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Johnson and Starmer clash over circuit-breaker lockdown

The Prime Minister warned that a national shutdown would cause misery, but experts said it could provide vital breathing space for the NHS.

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Coronavirus

Boris Johnson insisted he wanted to avoid the “misery” of another national lockdown as Chancellor Rishi Sunak warned it would cause “significant damage” to livelihoods.

The Prime Minister clashed with Sir Keir Starmer over the Labour leader’s call for a short “circuit-breaker” lockdown aimed at getting the virus back under control.

Leading scientists have suggested that a short lockdown – possibly over Christmas – could prevent the NHS being overwhelmed and potentially reduce the death toll this winter.

POLITICS Quarantine
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The row over England’s approach to tackling a surge in coronavirus cases came as:

– Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford set out plans to ban travel into the country from high-risk areas of England, Scotland and Northern Ireland from 6pm on Friday.

– Nicola Sturgeon advised Scots against travelling to English coronavirus hotspots, singling out Blackpool as “associated with a large and growing number of Covid cases in Scotland”.

– Northern Ireland’s First Minister Arlene Foster announced that pubs and restaurants will close for four weeks – with the exception of takeaways and deliveries – while schools will close on Monday for two weeks, one of which will cover the half-term break.

The latest figures showed 19,724 more lab-confirmed cases of coronavirus in the UK and that a further 137 people have died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19.

Pressure on the Prime Minister to take tougher action has intensified after Sir Keir backed the Government’s scientific advisory panel Sage’s call for a short national lockdown.

In testy exchanges at Prime Minister’s Questions, Mr Johnson accused him of opportunism and urged the Labour chief to put pressure on his party’s local leaders in northern England to accept tighter restrictions under the new multi-tier system.

Sir Keir’s call for a lockdown has fractured the fragile consensus on the coronavirus response that existed at Westminster, and in the Commons he suggested the Prime Minister’s failure to follow scientific advice had cost lives.

The Labour leader said that since the Sage advice was given on September 21 “the infection rate has quadrupled, hospital admissions have gone from 275 a day to 628 a day in England, yesterday 441 Covid patients were on ventilators and the number of deaths recorded was – tragically – the highest since June 10”.

“That’s the cost of rejecting the advice,” Sir Keir told Mr Johnson.

The Prime Minister defended his approach, saying: “The whole point is to seize this moment now to avoid the misery of another national lockdown – into which he wants to go headlong – by delivering a regional solution.”

And he urged Sir Keir to “get on to his Labour friends in those parts of the north of England where we want to work with them to put those very stringent measures in place in order to deliver the reductions that the whole country wants to see”.

The Prime Minister’s new three-tier system of coronavirus restrictions for England came into effect on Wednesday, but the Liverpool City Region is the only area to be under the toughest rules.

Greater Manchester’s Labour mayor Andy Burnham has resisted pressure to agree to Tier 3 restrictions – including the closure of pubs – and threatened legal action if the move is imposed by Whitehall despite his opposition.

But in Lancashire, Tory county council leader Geoff Driver said it was “inevitable” his region would enter Tier 3.

Mr Burnham said he is expecting to hold further talks with Downing Street on Thursday following a briefing from the deputy chief medical officer Dr Jenny Harries.

The BBC reported the Joint Biosecurity Centre has recommended that most of the North West and North East of England together with large parts of Yorkshire and the Midlands should be placed in Tier 3 – although no final decisions have been taken.

There was no immediate response from the Department of Health and Social Care.

Meanwhile, London mayor Sadiq Khan has said he would support moving the capital from Tier 1 to Tier 2 but called for a support package for businesses, workers and local authorities.

Mr Johnson has not ruled out a circuit-breaker, but the Chancellor strongly criticised the idea.

Mr Sunak told MPs that Labour should “have the integrity to acknowledge that what they’re proposing will create significant damage to people’s lives and livelihoods”.

Further pressure for the circuit-breaker came with a new paper modelling the impact it could have.

HEALTH Coronavirus
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Graham Medley, professor of infectious disease modelling at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), said it may be too late to implement a two-week circuit-breaker over the October school half-term but that December could be an option.

Prof Medley said thousands of deaths could be prevented up to January with a circuit-breaker but that did not necessarily translate into lives saved from coronavirus in the long-term.

But Prof Medley said lives would undoubtedly be saved through the NHS not becoming overwhelmed by Covid-19 cases and the knock-on impact that would have on other care.

HEALTH Coronavirus
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“I think that would be the point of it, the point of it is to stop hospitals getting to a level where they cannot cope with other conditions,” he said.

The modelling paper written by Prof Medley and colleagues sets out that deaths could possibly reduce for the rest of the year from about 19,900 to 12,100. Hospital admissions could be reduced from 132,400 to 66,500.

Meanwhile a poll by YouGov suggested the majority of the public – 68% – back the introduction of a circuit-breaker, compared with just 20% who would oppose the measure.

England’s three-tier system involves the country being put into different categories labelled as medium, high or very high risk.

PA infographic showing weekly rate of new Covid-19 cases in the UK
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The medium level maintains current national restrictions, the high level will see households banned from mixing indoors, while the third tier involves harsher restrictions including the closure of bars.

Liverpool mayor Joe Anderson said that crowds of people partying as Merseyside’s Tier 3 restrictions came into place “shame our city”, while Downing Street condemned the actions of an “irresponsible” minority.

Paul Brand, a councillor in Liverpool, said the city’s intensive care units were already more than 90% full, with the city soon expected to reach levels of bed occupancy seen during the first wave of Covid-19.

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