Rabu, 23 September 2020

Coronavirus: Rishi Sunak is to unveil 'Winter plan' to help firms - Daily Mail

Rishi Sunak will splash the cash AGAIN: Chancellor is to unveil 'Winter plan' to help firms during coronavirus crisis but 'rejects calls to extend furlough'... as experts issue dire warning that 540,000 hospitality jobs could be at risk

  • Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak last night cancelled plans for a full-scale Budget in November
  • Instead he will map out an emergency 'Winter Economy Plan' designed to help firms cope with restrictions
  • Whitehall sources said Chancellor's plans would include a new wage subsidy modelled on German scheme 
  • Mr Sunak is also expected to extend the number of cheap loan schemes for business and help self-employed 
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Rishi Sunak will set out plans for another multi-billion-pound business support scheme – but will warn that the Treasury cannot save every job threatened by the Government’s Covid restrictions.

The Chancellor cancelled plans for a full-scale Budget in November, with sources saying it was ‘not the time’ for long-term plans.

Instead he will map out an emergency ‘Winter Economy Plan’ today designed to help firms cope with new Covid restrictions which Boris Johnson has warned will last for six months.

Whitehall sources last night said the Chancellor’s plans would include a new wage subsidy scheme modelled on a German scheme that helps fund salaries at firms where there is only enough work to go back part-time.

Mr Sunak is also expected to extend a number of cheap loan schemes for business. And the Prime Minister hinted yesterday there would be additional help for the self-employed.

As the Archbishops of Canterbury and York warned of the economic costs of Covid:

  • Hospitality groups said a quarter of pubs and restaurants could go bust this year; 
  • HMRC and Goldman Sachs were among employers abandoning their drives to get people back to the office;
  • Pictures showed high streets boarded up as shops reacted to the clampdown; 
  • The travel industry faced fresh despair when Downing Street warned of the risk of booking half-term holidays; 
  • Upper Crust and Caffe Ritazza are keeping two thirds of outlets shut; 
  • MPs demanded extra help for theatre and music venues;
  • No 10 said a ban on household visits could be extended across large swathes of England;
  • A mobile tracing app is finally being rolled out – four months late;
  • Matt Hancock’s target for half a million virus tests a day by the end of next month was under threat from equipment shortages;
  • Scientific advisers suggested that students could be told to remain on campus over Christmas.
Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak (left) and Prime Minister Boris Johnson leave 10 Downing Street, for a Cabinet meeting to be held at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in London, ahead of MPs returning to Westminster after the summer recess on September 1. The Chancellor last night cancelled plans for a full-scale Budget in November

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak (left) and Prime Minister Boris Johnson leave 10 Downing Street, for a Cabinet meeting to be held at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in London, ahead of MPs returning to Westminster after the summer recess on September 1. The Chancellor last night cancelled plans for a full-scale Budget in November

Ministers are also looking at a bailout scheme for struggling sports clubs hit by a ban on crowds. 

Furious Tory MPs have turned on 'authoritarian' Boris Johnson as he ordered the British public to obey his draconian new coronavirus restrictions – or face an economically devastating second national lockdown

Furious Tory MPs have turned on 'authoritarian' Boris Johnson as he ordered the British public to obey his draconian new coronavirus restrictions – or face an economically devastating second national lockdown 

But Treasury sources said the Chancellor had rejected calls to extend the £35billion furlough scheme, despite warnings that its closure at the end of next month could result in more than one million redundancies.

‘The Chancellor has shown he has been creative in the past and hopes that people will trust us to continue in that vein,’ a source said. ‘Giving people reassurance and businesses the help they need to get through this is uppermost in his mind.’ Mr Sunak played a pivotal role in helping persuade Mr Johnson not to move to an immediate second lockdown this week.

But the decision to tighten Covid restrictions on the hospitality sector and order millions of office staff to work from home until spring has put him under huge pressure to bring forward more support.

Today he is expected to warn that the Treasury does not have a bottomless pit of money to prop up the economy indefinitely – and cannot save every job.

Allies said he would be ‘very honest with people’ about the ‘difficult trade-offs’ the Government faces as it tries to deal with the twin challenges of surging Covid cases and a battered economy.

‘It is not about health versus the economy, but about the balance between keeping people in jobs and finding them new ones,’ the source said.

