• AutoTL;DRB
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    110 months ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    A planned strike by junior doctors in England later this month could be called off if NHS bosses give permission for further time for negotiations, the British Medical Association has said.

    The trade union for doctors and medical students announced the strikes after it said the government had “failed to meet the deadline to put an improved pay offer on the table”.

    Now the BMA has written to the leaders of NHS Employers asking for them to increase the period during which it is allowed to hold strike action in order for further pay negotiations to take place.

    In a letter to Danny Mortimer, the chief executive of NHS Employers, the BMA chair of council, Prof Philip Banfield, has asked him to agree to the extension, which he can do on behalf of hospital trusts.

    He said in the letter: “In return for this agreement the BMA junior doctors committee is prepared to cancel the planned strike action for 24 to 28 February, providing space for the government to negotiate with us during the next two weeks.”

    The BMA suggests that if NHS Employers agree to the request, it will allow the health secretary, Victoria Atkins, and the government more time to “present a credible pay offer” to junior doctors.


    The original article contains 603 words, the summary contains 210 words. Saved 65%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • @[email protected]
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    -810 months ago

    i can understand why they want to have a pay rise but the amount asked is totally unrealistic considering the NHS is on its knees.

    Can anyone see the healthcare in this country is only going to get worse? Its terrible over in Wales where i am.

    • @[email protected]
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      1210 months ago

      The NHS is on its knees due to 14 years of deliberate Tory underfunding and sabotage. Asking for a reasonable wage is not a unreasonable act.

    • HeartyBeast
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      910 months ago

      The amount asked, is simply the amount lost due to inflation over multiple years without an inflation-matching pay rise.

      • @[email protected]
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        -610 months ago

        i know that, and if they can get it, good for them. But read the room, there’s no money

        • HeartyBeast
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          510 months ago

          So how about the government actually open proper negotiations ?

          • @[email protected]
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            10 months ago

            That’d be good. It’ll never happen, at least with the current one.

            I also can’t see a lavour one giving what the Drs ask either. They’re rowing back on other expenditure because the forecast of our economy and the govts finance is bleak.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      The NHS is on its knees because of deliberate underfunding. It is only still going because NHS workers have taken a 25-35% real terms pay cut since 2010. It cannot recover off the backs of its workforce, not least because that workforce can easily find work elsewhere but the NHS cannot replace them.

      The Tories are doing this because they want to privatise health care. Don’t make it so easy for them.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        what exactly am I doing to make it so easy for them? Not being optimistic about the situation? I’m not stopping anyone doing anything. Crack on. I just will not join in the “hurr, durr. Tories bad” circlejerk with the endless repetition of the same old widely known history and either sides talking points. It’s the infantile r/unitedkingdom all over again.

        I think you’re all naive to think anyone is going to get anywhere with the current govt, theres a track record of this and neither side is willing to compromise. History has shown what happens in this situation in the UK. Nothing. Even if the protests/strikes develop into violence, we’ve seen what happens. Still nothing.

        It’s about time people get serious about the current situation and near future, because people are too damned optimistic, have too much faith in our politicians, of any party, and are going to end up seriously dissapointed.

        Sorry to be a doomer.

        • TWeaK
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          310 months ago

          The issue isn’t the current government, the issue is all the people (such are yourself) putting down striking workers instead of supporting them and their cause.

          Frankly, we’re long overdue a general strike. But the British public are such masochistic pussies that it probably will never happen.

          • @[email protected]
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            9 months ago

            i fail to see how suggesting people to be prepared for not getting what you want is putting them down. You say it like this doesn’t affect me. Half my family works/worked in the NHS. Admittedly only 1 is a Dr and she hasn’t striked because where she is, they didn’t get enough union votes to allow it.

            Maybe its the fact i grew up with my father striking in the 80s (not the mines, dockyard. Didn’t work) been to enough protests, seen the inside of a police van too many times, and prefer to not go up before the magistrate again, that im jaded to it all.

            But sure, lets all ignorantly cheerlead them on from the sidelines, right? 👏👏👏

            I want to be wrong, but, mark my words, short of a revolution, nothing will happen. Partly because protests don’t work and partly because this country’s economy is circling the drain.

            Just heads up, don’t expect a reply if you do.