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Resident doctors in England vote in favour of more strike action
Summary
Resident doctors in England voted 93% in favour of continuing industrial action, with a 53% turnout, giving the BMA a six-month mandate to call strikes; no dates have been announced.
Content
Resident doctors in England have voted to continue industrial action in their long-running dispute with the government. The British Medical Association (BMA) said 93% of voting members supported keeping strikes on the table, with turnout at 53%, and that the result provides a six-month mandate for further action, though no strike dates were set. The dispute began in spring 2023 and has led to 14 separate strike days; this ballot follows a month of talks after the last walkout before Christmas.
Key facts:
- 93% of BMA resident doctor members who voted backed continuing industrial action, with a 53% turnout.
- The union now holds a six-month mandate to take strike action; the BMA has not announced dates.
- The dispute started in spring 2023 and has included 14 separate strikes to date.
- The BMA has highlighted pay and a shortage of training posts as central issues and has called for a jobs package and multi-year pay proposals, as reported.
Summary:
The ballot renews the BMA's formal authority to call further strikes while leaving the timing of any new walkouts undetermined at this time. Negotiations between the union and the government have continued, but no settlement or schedule for future industrial action has been announced.
