Kamis, 04 Juni 2020

Poll shows a THIRD of public think quarantine on UK arrivals should be tougher - Daily Mail

EXCLUSIVE: Poll shows a THIRD of public think Priti Patel's 14-day quarantine on UK arrivals should be even tougher as scientists warn Britain needs to bring its OWN infection rate down before restrictions on others

  • The government is imposing 14-day quarantine on UK arrivals from Monday
  • Scientists and Tory MPs have criticised the plans as pointless and damaging
  • Poll shows public is behind it and a third think the measures could be tougher 

A third of Britons want the government's 14-day quarantine to be even tougher, a poll found today - despite scientists dismissing the plan as pointless.  

Research for MailOnline found overwhelming support for the restrictions on UK arrivals announced by Priti Patel yesterday. 

With only very limited exceptions for lorry drivers and NHS workers, from Monday everyone coming to the country by plane, rail or sea will be ordered to give an address and self-isolate for two weeks, with spot checks from officials. 

Experts insist the measures will make no difference while the UK's own transmission rates are so high, while the aviation industry has warned of mas redundancies as the UK 'puts up a closed sign'.

But the exclusive poll by Redfield & Wilton Strategies found 42 per cent are satisfied with the move, and 35 per cent believe it does not go far enough.

The study, carried out this week, also underlines the extent of 'coronahobia' among the public, with 73 per cent saying they would not feel safe in a plane in the near future.

There are deep doubts over the the prospect of 'air bridges' to low-infection countries, even though they could allow people to take foreign holidays without the need to quarantine for two weeks at either end. 

Some 42 per cent support the idea, being worked on by ministers, but 39 per cent were against it.

A poll for MailOnline by Redfield & Wilton Strategies found 42 per cent are satisfied with the quarantine move, and 35 per cent believe it does not go far enough

A poll for MailOnline by Redfield & Wilton Strategies found 42 per cent are satisfied with the quarantine move, and 35 per cent believe it does not go far enough

Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis defended the plans in a round of interviews this morning, saying it was the 'right time to do it'

Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis defended the plans in a round of interviews this morning, saying it was the 'right time to do it'

The study also underlines the extent of 'coronahobia' among the public, with 73 per cent saying they would not feel safe in a plane in the near future

The study also underlines the extent of 'coronahobia' among the public, with 73 per cent saying they would not feel safe in a plane in the near future

Boris Johnson's personal approval has dived over by 40 points to turn negative in less than two months. His net rating was plus 38 in mid-April, but by this week it was minus five

Boris Johnson's personal approval has dived over by 40 points to turn negative in less than two months. His net rating was plus 38 in mid-April, but by this week it was minus five

PM's approval rating has dived by 40 POINTS to turn negative in less than two months 

Boris Johnson's personal approval has dived over by 40 points to turn negative in less than two months. 

The poll for MailOnline showed the astonishing reduction as the government faced a backlash over coronavirus testing, PPE supplies and accusations that Dominic Cummings breached lockdown.   

In mid-April, Mr Johnson's rating were riding high.

Some 23 per cent said they 'strongly approved' of his handling of the crisis.

Another 36 per cent voiced support, while just 12 per cent disapproved and 9 per cent strongly disapproved.

That gave a net rating of plus 38. 

But Redfield and Wilton Strategies found this week that Mr Johnson's standing had taken a massive hit.

Just 9 per cent strongly approved of his stewardship, with 30 per cent broadly happy. They were outweighed by 20 per cent who disapproved and 24 per cent who disapproved strongly.

That gave a net rating of minus five.  

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The research suggests that much of the public has already given up on holidays this year, with just 14 per cent per cent saying they were planning to go abroad in 2020, and only 15 per cent intending to have a break within the UK.

Some 59 per cent said they are planning to avoid holidays altogether this year, compared to 73 per cent who said they were intending to go away before the pandemic hit. 

Ms Patel insisted the clampdown was 'proportionate' yesterday, but she was assailed by a slew of Conservatives. Former PM Theresa May accused the government of 'closing Britain off from the rest of the world', while ex-minister Theresa Villiers said it must act to 'save jobs in aviation and let families go on holidays in the sun'. 

Ex-trade secretary Liam Fox said the government's policy contortions resembled 'gymnastics', and the focus should be on test and trace rather than 'unnecessary economic isolation'. 

Ryanair chief Michael O'Leary branded the system 'utterly ineffective' saying because spot checks are carried out on the phone people could trick officials even if they were out playing golf or on the beach. 