The Treasury was tight-lipped about the Chancellor’s plans last night. But it is understood he will press ahead with a version of Germany’s ‘kurzarbeit’ scheme, which ensures workers who have had their hours cut by struggling firms receive a minimum of 60 per cent of their lost pay.

Questions had already been raised over whether the Chancellor's set piece autumn announcement, broadly penned in for November, would go ahead

Questions had already been raised over whether the Chancellor's set piece autumn announcement, broadly penned in for November, would go ahead

What is the German-style system that Rishi Sunak could use in place of the furlough scheme? 

Germany's has used its Kurzarbeit job subsidy measures during the coronavirus pandemic and has recently extended its use until the end of 2021.

Unlike the British furlough programme, an emergency scheme which pays companies to pay employees not to work, the Kurzarbeit system, which already existed before the pandemic, surrounds short-time working.

It allows employers to reduce employees' hours while keeping them in a job.

The government pays workers a percentage of the money they would have got for working those lost hours. 

According to the Munich-based Ifo Institute for Economic Research, at the height of the pandemic, half of all German firms had at least some of their staff on the scheme. 

Influential British political figures including former prime minister Gordon Brown have urged the government to bring in such a scheme, or a similar French-style system, after the furlough scheme ends in October.

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A similar scheme proposed by the Confederation of British Industry would see subsidies for firms that can offer staff at last 50 per cent of their normal hours, with the cost for non-working hours shared equally by the company, the Treasury and the employee.

The final scheme is likely to be significantly cheaper than furlough, which has paid 80 per cent of the wages of staff unable to work and helped protect 9.6million jobs. But it will fall short of demands from Labour and the unions for the furlough scheme to continue indefinitely.

In the Commons yesterday, Mr Johnson was repeatedly urged to extend the furlough scheme in the wake of his decision to tighten Covid restrictions for at least six months.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer urged him to ‘stop and rethink, support the businesses affected, not to withdraw furlough’.

Mr Johnson said the furlough scheme had ‘already been extended’ once, adding: ‘I do not think that it would be sensible simply to extend the current existing furlough scheme in its present form beyond the end of October.

‘But we will do everything we can to support businesses and to support those in jobs and, indeed, the self-employed.’

Mr Johnson said the Government had already paid out £160billion to prop up the economy, with business support more generous than in most other countries.

Entrepreneur and former Pizza Express boss Luke Johnson told the BBC’s Newsnight programme that closure of the furlough scheme at a time when the economy was still operating under tight restrictions would lead to mass redundancies next month. ‘I would estimate of the three million [still on the furlough scheme], at least a million... will be made redundant,’ he said.

The decision to cancel the Budget is a blow to the Treasury’s hopes of getting the public finances back on a more even keel.

Mr Sunak had been considering tax rises to help offset a budget deficit expected to top £300billion this year. But decisions on tax will now have to be delayed until next year.

The cancellation of the Budget could also prove a blow to the aviation industry, which had been hoping for a cut in Air Passenger Duty.

A Government source last night told the Mail that ministers were also looking at a rescue package for threatened football and rugby clubs.

‘We cannot have a situation where local football clubs are going to the wall,’ the source said. ‘They and other similar sports clubs are critical parts of their communities.’

It's criminal! Amid howls of anger from business chiefs over SIX-MONTH crackdown that threatens millions of jobs, one boss delivers his damning verdict...

By Daniel Martin, Tom Witherow and Lucy White for The Daily Mail   

One of Britain’s top business bosses yesterday led a backlash against ‘criminal’ Covid curbs that he claims could threaten millions of jobs.

Julian Metcalfe, the founder of sushi chain Itsu and sandwich shop Pret a Manger, tore into No 10 for its decision to impose six-month restrictions.

Nearly a quarter of pubs and restaurants fear they will fail by the end of the year unless Chancellor Rishi Sunak unveils significant support for them, a poll found.

Shoppers and workers get their takeaway from Pret A Manger in Chelsea while wearing masks before it becomes compulsory in shops in England on Thursday

Shoppers and workers get their takeaway from Pret A Manger in Chelsea while wearing masks before it becomes compulsory in shops in England on Thursday

A survey by the British Beer and Pub Association, UK Hospitality and the British Institute of Innkeeping exposed concerns that as many as 540,000 jobs could go over the next few months.

This was before the latest restrictions for pubs, restaurants and the wider hospitality sector were announced.

Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UK Hospitality, added: ‘The future of the sector is still very much in the balance'

Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UK Hospitality, added: ‘The future of the sector is still very much in the balance'

Boris Johnson ordered all pubs and restaurants in England to close at 10pm from tonight and made table service mandatory. In addition, he ordered people to work from home if they can – a U-turn on his call for staff to return to the office in a bid to shore up ailing city high streets.

Responding to the restrictions, Mr Metcalfe said he did not know whether Itsu would survive the measures. ‘The repercussions of this six months is going to be devastating to so many people, to local councils, to industry, to people all over our country,’ he told Radio 4’s World At One.

‘We have just not begun to touch the seriousness of this. People who work in hotels, restaurants, takeaways and in coffee shops are devastated. A great many are closing down – we’re losing thousands upon thousands of jobs. How long can this continue, this vague “work from home”, “don’t go on public transport”? The ramifications of this are just enormous.

‘I hate to think how many people will be made redundant – it’s just heartbreaking. It’s hundreds of thousands of hospitality businesses, and the knock-on effects of people who look after them and service them and bring them food and clean them. It’s millions of jobs.’

Mr Metcalfe turned his fire on Mr Johnson, accusing him of announcing a policy of ‘exaggerated nonsense’.

‘To turn to an entire nation and say “stay at home for six months”, and to spout off some Churchillian nonsense about we’ll make it through – it’s terribly unhelpful to this country,’ he said.

Boris Johnson ordered all pubs and restaurants in England to close at 10pm from Thursday night and made table service mandatory. Pictured, people drinking outside in Soho, London, on Wednesday night

Boris Johnson ordered all pubs and restaurants in England to close at 10pm from Thursday night and made table service mandatory. Pictured, people drinking outside in Soho, London, on Wednesday night

Emma McClarkin (pictured), chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, said: ‘This research shows pub businesses were already teetering on the edge'

Emma McClarkin (pictured), chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, said: ‘This research shows pub businesses were already teetering on the edge'

‘This talk of six months is criminal. It should be “we will review the situation each week, each hour” – not “everyone stay home for six months and let’s see where we are”. Because the scientists are all disagreeing with each other.’

And while Mr Metcalfe welcomed Mr Sunak’s furlough scheme, he said: ‘We can’t as a country go on borrowing, borrowing, borrowing money, pretending it doesn’t matter.... Of course we’d love furlough to continue, but it can’t.’

Major firms including HSBC and Goldman Sachs have halted their return-to-the-office programmes, leading to increased fears for pubs and restaurants.

Citigroup has also eased its return to the office programme and has asked staff to exercise judgment. Barclays and Lloyds are also set to reduce their back to workplace programmes.

The Chancellor has drawn up plans to help hospitality firms, but businesses fear it won’t be enough.

The survey by the three trade bodies found that one in eight hospitality staff has already been made redundant, and more jobs in the sector are expected to be lost when the furlough scheme ends.

A survey by the British Beer and Pub Association, UK Hospitality and the British Institute of Innkeeping exposed concerns that as many as 540,000 jobs could go over the next few months. Pictured, people drinking outside a bar in Blackpool on Wednesday night

A survey by the British Beer and Pub Association, UK Hospitality and the British Institute of Innkeeping exposed concerns that as many as 540,000 jobs could go over the next few months. Pictured, people drinking outside a bar in Blackpool on Wednesday night

Julian Metcalfe (pictured), the founder of sushi chain Itsu and sandwich shop Pret a Manger, tore into No 10 for its decision to impose six-month restrictions

Julian Metcalfe (pictured), the founder of sushi chain Itsu and sandwich shop Pret a Manger, tore into No 10 for its decision to impose six-month restrictions

On average, businesses believe their workforce will be 25 per cent lower by February 2021 compared to February this year.

Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, said: ‘This research shows pub businesses were already teetering on the edge.

‘Now the Prime Minister has announced even more restrictions for them, it is clear much more support will be needed from the Government to ensure they survive.

‘Only by taking these measures can the Government save our pubs, hospitality businesses and as many as 540,000 jobs.’

Kate Nicholls, chief executive of UK Hospitality, added: ‘The future of the sector is still very much in the balance. The additional restrictions announced this week place even further burdens on a sector that is operating with razor-thin margins and needs all the help it can get. It is vital that these restrictions are reviewed regularly.’

