Mary Bousted photograph

Mary Bousted

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Gender Female
Age 64
Born Lancashire
Date of birth September 15,1959
Zodiac sign Virgo
Education Mount St Joseph
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID410744
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Mary Bousted Life story


Mary Winefride Bousted is the Joint General-Secretary of the National Education Union alongside Kevin Courtney. Bousted was formerly General Secretary of the teachers' union, the Association of Teachers and Lecturers prior to its amalgamation with the National Union of Teachers, forming the NEU.

Chris Mason: Will the pay offer stop the strikes?

Chris Mason: Will the pay offer stop the strikes?
Jul 13,2023 5:30 pm

... So much so that Mary Bousted, the joint general secretary of the National Education Union, put her name to a joint statement with the prime minister...

Teacher strikes likely to end in England

Teacher strikes likely to end in England
Jul 13,2023 1:50 pm

... NEU joint general secretary Mary Bousted told Sky News she would be recommending members " bank" this offer...

Teachers strike: Second day of disruption as National Education Union walks out in England

Teachers strike: Second day of disruption as National Education Union walks out in England
Jul 7,2023 3:20 am

... Speaking to BBC Radio 4 s Today programme, the NEU s joint general general secretary Dr Mary Bousted called the reported offer " credible" saying it would be the " biggest award announced by a pay review body" and " deserved for teachers"...

Teachers' strikes: School disruption as NEU members walk out again in England

Teachers' strikes: School disruption as NEU members walk out again in England
Jul 4,2023 9:20 pm

... Dr Mary Bousted, joint general secretary of the NEU, said Education Secretary Gillian Keegan s " refusal to re-enter negotiations" had " united the teaching profession in its anger towards a government that is failing to recognise the serious challenges that need to be addressed in our education system"...

Teachers in England to strike for two days in July, NEU announces

Teachers in England to strike for two days in July, NEU announces
Jun 17,2023 12:10 pm

... Dr Mary Bousted and Kevin Courtney, the NEU s joint general secretaries, said the education secretary had " turned her back" on teachers in England...

Sats reading paper: Government defends 'challenging' tests

Sats reading paper: Government defends 'challenging' tests
May 12,2023 2:21 pm

... NEU joint general secretary, Mary Bousted, added there were " better ways of assessing pupils" than through Sats...

Year 6 Sats: Children 'distraught' after reading paper

Year 6 Sats: Children 'distraught' after reading paper
May 11,2023 12:21 pm

... Dr Mary Bousted, joint general secretary of the National Education Union, said the Sats this week had been " a punishing experience for many pupils and staff"...

England's teachers' strike causes more disruption

England's teachers' strike causes more disruption
Apr 27,2023 9:51 am

... Speaking on the picket line at a rally in Oxford, Dr Mary Bousted, NEU joint general secretary, said members wanted to see " a long-term correction in teacher pay over the next few years" and hopes the government will restart negotiations...

Chris Mason: Will the pay offer stop the strikes?

Apr 16,2023 7:20 pm

By Chris MasonPolitical editor, BBC News

" So, are we getting a pay rise, then? "

The question from The Policeman on The Gates of Downing Street as I arrived for the Prime Minister 's news conference could have been asked by More Than A Million public sector workers.

The Answer , I told him an hour later as I left, was Yes - 7%.

The big question now is what police officers and others make of what they have been offered.

The government has the recommendations of the pay review bodies, the groups that recommend how much of a pay rise various parts of The Public sector should get.

At The Core of all of this are choices: gnarly choices, tricky trade-offs.

The Prime Minister doesn't want to borrow money to fund the pay rises.

Borrowing and debt are already high, and more borrowing, he fears, would fuel inflation, which is also high.

And he doesn't want to put up taxes either. Yes , they are high by historic standards too.

So how is this being paid for?

Ministers have been scrabbling About Looking for money within existing budgets. The additional cost of these plans is around £2bn.

About half of that, they hope, will be raised by cranking up the cost of visas and the surcharge that migrants have to pay to use the NHS.

What about The Other half, The Best part of a billion pounds?

This is the chunk being looked for by what are described by those in government as " underspends and reallocations. "

They are not keen on using The Word cuts.

Whatever The Word you use, what this amounts to is money that had been allocated to One Pot , being Taken Out of it and put into the pay pots.

The government, just like the rest of us, can't spend the same pound twice.

And so, the priority has still to be decided. So, what won't be happening because of these pay rises that might otherwise have happened?

Officials haven't given many examples, even though The Process of moving money around has been completed.

Two of the examples offered are a freeze on civil servant recruitment in the Ministry of Defence and offering fewer traineeships in the Civil Service .

And where are Labour in all this?

It is striking that Keir Starmer did not directly criticise the government's announcement. They are offers for workers and unions to consider and he had little to add, He Said .

The big question now is what difference will these pay offers make? Will they stop The Strikes ?

The Leadership of the teaching unions have welcomed The Settlement they have been offered.

So much so that Mary Bousted , the joint General Secretary of the National Education Union, put her name to a joint statement with the Prime Minister .

The Sunak-Bousted Double Act is not something many would have imagined a few months back.

But, as ever, it will be up to union members to decide whether they accept these suggestions.

And some are lukewarm at best.

The Doctors ' union the BMA and Unite, a huge trade union, are both sounding very sceptical.

It is a reminder than in an era of high taxes, high government spending, high inflation and stagnant growth, there are few easy answers for any of us: workers, unions, opposition parties or the government.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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