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Friday, 25 July 2025

Labour's Danegeld Problem



BMA could sue Labour over plans to fight doctors’ strikes


The British Medical Association (BMA) could take legal action if the Labour Government makes doctors “feel pain” for striking.

Dr Tom Dolphin, the BMA council chairman, said he was “disappointed” to see the Government “taking such a hard line against trade unions”.

His comments came after The Telegraph revealed that Wes Streeting had told NHS leaders that strikes should not be “pain-free” for doctors.

8 comments:

Anonymous said...

Sack the lot of them, there's hundreds of doctors arriving on the beaches of Kent every day to replace them. Apparently.

dearieme said...

Mr Stress Wetting looks like the soft boy at school. He'll prove a pushover.

DiscoveredJoys said...

You could make an argument that 'striking' carries no penalty beyond loss of pay and length of service - perhaps that is a utopian view of withdrawing your labour without consequence. Perhaps that view should be challenged, in court if necessary.

A K Haart said...

Anon - good point, all they have to do is say "hands up all the doctors" then give them a stethoscope.

dearieme - and they seem to know it, or their union does.

DJ - fire and rehire would be one way to tackle the no penalty problem.

Anonymous said...

From elsewhere:
"Pensions tax information from the BMA web site

If your threshold income is above £200,000 and your adjusted income is above £260,000 then your annual allowance will be reduced. For each £2 that your adjusted income exceeds £260,000, your annual allowance threshold is reduced by £1. If your adjusted income exceeds £360,000 or over then you will have a reduced annual allowance of £10,000"

A K Haart said...

Anon - it's not easy to see how they scrape by.

Tammly said...

Is the snake of Lawfare beginning to eat it's own tail?

A K Haart said...

Tammly - I think it is and it won't end well.