MILITANT junior doctors have secretly admitted some members are reluctant to go back on strike.Â
And they are telling activists to host “pizza” parties to drum up support for a fresh round of walkouts.
Junior doctors, now called residents, are set to strike again despite a 22 per cent pay rise last year.
British Medical Association chiefs will ballot thousands of their members later this month.
But a document for activists walking around wards gives them tips on how to persuade reluctant colleagues to strike.
It includes combating comments like: “We have lost momentum after the last strikes.”
And: “There is no money in the Treasury for more of anything in the UK, we shouldn’t be asking for more.”
Another says: “My registrars and consultants are anti-strike. They think the first strikes were good but now we’re being greedy.”
Another document that details their plan instructs union representatives to organize activities such as “pizza and pay meetings” to reconnect with individuals who may have become less involved in the strike.
According to Mike Wood, who serves as the shadow Cabinet Office minister, he mentioned, “If the Labour party truly prioritized the nation over their own interests, they would confront the unions, but I have low expectations for that to happen.”
A deal with the new Labour Government last year ended 18 months of strike misery which led to millions of cancelled appointments.Â
Newly qualified doctors saw their pay increase from ÂŁ29,400 to ÂŁ36,600 in the first year and from ÂŁ58,400 to ÂŁ70,400 in the fifth year.
The BMA were approached for comment.