Sunak 'open' to discussion over pay rises for nurses
LONDON — British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak said on Sunday he was willing to discuss pay rises for nurses ahead of a meeting with public sector trade union leaders in an effort to end the biggest wave of industrial disputes in decades.
Britain's National Health Service, long treasured and funded by taxpayers, delivers free care to all, but is under strain following years of relative underinvestment and the fallout from the COVID-19 pandemic.
The strikes involving nurses and ambulance workers, staff shortages and winter flu have led some hospitals to declare critical incidents. Patients are facing hourslong waits for ambulances, and some are being treated in corridors.
"The NHS is under enormous pressure from COVID and flu, and on top of tackling the backlog caused by the pandemic, Strep A and upcoming strikes, this winter poses an extreme challenge," Health Secretary Steve Barclay said in a statement.
Sunak is under increasing pressure, including from members of his Conservative Party, to improve wage offers to healthcare staff. He said the government was willing to have conversations with union leaders about pay, despite ministers previously refusing to reopen talks about this year's deal.
"We want to have a reasonable, honest two-way conversation about pay," Sunak told the BBC. "The door has always been open to talk about the things that nurses want to talk about, and the unions want to talk about more generally."
Pat Cullen, head of the Royal College of Nursing union, said she had a "chink of optimism" after noticing a "little shift" in the prime minister's stance.
The government was expected to hold a meeting on Monday with union officials representing public sector workers such as nurses and train drivers.
The main opposition Labour Party and the Unite union, which represents ambulance workers, accused Sunak of making misleading statements over the offer to negotiate pay.
Labour said the prime minister was taking nurses and ambulance workers "for fools" because the government has made it clear it would only negotiate pay rises for next year.
Unions said they will only call off strikes in the next few weeks if offers are made to resolve the disputes over this year's pay settlement.
Thousands of nurses in Britain will go on strike again on Jan 18 and 19 after walking out for two days in December. Ambulance workers are due to go on strike on Jan 23.
Sunak repeatedly refused to say during the interview on Sunday whether he uses private healthcare, insisting the issue is a "distraction from the things that really matter".
Sunak also said it is "not a given" that inflation will slow this year amid ongoing wage negotiations.
Lowering inflation is a "function of having a responsible economic policy when it comes to things like pay", he said.
Inflation in the UK hit a 41-year high of 11.1 percent late last year, driven by sharply rising energy and food costs.
Agencies via Xinhua
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