People drinking outside the Old Compton in Soho, London, Wednesday night. Catherine McGuinness, from the City of London Corporation, said safety had to come first, but expressed disappointment at the blanket call for office workers to return to working from home

People drinking outside the Old Compton in Soho, London, Wednesday night. Catherine McGuinness, from the City of London Corporation, said safety had to come first, but expressed disappointment at the blanket call for office workers to return to working from home

The chief executives of Deliveroo, KFC and Pizza Hut last night wrote to the Chancellor urging him to ensure that incomes remain stable, an extension of VAT reduction on food for six months, and an extension of business rates relief.

Catherine McGuinness, from the City of London Corporation, said safety had to come first, but expressed disappointment at the blanket call for office workers to return to working from home.

She told Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘It’s clear that this virus isn’t going to go away quickly so we need to find a way of living with it that doesn’t cripple our economy.’

Last night a Government spokesman said: ‘The aim is to reduce transmission in areas where people are enclosed and where they might come into contact with people they don’t know. This can include public transport and can include places that are not fully Covid secure. It is a way of reducing those chances transmission which is the name of the game.’ 

How much more of Britain will be boarded up now? 

Commentary by Alex Brummer for The Daily Mail 

The Chancellor’s emergency decision to cancel the November budget and instead unveil a new winter plan today to preserve jobs and support enterprise is an indication of the grave economic uncertainty this country now faces.

Uncertainty made far worse by the Government’s latest measures to contain the pandemic.

Rishi Sunak’s surprise autumn package, which comes after his July ‘Plan for Jobs’, shows that amid the havoc wreaked by Covid-19 and the Government’s cautious response to rising infections, the Chancellor is having to make decisions on the hoof irrespective of their financial and economic consequences.

Picture shows closed shops on Kensington High Street after coronavirus lockdown left retailers unable to sustain business

Picture shows closed shops on Kensington High Street after coronavirus lockdown left retailers unable to sustain business

Closed down shop front on Golders Green Road in North West London. It is the second time in a year that a Chancellor has been forced to postpone the budget. Last November Sunak’s predecessor Sajid Javid called off his plans when Boris Johnson called the December election

Closed down shop front on Golders Green Road in North West London. It is the second time in a year that a Chancellor has been forced to postpone the budget. Last November Sunak’s predecessor Sajid Javid called off his plans when Boris Johnson called the December election

Just a few weeks ago the big debate was about whether the time was right for raising taxes in the budget. But now, with the new clampdown on the hospitality sector and office working, any plans he had to deal with the ballooning budget deficit and debt have been put on hold until next year. Sunak is having to reach deep into his bag of tricks to prevent the economy going back into lockdown.

It is the second time in a year that a Chancellor has been forced to postpone the budget. Last November Sunak’s predecessor Sajid Javid called off his plans when Boris Johnson called the December election.

This time, the cause of the postponement is more chilling. The uncertainty caused by the Prime Minister’s doom-laden response to the virus this week has sapped business confidence and caused huge sectors of the economy – particularly the hospitality, sport and aerospace industries – to knock on the Treasury’s door for help.

Without measures from No 11, vast swathes of Britain’s high streets and city centres, already desolate, risk being boarded up forever. In making the latest batch of spending decisions, designed to keep the economy running, Sunak and the Treasury will almost be flying blind. Most government departments still have to submit their budget plans for 2021-22 and these are likely to be outlined in a spending review later in the Autumn.

A Vision Express was closed down in Camden High Street, London. The precise direction of the public finances and the outlook for the economy will not be fully revealed until the Office for Budget Responsibility releases its twice yearly forecasts in mid-November

A Vision Express was closed down in Camden High Street, London. The precise direction of the public finances and the outlook for the economy will not be fully revealed until the Office for Budget Responsibility releases its twice yearly forecasts in mid-November

Closed shop premises on King Street in Manchester city centre. Government borrowing in the current financial year is already projected to reach at least £300billion. Debt levels have reached an alarming £2trillion, which is the equivalent of a whole year of national output pre-Covid

Closed shop premises on King Street in Manchester city centre. Government borrowing in the current financial year is already projected to reach at least £300billion. Debt levels have reached an alarming £2trillion, which is the equivalent of a whole year of national output pre-Covid

The tragedy is that there were signs of a strong bounce in the economy in the summer – it recovered almost half the output lost during the first half of the year as we caught a small glimpse of the desired ‘V’ shaped recovery.

