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Resident Doctors Industrial Action 2025-07-10

10 July 2025

Lead MP

The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

NHSEmployment
Other Contributors: 15

At a Glance

The Secretary of State for Health and Social Care raised concerns about resident doctors industrial action 2025-07-10 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

NHSEmployment
Government Statement
Today, the NHS is moving in the right direction with waiting lists decreasing after 14 years of decline. Since July, we have cut waiting lists by 260,000 and delivered over 4.6 million more appointments than promised. A 28.9% pay rise was given to resident doctors last year, which is generous compared to previous years. The BMA announced five days of strike action from 7 am on Friday 25 July to 7 am on Wednesday 30 July, but these strikes are unnecessary and unreasonable. I have offered repeatedly to meet the full resident doctors committee since January, yet no progress was made due to their unwillingness to talk. The NHS faces a £1.7 billion cost from previous strikes, resulting in cancelled operations and appointments. This Government has changed its approach by working with resident doctors and delivering significant pay rises, but the BMA's tactics have not. Resident doctors received the highest public sector pay award both this year and last year. I am willing to work together to improve their conditions without preconditions attached.

Shadow Comment

Edward Argar
Shadow Comment
The Government was warned that caving into union demands for above-inflation pay rises would set a dangerous precedent, which is now being realised. The BMA's strike action supported by less than 50% of eligible voters is irresponsible, wrong, and unnecessary. The public is concerned about the impact on NHS services during this industrial dispute. We are asking what additional steps the Government will take to resolve the dispute and prevent strike action from going ahead.
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