There is something quietly devastating about the situation facing students at Queen Mary University of London’s Malta campus. These are not individuals who went rogue or selected an obscure organization in a remote part of the globe. They were pursuing the same GMC-accredited degree, studied the same curriculum as their counterparts in the UK, and enrolled in an international branch of a reputable British university. The understanding — reasonable, documented, and historically consistent — was that they would be treated the same when it came time to enter the NHS Foundation Programme. That comprehension is no longer valid.
Few could have predicted how the Medical Training (Prioritization) Act 2026, which was only weeks after it was introduced, would alter the rules of the game for these students. According to the new law, students from Ireland, Iceland, Liechtenstein, Norway, and Switzerland will receive Foundation Programme spots after UK-trained graduates. That list does not include QMUL Malta. The outcome is startling: even after a second round of allocations, less than 20% of the cohort of students who previously had a 97% entry rate into the Foundation Program are now offered positions. It’s not a dip. It’s a collapse.
Kingsley Napley, a law firm that represents 284 students enrolled at QMUL Malta, filed a Judicial Review claim on behalf of two representative claimants. The company contends that Section 1 of the Act, when read in conjunction with Section 4, is incompatible with the students’ rights under both Article 8, which addresses the right to private and family life, and Article 14 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which protects against discrimination. The UK Foundation Programme Office, Queen Mary University London, and the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care are listed as interested parties in the June 2026 claim.

What makes this case hard to dismiss is the speed at which the law moved. In less than two months, Royal Assent will be introduced, and impacted parties will not have a meaningful consultation period. One parent, Madhu Iyer, whose son is in his third year and had hoped to pursue radiology, described the situation plainly: their children started their degrees on assurances of parity and are now being cut adrift mid-study. That timeline is especially unsettling in some way. These pupils were unable to change course. They had already completed five years of coursework.
One of the main issues, according to Natalie Cohen, the Kingsley Napley partner spearheading the claim, is the lack of any transitional arrangements. For students who were already enrolled, the government did not offer a grace period. It did not make an exception for people who followed the earlier guidelines when making their decisions. It just veered off course, leaving the pupils in their current position.
The courts’ reaction to the human rights arguments put forth here is still unknown. Incompatibility claims under the ECHR are rarely simple, and judicial review is a high bar. But the legal question almost secondary to the policy one. The optics of barring British nationals—roughly 70% of this cohort—from NHS careers because they attended a British university’s overseas campus will continue to raise serious concerns about how Parliament approaches fairness when passing legislation quickly, even if the Act passes scrutiny.
There’s a sense, watching this unfold, that the QMUL Malta situation got caught in the crossfire of a broader political push to protect domestic medical graduates without anyone fully thinking through who else might be standing in the way. The 284 students involved in this case did not make careless decisions. The ground beneath them moved as they made sensible ones.

