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Sir Keir Starmer warns 'damaging' doctors' strike serves those ‘who want NHS to fail'

Labour leader Keir Starmer speaks to the media after a visit to a pensioners drop-in session in Wakefield, West Yorkshire, to talk about the increased cost of living and the priorities for local people. Picture date: Wednesday May 4, 2022.
Sir Keir Starmer warned the strike was a 'damaging road'. Picture: Alamy

By Ruth Lawes

Sir Keir Starmer has issued a stark warning to doctors that the strike will embolden NHS detractors at a critical juncture.

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Thousands of doctors are expected to strike tomorrow to demand a 29 per cent pay rise in a move the Prime Minister fears will 'blight' patients and cause 'real damage'.

Sir Keir expressed concern the industrial action will 'play into the hands of those who do not want our NHS to succeed in its current form' and will 'choke off its recovery'.

Urging doctors not to pursue this 'damaging road', the Prime Minister said: “Most people do not support these strikes. They know they will cause real damage.

"Behind the headlines are the patients whose lives will be blighted by this decision. The frustration and disappointment of necessary treatment delayed. And worse, late diagnoses and care that risks their long-term health."

Read more: Fellow resident doctors, we must now begin to take public support seriously

Read more: Streeting to resident doctors: ‘I deeply regret position we find ourselves in’

NHS consultants and junior doctors unite In joint BMA strike over pay grievances in 2023.
NHS consultants and junior doctors unite In joint BMA strike over pay grievances in 2023. Picture: Getty

He continued in The Times: “It’s not fair on patients. It’s not fair on NHS staff who will have to step in for cover for those taking action. And it is not fair on taxpayers.

"These strikes threaten to turn back the clock on progress we have made in rebuilding the NHS over the last year, choking off the recovery.”

The British Medical Association (BMA) is pushing for the increase to match how much it claims doctors’ pay has fallen since 2008-09.

Sir Keir said: "We wanted to reach a good agreement that serves the interests of doctors and patients alike, not see doctors out on strike. In a tough time for our country, we all need to pull together to deliver a fairer deal for everyone."

The Prime Minister joins numerous NHS bosses in criticising the strike, including Sir Jim Mackey, who said doctors should not be 'consequence-free'.

Sir Jim said those looking to take on overtime to clear backlogs once the industrial action is over should be blocked from doing so.

NHS chief Sir Jim Mackey has condemned the doctors' strike.
NHS chief Sir Jim Mackey has condemned the doctors' strike. Picture: Alamy

He also said the NHS would be 'much more resistant' to demands from the BMA, which is staging its 12th strike since March 2023.

The NHS chief told the public to continue using services as usual and urged hospitals to keep routine operations and appointments running.

Hospitals and local teams have spent this week preparing for the strike, which is scheduled to begin at 7am on Friday, after five days of talks between the government and the BMA failed to deliver a compromise.

GP surgeries, urgent care and A&E departments will continue to operate as usual for those who need them, NHS England said.

For urgent but not life-threatening issues, the public has been told to use 111 online as the first port of call.

Last June, close to 62,000 inpatient and outpatient appointments were rescheduled following a resident doctors' strike.

Almost 1.5 million appointments have been rescheduled since the end of 2022 as a result of industrial action.

The BMA has been clear that strike action will only be reversed if the Government improves its 5.4% pay offer.

Health Secretary Wes Streeting said he would continue talks with the union if they postpone the strike, but insisted that he wouldn’t increase his pay offer.

This failed to convince the doctors’ union, which maintains that their main reason for striking is to achieve better pay.