However, the combination of the end of furlough in October and imposition of new lockdown rules will deliver a devastating blow to output and jobs. Sunak is known to be concerned that if the furlough were kept in place he would be in danger of supporting ‘zombie jobs’ that will never come back. But he will also want to avoid a ‘cliff-edge’ in which millions suddenly find themselves out of work.

The precise direction of the public finances and the outlook for the economy will not be fully revealed until the Office for Budget Responsibility releases its twice yearly forecasts in mid-November. What we do know, however, even before Sunak’s latest expensive package of assistance, is that Britain now faces the worst peacetime budget crisis of modern times.

Government borrowing in the current financial year is already projected to reach at least £300billion. Debt levels have reached an alarming £2trillion, which is the equivalent of a whole year of national output pre-Covid. The Chancellor has spent £35billion so far on the furlough scheme and will be anxious to make sure the money has not been totally wasted.

One possible way of saving jobs would be to replace it with a German-style support scheme under which employers put people back to work on a part-time basis and the Government makes up the shortfall in wages, allowing the economy to gather momentum.

As the country rides the coronavirus roller-coaster, all the normal rules of predictable economic policymaking have been torn up. The Chancellor is having to adopt a dynamic approach of a kind never seen before.

But whatever happens tomorrow, when the pandemic has passed, Britain will face a massive task in restoring fiscal responsibility and credibility. 

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2020-09-23 21:03:02Z
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Brexit breakthrough: Barnier says Boris' hardline tactics created 'opening' for trade deal - Daily Express

Brussels sources said Michel Barnier believes Boris Johnson’s threat to rip up the Withdrawal Agreement had created a “more open atmosphere” in talks with UK negotiator Lord Frost And senior diplomatic sources told Express.co.uk the EU’s chief negotiator had identified several “landing zones” for compromises to break the deadlock over a post-Brexit trade deal. It was said Mr Barnier was undeterred by the recent spat over Downing Street’s willingness to overrule parts of the divorce deal relating to Northern Ireland.

He vowed to “stay calm” and remain at the negotiation table despite what was seen as a deliberate provocation by No10 to force him to quit the talks.

The Frenchman told a recent gathering of EU27 ministers the Internal Market Bill was “not helpful” but insisted he is “focused on the endgame of the negotiations”, according to a source familiar with the talks.

Another source said legislation had created an “opening” in the talks as they reached their end point. 

Mr Barnier today met with Lord Frost, the Prime Minister’s Brexit envoy, to prepare for the ninth formal negotiating round in Brussels.

Arriving in London, the Brussels diplomat said: “I am determined.

“We remain calm, respectful, realistic and firm.”

Next week’s session is seen as vital in reaching an agreement by the October deadline set by both sides.

British officials have complained the wrangling over a post-Brexit trade deal has brought to a standstill because of the EU’s refusal to budge from its demands for continued access to Britain’s fishing grounds and a regulatory level-playing field.

But a diplomatic source said Mr Barnier is “realistic” a deal can be reached before the end of the year.

“An agreement remains possible in line with the EU’s interests and the three UK red lines,” they told Express.co.uk.

Another source involved in the discussions said a fisheries agreement “in theory should not be difficult”, but it is expected to be held back until the very end of the talks.

“Having talked for such a long time, the negotiators know where the landing zones are,” they added.

MUST READ: Galileo mystery: 'Where did the £92million go?' MP asks

They believe any future relationship pact will alleviate Downing Street’s concerns over Northern Ireland being cut off from the mainland.

And reports Mr Johnson is willing to delay his Brexit Bill’s route through Parliament were well received in Brussels.

Sources said the bloc is now confident the Prime Minister will be able to remove sections of the legislation that allow ministers to rip up parts of the divorce deal.