Professor Robert Dingwall, one of the government's own SAGE advisers, said people coming to the UK were more likely to be infected by border officers than bring the virus into the country.

The Nottingham Trent University academic, a member of the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (SPI-M), told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'We are not seeing new clusters that are taking off from people who have been travelling abroad.

'I think we would really need to get the level in this country significantly further down before quarantine started to become a useful measure.

'That I think, even then, we would have to see something that is targeted on countries with a significantly higher level of community transmission than ourselves - and there aren't too many of those around, I'm afraid.

'If you're a holiday destination in Europe in a country that has worked really hard to get its levels of community transmission down and you're perhaps looking forward to seeing the end of the virus circulating, apart from in isolated outbreaks, then you have to wonder would they really want to welcome a load of British tourists from a country which hasn't fully got this virus under control yet?'

The research suggests that much of the public has already given up on holidays this year, with just 14 per cent per cent saying they were planning to go abroad in 2020

The research suggests that much of the public has already given up on holidays this year, with just 14 per cent per cent saying they were planning to go abroad in 2020

Priti Patel insisted the clampdown was 'proportionate' yesterday (pictured), but she was assailed by a slew of Conservatives in the Commons

Priti Patel insisted the clampdown was 'proportionate' yesterday (pictured), but she was assailed by a slew of Conservatives in the Commons 

But Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis defended the plans in a round of interviews this morning, saying it was the 'right time to do it'.

Speaking on BBC Breakfast, the Northern Ireland Secretary said: 'Even if a (transmission) rate in a certain country is lower than ours, any single person who comes into the country who is potentially carrying the virus makes a marginal impact.

'The reality is that we want to stay ahead of this, the Transport Secretary is working across government to look at how we fine-tune this as we go forward.'

When asked why it has taken so long to impose quarantine, he said: 'The higher the spread of the virus here in the community in the UK, the more negligible any difference is of somebody coming into the country.

'As the spread in our communities is now much lower, the marginal impact of anyone coming into the country (with Covid-19) is much higher - that is why this is the right time to do it.'

He added: 'As our community transmission of the virus is now so much lower, somebody coming into the country really does make an impact.'

Mr Lewis admitted that under the new quarantine policy, a family from Spain could visit the Lake District for a holiday, while a family from London cannot.

He told BBC Breakfast: 'As long as they are following the guidance and doing the quarantine as outlined, and giving the details to Public Health England (PHE), somebody from abroad can come to the UK but they will have to quarantine for 14 days.'

Mr Lewis said: 'PHE will be checking up on this, there will be substantial fines for people who don't follow those guidelines, they will have to quarantine - here within the UK we are gradually looking at how we can ease the lockdown measures.

'We are very keen that people across the country, with a cautious approach, will be able to enjoy their summer, will be able to take those trips.

'We've got to do that in a very managed and cautious way.'

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2020-06-04 11:43:41Z
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Concern as Alok Sharma struggles through illness at Commons before being tested for coronavirus - The Sun

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  1. Concern as Alok Sharma struggles through illness at Commons before being tested for coronavirus  The Sun
  2. Alok Sharma: Cabinet minister tested for virus after being taken ill  BBC News
  3. Business secretary Alok Sharma appears unwell in House of Commons chamber  Guardian News
  4. MPs slam Business Secretary Alok Sharma for battling on while ill at the despatch box  Daily Mail
  5. Business Secretary Alok Sharma tested for coronavirus after falling ill in the Commons  The Telegraph
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-04 09:04:13Z
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Business Secretary Alok Sharma tested for coronavirus after falling ill in the Commons - The Telegraph

[unable to retrieve full-text content]

  1. Business Secretary Alok Sharma tested for coronavirus after falling ill in the Commons  The Telegraph
  2. Alok Sharma: Cabinet minister tested for virus after being taken ill  BBC News
  3. Business secretary Alok Sharma appears unwell in House of Commons chamber  Guardian News
  4. MPs slam Business Secretary Alok Sharma for battling on while ill at the despatch box  Daily Mail
  5. Concern as Alok Sharma struggles through illness at Commons before being tested for coronavirus  The Sun
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-06-04 07:25:00Z
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Young child 'critical' and among four people shot in London - Sky News

An investigation has been launched into the shooting of three adults and a young child in north London.

Police were called to Energen Close, Harlesden, at 9.45pm on Wednesday, following reports of "shots fired".

