Resident doctors began voting today on the government’s new pay and jobs offer — a moment that feels less like the end of a dispute and more like a pause in a long, exhausting struggle. The British Medical Association’s decision to call off this week’s strike was not a sign of retreat, but an act of responsibility: a willingness to let members judge the offer on its merits rather than escalate for escalation’s sake. It is, in other words, what professionalism looks like. The question now is whether the offer itself meets that same standard.
The headline numbers are familiar: the 2016 contract terms extended to all locally employed medics, an average 6.6 per cent uplift by April 2027, and a promise of 4,500 extra speciality training places over three years. On paper, it is a package that gestures towards stability — a government finally acknowledging that the NHS cannot run on goodwill and burnout indefinitely. But resident doctors know better than anyone that gestures are not guarantees. They have lived through a decade of attrition: real‑terms pay cuts, rota gaps, spiralling workloads, and a career structure that too often feels like a conveyor belt to exhaustion. Against that backdrop, “worth consideration” — the BMA’s careful phrase — is not the same as “enough.”
What gives this moment its weight is not the offer itself, but the context in which it arrives. This would have been the sixteenth round of strike action since 2023 — a statistic that should shame any government that claims to value the NHS. Doctors do not walk out lightly. They do so because the alternative is a system that continues to hollow out, year after year, until the only people left are those too exhausted to fight. The government calls its proposal “transformative.” Perhaps. But transformation is measured not in press releases, but in whether doctors can afford to stay in the profession, whether training bottlenecks are genuinely eased, and whether the NHS stops haemorrhaging talent to countries that treat their clinicians with respect.
Dr Jack Fletcher, the BMA’s chair, put it plainly: if members believe this is a real step towards pay restoration and a career structure they can trust, the strikes will end. If not, they will escalate. That is not a threat; it is a statement of reality. A workforce pushed to the brink will not be placated by rhetoric. They will vote with the clarity that comes from lived experience — from nights spent covering unsafe rotas, from years of pay erosion, from watching colleagues leave medicine entirely.
The government insists the offer “will not get any better.” History suggests otherwise. Offers improve when workers stand together, when unions refuse to be divided, and when the public sees through the narrative that doctors are asking for too much. They are not. They are asking for the bare minimum required to keep the NHS functioning: fair pay, safe staffing, and a future that does not demand personal sacrifice as the entry price for public service.
Whatever the outcome of the vote, one truth remains: resident doctors have shown extraordinary resolve, dignity and unity throughout this dispute. They have held the line not just for themselves, but for the health service as a whole. And if the government truly wants an NHS that can survive the next decade, it would do well to remember that progress is not achieved by insisting “this is as good as it gets,” but by listening to the people who keep the system alive.
The direction of travel is clear. The vote now rests with the doctors. The responsibility for what happens next rests squarely with the government.
By Maria Camara