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2020-09-23 21:00:00Z
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Coronavirus: Sir Keir Starmer blames UK government 'failure' for new COVID-19 measures - Sky News

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  1. Coronavirus: Sir Keir Starmer blames UK government 'failure' for new COVID-19 measures  Sky News
  2. Indyref2: Starmer refuses to rule out backing Scotland referendum  BBC News
  3. Johnson and Starmer clash over coronavirus testing and tracing at PMQs  Guardian News
  4. I‘m glad Keir Starmer’s speech turned off the radical left – it’s about time they left the Labour Party  The Independent
  5. Will Keir Starmer learn the lessons of his defeated party?  Telegraph.co.uk
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-09-23 20:11:41Z
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Keir Starmer delivers 'right of reply' to Boris Johnson's coronavirus statement – watch live - Guardian News

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  1. Keir Starmer delivers 'right of reply' to Boris Johnson's coronavirus statement – watch live  Guardian News
  2. Indyref2: Starmer refuses to rule out backing Scotland referendum  BBC News
  3. Johnson and Starmer clash over coronavirus testing and tracing at PMQs  Guardian News
  4. I‘m glad Keir Starmer’s speech turned off the radical left – it’s about time they left the Labour Party  The Independent
  5. Keir Starmer is refusing to play Downing Street's game. So far, it's working  The Guardian
  6. View Full coverage on Google News

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2020-09-23 19:48:20Z
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Brexit: Michael Gove says lorry drivers will need 'Kent Access Permit' to access county once transition period ends - Sky News

Lorry drivers exporting goods to Europe through Kent after the Brexit transition period ends will need to have a permit or face police action, a senior minister has told MPs.

Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove said getting one will be a "relatively simple process", adding the scheme is designed to avoid congestion in the county.

The UK will stop following the rules of the EU's single market and customs union once the Brexit transition ends at the end of the year, moving instead to new customs rules.

"That system has been developed, it's being shared with business and we want to make sure that people use a relatively simple process in order to get what will become known as a 'Kent Access Permit', which means that they can then proceed smoothly through Kent," Mr Gove told the Commons.

Michael Gove addresses the Commons
Gove's 'worst case scenario' for Brexit

Mr Gove's answer came in response to a question from Ashford MP Damian Green, who asked for a guarantee that the Smart Freight system will be up and running by January.

"The prospect of 7,000 trucks queuing to cross the Channel will send a chill through my constituents because we know what effect that has on all the roads in Kent and it's disastrous," he said, referring to a leaked "reasonable worst-case scenario" from the government that emerged earlier.

Under this scenario, between 30-50% of trucks crossing the Channel will not be ready for the new regulations coming into force on 1 January 2021, while a "lack of capacity to hold unready trucks at French ports" could reduce the flow of traffic across the strait to 60-80% of normal levels.

More from Brexit

According to a government consultation launched last month, KAPs would be required for hauliers driving to the Port of Dover or Eurotunnel in Folkestone.

It is part of Operation Brock contingency planning for possible disruption to cross-Channel trade.

General view of HGV lorries on the M42 motorway.
Why trucks have stalled Brexit trade progress

KAPs would be issued to drivers who have been given a green or amber result from the online Smart Freight system and be valid for 24 hours to cover a single trip.

This is being developed by ministers to try and make sure goods are ready to cross the border before journeys begin.

Drivers who are found travelling to Dover or Folkestone without a KAP face being given a £300 fine by the police or the Vehicle Standards Agency.

Trade association Logistics UK warned last month that the move will create "more red tape for businesses".

"Our members are dismayed that the onus for compliance will be placed on drivers themselves, leaving them personally liable for a fine if they do not comply with the new rules," policy manager Chris Yarsley said.

"The current proposals create an internal UK border by introducing Kent Access Permits, adding more red tape to the work which hauliers will be obliged to comply with."

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Mr Gove also told MPs that "many" businesses have not taken all the steps necessary to prepare for the end of the transition period.

He said that just one in four firms think they are "fully ready" for the UK's post-Brexit arrangements to kick in.

The Cabinet Office minister said businesses are becoming more prepared but there are "still many" who have "not quite taken the steps they need to".

Labour's Rachel Reeves hit back, with the shadow Cabinet Office minister telling the Commons: "It is all well and good to tell businesses to act now.

"But without the systems in place, frankly it's like telling me to bake a cake but forgetting to turn the oven on."

A government spokesperson said: "We are prioritising the smooth movement of outbound HGVs over 7.5 tonnes through Kent to prevent unnecessary queues at the border.

"HGV drivers, or those acting on their behalf, will be able to follow a simple process to get a 'Kent Access Permit' using the newly developed Smart Freight webservice.

"We have been engaging with industry on this for some time and we will set out more detail on this shortly."

