, said it is time to 'abandon these outdated practices' of prosecuting women. He said: 'I believe that our laws cannot be fixed relics of the past, but must reflect social attitudes and societal norms.' He insisted 'decriminalisation does not mean deregulation' and that he has not seen evidence 'to suggest that removing the criminal law deterrent would then motivate swathes of women to have abortions after 24 weeks'. He added: 'I'm in favour of regulation of abortion, but I'm also in favour of decriminalising it, so that abortion can once and for all be treated… as a matter of healthcare, not criminality.' Jim Shannon was among those who spoke against decriminalisation (Richard Townshend/UK Parliament/PA) But DUP MP Jim Shannon disagreed, stating that abortion is not 'simply medical treatment'. He added: 'This is not a simple matter. It's certainly not for me. It's not for my constituents. It's not for us who represent this point of view.' He said it would be a 'radical step' and 'seismic change' and suggested a late-term abortion on the basis of a baby's sex could be accepted if the law was to change. He said: 'Depending on the model of decriminalisation, the effect would range from de facto access to abortion for women up to birth for any reason, there would be no enforceable prohibition on abortion on the basis of the sex of the unborn baby, for example.' Labour MP Tonia Antoniazzi, who will table an amendment in the Commons to the Bill stating that 'no offence is committed by a woman acting in relation to her own pregnancy', told MPs on Monday: 'There must be no more Nicola Packers.' She said: 'I am staunchly pro choice, and as much as I believe future reforms are needed regarding abortion provision, we must not lose sight of the current moral imperative here and its urgency, namely, vulnerable women being dragged from hospital bed to police cell under suspicion of ending their own pregnancies. 'This can be stopped by disapplying the criminal law related to abortion from women.' Fellow Labour MP Stella Creasy spoke in favour of going further by enshrining a human right to abortion, and is expected to put forward a separate amendment to 'lock in' the right of a woman to have one and protect those who help them. DUP MP Carla Lockhart, who is opposed to decriminalisation, said she was speaking with 'deep conviction' on the issue. She said: 'For me, this is a debate on life and I believe that both lives matter in every pregnancy. The most basic human right is the right to life.' She said the number of abortions taking place in the UK is 'a national tragedy' and attributed a rise in prosecutions in recent years to women being able to take abortion medication at home. She said: 'It is surely not because the CPS (Crown Prosecution Service) or police have suddenly decided to handle this issue in a more draconian way. 'The pills-by-post scheme has enabled women, either dishonestly or because they have miscalculated their own gestational age, to obtain abortion pills beyond the 10-week limit.' Justice minister Alex Davies-Jones said the Government is neutral on decriminalisation and that it is an issue for Parliament to decide upon. She said: 'If the will of Parliament is that the law in England and Wales should change, then the Government would not stand in the way of such change but would seek to ensure that the law is workable and enforced in the way that Parliament intended.' The debate came as it was confirmed Mayor of London Sir Sadiq Khan had 'stepped in' after advertisements from the British Pregnancy Advisory Service (Bpas) in support of decriminalisation were rejected by Transport for London (TfL) last month. TfL said the proposed advertisements did not comply with its advertising policy 'because they made negative references about the police'. A spokesperson for the Mayor of London said: 'The mayor has stepped in and we are now urgently looking into this issue so we can allow adverts from the British Pregnancy Advisory Service on London's transport network.' Bpas said: 'Ahead of the vote in Parliament, it is absolutely vital that the voices of the women who have been so deeply harmed by the current law are allowed to be heard. We urge the mayor to take swift action and allow our charity to share these stories as a matter of urgency.'