Labour NHS crisis as third trade union threatens strikes in huge blow | Politics | News

Health Secretary Wes Streeting is faced with more NHS strike crisis after the Royal Nursing College plans to allow members if the government refuses to give a high wage increase. The members of the union were offered a 3.6% increase for 2025/26, which was overwhelmed by 91%.
RCN warns that if the health secretary refuses to enter its demands until the end of summer, its members will take part in the strike action. RCN Secretary General Nicola Ranger warned that nurses felt “deep worthless, despite the increase in wage -based wage -based wage -based increase. Professor Ranger said: “My profession feels deeply worthless, and therefore the registration numbers say to the government to wake up to the government, to perceive the urgency here and to do the right thing by them and the patients.
“The registration numbers made this decision to a broken system that holds the nursing fee and careers and prevented NHS.
“As a critical profession in terms of security, protecting experienced nursing personnel is mainly the key to the government’s own vision for NHS.
“Nursing career progress and NHS payment structure for a long time excessive reforms not only about justice and equality, but also for patient safety.”
The RCN threat comes two days after warning that Unite Union’s government is on the verge of strikes on the strikes of the NHS personnel of NHS.
Unite, representing the agenda for the ‘change for NHS staff’, destroyed its members and found that almost all of them were angry with their wage increase proposal.
Secretary -General Sharon Graham warned Wes Streeting that he should urgently find more cash or take a walk. The personnel survey also wanted to show 95% strike to oppose NHS deductions.
United Secretary -General Sharon Graham said: “When he came to power, this government was clear that NHS was broken.
“However, the staff is still exiled and the morale is still always low.
Junior doctors finished their five -day strikes yesterday and continued payment negotiations with BMA Health Secretary.
Wes Streeting offered to continue negotiations at the beginning of next week, but warned that the BMA lost its goodwill after the government’s strike.
In a letter to a left union, Mr. Streeting said that their return to the negotiation table was “ironic için because I never left”.
The upper cab minister reiterated the ‘deep disappointment’ with the strike decision that the union branded that it was “completely unnecessary”.
Junior doctors received a 22% wage increase last year and a wage increase this year – the highest of any public sector employees.
However, the BMA demands an increase of 29% of the eye, and they claim that doctors will realize their wages to 2008.
This morning, the Association of the Train drivers, the leader of Aslef, said that striking doctors do not want enough ”.
Mick Whelan said: “My people are gaining more than doctors. I will not say that my people should learn less – but I believe that doctors should win more.”




