
England’s resident doctors accept pay deal, ending strikes; Victoria’s doctors edge toward industrial action
A vote by medics in England closes a protracted dispute, while in Australia stalled negotiations push Victorian hospital doctors to ballot for the first work stoppages in two decades.
Resident doctors in England have voted to accept a government pay and conditions offer, formally ending a year of industrial action that saw 21 days of strikes since July 2023. The British Medical Association confirmed that 53 percent of participating members backed the deal on a 57 percent turnout, with 32,932 doctors casting ballots. The immediate effect is the cancellation of all planned walkouts and a return to full service across the National Health Service, drawing a line under a dispute that had disrupted elective care and piled pressure on waiting lists.
The agreement mandates the application of standard 2016 contract terms to all locally employed doctors and delivers an average pay uplift of 6.6 percent, fully phased in by April 2027. It also creates 4,500 additional specialty training places over three years. According to the Department of Health and Social Care, the package lifts resident doctor pay to a level 35.2 percent higher on average than four years ago. Health Secretary James Murray said the settlement allows the NHS to “focus on getting on with the job of rebuilding our health service.” The vote averted a four-day strike that had been scheduled for mid-June, which would have been the sixteenth round of action since 2023.
Viewed from Melbourne, the resolution in England contrasts with a hardening of positions in the Australian state of Victoria, where public hospital doctors are preparing for their first industrial action in 20 years. The Australian Medical Association Victoria and the salaried doctors’ union have been negotiating a new enterprise agreement for 10 months but accuse the state government of backflipping on key commitments, particularly on overtime access and parental leave. A meeting of more than 2,000 members on Monday voted overwhelmingly to apply for a protected action ballot, with only 12 votes against. The unions plan a three-stage escalation: public campaigning, then overtime bans, and finally stop-work actions, all designed to avoid compromising patient safety.
The next factual milestone in Victoria is the filing of the protected action order with the Fair Work Commission, which will trigger a formal ballot authorising specific industrial tactics. In England, attention shifts to implementation of the new pay structure and training places, with the BMA describing the deal as a step toward restoring earnings eroded by inflation since 2008. The government has signalled that further negotiations on working conditions will continue.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 2 languages
Junior doctors in England have accepted a pay deal, ending a year of strikes with a 6.6% average uplift and extra training places. Meanwhile, Victorian doctors in Australia are moving toward their first industrial action in two decades, accusing the state government of backflipping on key promises. The Anglosphere press notes the pragmatic resolution in the UK but remains skeptical about the looming dispute down under.
Doctors in England have voted to accept the government's pay offer, ending a year of strikes that strained the health service. The deal delivers an average 6.6% pay rise and thousands of extra training places, hailed as good news for medics, patients, and the NHS.
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