Officers attended the scene alongside the London Ambulance Service, and found four people with gunshot injuries.

All four were taken to hospital.

The child and a man are in a critical condition, the Metropolitan Police said.

Two other victims - a man and a woman - do not have life-threatening injuries.

A Section 60 order, which provides police stop and search powers, was put in place for the borough of Brent until 7am on Thursday.

More from London

Cordons are in place at the scene where a full forensic examination is taking place, and police have said a dispersal zone has also been authorised for the Harlesden area.

Witnesses or anyone with information can call police on 101 quoting reference 8326/03june, or Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.

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2020-06-04 07:00:42Z
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Rabu, 03 Juni 2020

Alok Sharma: Cabinet minister tested for virus after being taken ill - BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Business Secretary Alok Sharma is self-isolating at home after becoming unwell in Parliament.

Mr Sharma looked uncomfortable while taking part in a debate earlier, mopping his brow several times with his handkerchief while speaking.

A spokesman said the MP for Reading West had been tested for coronavirus and had returned home.

Mr Sharma was one of a handful of ministers to attend Tuesday's cabinet meeting in Downing Street in person.

The business secretary was in the Commons chamber for nearly an hour earlier while leading for the government on the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Bill.

Deep-cleaning

A spokesman said: "Alok Sharma began feeling unwell when in the Chamber delivering the second reading of the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Bill.

"In line with guidance he has been tested for coronavirus and is returning home to self isolate."

During the debate, Mr Sharma's opposite number, shadow business secretary Ed Miliband, passed him a glass of water at one point.

It's important to highlight that we don't know for sure whether the business secretary has coronavirus.

However, a potential case is causing real anger at Westminster.

Senior opposition figures say it shows the government was wrong to scrap a hybrid model which allowed MPs to contribute and vote remotely.

There are concerns some MPs didn't maintain social distancing rules in lengthy voting queues yesterday. Others fear they could become super spreaders, taking the virus back to their constituencies if there is an outbreak.

If Mr Sharma did test positive, anyone he had spent more than 15 minutes within two metres of would have to self-isolate for two weeks.

Mr Miliband subsequently sent his best wishes to Mr Sharma for a quick recovery.

The House of Commons authorities said "additional cleaning" had taken place, following the debate.

And the BBC's chief political correspondent Vicki Young said the MP who had sat nearest to Mr Sharma during his statement insisted that social distancing protocols had been observed throughout.

Mr Sharma was one of hundreds of MPs who queued around the building on Tuesday at two metre intervals as the Commons introduced new temporary voting procedures.

While the number of MPs permitted to sit in the chamber is still limited, many MPs are unhappy about being forced to return to Westminster, saying it poses a risk to them and their constituents.

Shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy said the events of the past 48 hours had shown that effective social distancing in Parliament was "impossible".

She said the government's decision to stop the largely virtual procedures in force since the middle of April, in which MPs were able to speak and vote remotely, was "reckless".

And her colleague Karl Turner said he had asked the Health and Safety Executive to conduct an urgent risk assessment of working conditions in Parliament.

He said MPs having to "huddle together" on escalators on the parliamentary estate while lining up to vote were among a number of "unsafe practices".

The HSE has the power to take enforcement action against any employers which it believes is compelling its staff to work in unsafe conditions or ignoring guidance set out by the government earlier this month.

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2020-06-04 04:33:04Z
52780830264128

Alok Sharma: Cabinet minister tested for virus after being taken ill - BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Business Secretary Alok Sharma is self-isolating at home after becoming unwell in Parliament.

Mr Sharma looked uncomfortable while taking part in a debate earlier, mopping his brow several times with his handkerchief while speaking.

A spokesman said the MP for Reading West had been tested for coronavirus and had returned home.

Mr Sharma was one of a handful of ministers to attend Tuesday's cabinet meeting in Downing Street in person.

The business secretary was in the Commons chamber for nearly an hour earlier while leading for the government on the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Bill.

Deep-cleaning

A spokesman said: "Alok Sharma began feeling unwell when in the Chamber delivering the second reading of the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Bill.

"In line with guidance he has been tested for coronavirus and is returning home to self isolate."

During the debate, Mr Sharma's opposite number, shadow business secretary Ed Miliband, passed him a glass of water at one point.

It's important to highlight that we don't know for sure whether the business secretary has coronavirus.

However, a potential case is causing real anger at Westminster.

Senior opposition figures say it shows the government was wrong to scrap a hybrid model which allowed MPs to contribute and vote remotely.

