For months, the United Kingdom has been affected by strikes in the sectors of health, transport, education, post… This Thursday, July 20, the country is facing new strikes, affecting both hospitals, where thousands of medical specialists stop working for the first time in ten years, and stations, where train drivers are on strike again. Workers are demanding increases, in the face of inflation which is falling but remains the highest of the G7 countries, at 7.9% in June.

After the nurses, the paramedics, the “junior doctors” who are the equivalent of interns, it is the turn of the “consultants”, the most experienced doctors, to stop work in British hospitals. They began a 48-hour strike at 7 a.m. Thursday (8 a.m. in Paris). Hospital dentists have joined the movement.

The public health service (NHS) is stretched thin. After years of austerity treatment and the Covid-19 pandemic, access to care is increasingly complicated. According to a BBC investigation published on Wednesday, children have to wait up to 18 months for dental treatments requiring anesthesia, including tooth extractions. The five-day strike, until Tuesday, July 18, of the “junior doctors” led to the postponement of more than 100,000 appointments. That of specialists could cause even more disruption, the NHS has warned.

“People need to have decent wages”

In eight months of strikes, more than 600,000 medical appointments have been affected in total, according to NHS Chief Medical Officer Stephen Powis. “It’s getting harder and harder to get services back on track after every strike,” he said. The government has proposed a 6% increase for this year for medical specialists. But according to the British Medical Association (BMA) union, this proposal corresponds to a reduction in wages in real terms.

“My door is always open to discuss non-wage issues, but this proposal is final and I therefore urge the BMA to end its strikes immediately,” Health Minister Steve Barclay said in a statement. On July 13, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak urged public service unions to end strikes and accept the government’s ultimate pay raise offer of 5% to 7% depending on the sector. The teachers have thus announced the suspension of their movement following an offer of 6.5%.

Train drivers from the RMT union, who have stepped up strikes for a year, are also on strike as the school holidays begin. Rail Services warned that on Thursday, July 22 and July 29 there would be “little or no service across much of the network”. The Aslef union began a strike on July 17, which should end on Saturday.

“These strikes are part of a campaign that began over a year ago,” RMT general secretary Mick Lynch told Sky News. They are disrupting trains “from the South West of England to Scotland”, he said. “We are really in trouble. People need to have decent wages,” he added.