Resident doctors hold placards during a picket on the first day of a six-day industrial action amid a dispute over pay and staffing pressures in London in April 2026.PHOTO: REUTERS

Doctors in England call off strikes after last-minute offer in long-running dispute

· The Straits Times

LONDON - Resident doctors in England have called off strikes that were due to start next week after a last-minute government offer, their unions said on June 13, raising the prospect of ending a long-running pay and staffing dispute. The walkout had been scheduled to run from June 15 to 19.

It would have been the 16th in a series of stoppages since 2023 over what the union called years of pay erosion and staffing pressures across the National Health Service.

The dispute began under the previous Conservative government. The British Medical Union said it would hold a referendum on the offer and suspend strike action while the vote takes place. It represents about 55,000 of England’s roughly 75,000 resident doctors, formerly known as junior doctors.

“We have always been clear that no strikes needed to go ahead if we received an offer appropriate to put to our members,” committee chair Jack Fletcher said, adding that doctors would judge the proposal on whether it tackles pay erosion and workforce concerns, including unemployment among trainees.

Fletcher said doctors would vote on the offer. If they reject it, he warned, the union would move ahead with plans for strike action in July.

A path to settlement

The offer includes a 3.5 per cent pay rise in 2026 as recommended by an independent review body, with the Department of Health saying resident doctors would see an average increase of about 4.9 per cent under the wider package.

The pay rise would grow to an average 6.6 per cent by April 2027, with a further increase to follow, the union said. Health minister James Murray welcomed the decision to suspend strikes, saying the deal “represents a chance to draw a line under damaging disputes of recent years and usher in a new period of industrial peace”.

Resident doctors have received pay rises totalling 33.4 per cent over the past four years, including this year’s 3.5 per cent increase, which the BMA had said was still a fifth lower than in 2008 after inflation.

The revised offer includes 4,500 training places over three years to ease a jobs backlog, annual progression for part-time doctors who qualify, and higher extra pay for medical academics, the union said. REUTERS