There are concerns some MPs didn't maintain social distancing rules in lengthy voting queues yesterday. Others fear they could become super spreaders, taking the virus back to their constituencies if there is an outbreak.

If Mr Sharma did test positive, anyone he had spent more than 15 minutes within two metres of would have to self-isolate for two weeks.

Mr Miliband subsequently sent his best wishes to Mr Sharma for a quick recovery.

The House of Commons authorities said "additional cleaning" had taken place, following the debate.

And the BBC's chief political correspondent Vicki Young said the MP who had sat nearest to Mr Sharma during his statement insisted that social distancing protocols had been observed throughout.

Mr Sharma was one of hundreds of MPs who queued around the building on Tuesday at two metre intervals as the Commons introduced new temporary voting procedures.

While the number of MPs permitted to sit in the chamber is still limited, many MPs are unhappy about being forced to return to Westminster, saying it poses a risk to them and their constituents.

Shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy said the events of the past 48 hours had shown that effective social distancing in Parliament was "impossible".

She said the government's decision to stop the largely virtual procedures in force since the middle of April, in which MPs were able to speak and vote remotely, was "reckless".

And her colleague Karl Turner said he had asked the Health and Safety Executive to conduct an urgent risk assessment of working conditions in Parliament.

He said MPs having to "huddle together" on escalators on the parliamentary estate while lining up to vote were among a number of "unsafe practices".

The HSE has the power to take enforcement action against any employers which it believes is compelling its staff to work in unsafe conditions or ignoring guidance set out by the government earlier this month.

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2020-06-04 04:18:04Z
52780830264128

Alok Sharma: Cabinet minister tested for virus after being taken ill - BBC News

Media playback is unsupported on your device

Business Secretary Alok Sharma is self-isolating at home after becoming unwell in Parliament.

Mr Sharma looked uncomfortable while taking part in a debate earlier, mopping his brow several times with his handkerchief while speaking.

A spokesman said the MP for Reading West had been tested for coronavirus and had returned home.

Mr Sharma was one of a handful of ministers to attend Tuesday's cabinet meeting in Downing Street in person.

The business secretary was in the Commons chamber for nearly an hour earlier while leading for the government on the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Bill.

Deep-cleaning

A spokesman said: "Alok Sharma began feeling unwell when in the Chamber delivering the second reading of the Corporate Insolvency and Governance Bill.

"In line with guidance he has been tested for coronavirus and is returning home to self isolate."

During the debate, Mr Sharma's opposite number, shadow business secretary Ed Miliband, passed him a glass of water at one point.

It's important to highlight that we don't know for sure whether the business secretary has coronavirus.

However, a potential case is causing real anger at Westminster.

Senior opposition figures say it shows the government was wrong to scrap a hybrid model which allowed MPs to contribute and vote remotely.

There are concerns some MPs didn't maintain social distancing rules in lengthy voting queues yesterday. Others fear they could become super spreaders, taking the virus back to their constituencies if there is an outbreak.

If Mr Sharma did test positive, anyone he had spent more than 15 minutes within two metres of would have to self-isolate for two weeks.

Mr Miliband subsequently sent his best wishes to Mr Sharma for a quick recovery.

The House of Commons authorities said "additional cleaning" had taken place, following the debate.

And the BBC's chief political correspondent Vicki Young said the MP who had sat nearest to Mr Sharma during his statement insisted that social distancing protocols had been observed throughout.

Mr Sharma was one of hundreds of MPs who queued around the building on Tuesday at two metre intervals as the Commons introduced new temporary voting procedures.

While the number of MPs permitted to sit in the chamber is still limited, many MPs are unhappy about being forced to return to Westminster, saying it poses a risk to them and their constituents.

Shadow foreign secretary Lisa Nandy said the events of the past 48 hours had shown that effective social distancing in Parliament was "impossible".

She said the government's decision to stop the largely virtual procedures in force since the middle of April, in which MPs were able to speak and vote remotely, was "reckless".

And her colleague Karl Turner said he had asked the Health and Safety Executive to conduct an urgent risk assessment of working conditions in Parliament.

He said MPs having to "huddle together" on escalators on the parliamentary estate while lining up to vote were among a number of "unsafe practices".

The HSE has the power to take enforcement action against any employers which it believes is compelling its staff to work in unsafe conditions or ignoring guidance set out by the government earlier this month.

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2020-06-04 03:34:01Z
52780830264128