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2020-09-23 18:33:45Z
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Indyref2: Starmer refuses to rule out backing Scotland referendum - BBC News

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Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has refused to rule out the possibility of supporting a second referendum on Scottish independence in the long term.

But he told the BBC a vote like the one held in 2014 was "not needed" soon and the focus should be on "rebuilding" the economy and services after coronavirus.

His party would not campaign for a referendum in next May's Scottish Parliament elections, he added.

The SNP government in Scotland wants to hold one as soon as possible.

In an interview with BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg, Sir Keir also said Labour would "betray" voters "if we don't take more seriously winning elections and actually changing lives".

And he argued Prime Minister Boris Johnson did not have "the right character" to deal with the challenges posed by the pandemic.

When Scotland's voters were asked in a referendum in 2014 whether the country should become independent, 55% said no.

But the SNP has campaigned for a second poll since the UK's 2016 decision - in the Brexit referendum - to leave the EU.

It says the difference between the UK-wide result and that in Scotland - which chose by 62% to 38% to remain within the bloc - strengthens the case for independence.

It has also been suggested that, following the next UK general election, expected in 2024, Labour could need the support of the SNP if it wants to form a government. This might, it is added, require a deal on having another referendum.

Sir Keir said: "We will be going into that election in May making it very clear that another divisive referendum on independence in Scotland is not what is needed.

"What is needed is an intense focus on rebuilding the economy, on making sure public services are rebuilt as well and dealing with the pandemic."

'Hypothetical'

Pressed on what would happen after May, Sir Keir said: "We don't know... In politics, people tell you with great certainty what is going to happen next year and the year after, but it doesn't always turn out that way."

He added: "I am setting out the argument we will make into May. I am not doing a hypothetical of what will happen after that."

The Scottish government, led by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, had hoped to hold an independence referendum during the current term of the Scottish Parliament.

However, ministers wanted to secure an agreement with the UK government to make sure any vote would be legally watertight, something Mr Johnson has repeatedly stated his opposition to.

Work on preparations for a ballot was paused after coronavirus hit, but the Scottish government has promised to set out plans in a draft bill.

Labour, once dominant in Scotland, currently has 23 Members of the Scottish Parliament, putting it third behind the SNP, on 61, and the Conservatives, on 31.

Speaking for the UK government, Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove raised doubts about the Labour leader's comments, saying: "Sir Keir Starmer has a problem accepting referendum results.

"He tried to block Brexit, and now he wants to work with Nicola Sturgeon to renege on the Scottish referendum result and break up the UK."

Union concerns

Sir Keir replaced Jeremy Corbyn as Labour leader in April, following the party's worst general election result - in terms of seats - since 1935.

Recent UK opinion polls have suggested support for the party under his stewardship is now close to that for Mr Johnson's Conservatives.

But some trade unions, including Unite and the Fire Brigades Union (FBU), have raised concerns over Sir Keir's leadership.

The FBU has warned him not to "water down" pledges on workers' rights and the environment that he made when running for the job.

In his speech on Monday to Labour's annual conference, Sir Keir told his party to "get serious about winning".

Speaking to Laura Kuenssberg, he said: "When you lose four elections in a row, you have lost the chance to change lives for the better and we have gifted the Tories a decade or more of power. That is not what the Labour Party is there for."

He also said: "The Labour Party's historic mission was to represent working people in Parliament and to form governments to change lives, and we betray that if we don't take more seriously winning elections and actually changing lives."

Sir Keir is due to make a televised address at 20:00, in response to the prime minister's statement on Tuesday on the government's new coronavirus measures for England.

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2020-09-23 18:21:47Z
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Coronavirus: UK reports third highest number of daily COVID-19 cases ever - Sky News

The UK has reported 6,178 new coronavirus cases - the highest daily total in four months. 

There have only been two days since the pandemic began which have exceeded this total - 1 May, when there were 6,201 confirmed cases and 5 April, when there were 6,199.

More cases are being detected now than at the start of the UK outbreak due to increased testing, but Sky's science correspondent Thomas Moore said the daily figure "will underline the urgency of action to stem a second wave."

Live updates on coronavirus from UK and around the world

The UK's positivity rate - the ratio of positive tests to number of tests overall - is now at 2.51%, compared with below 1% for most of July and early August.

This is edging towards the World Health Organisation's recommended level of below 5% and suggests that the number of infections is growing.

However, the UK is still nowhere near a realistic comparison to the peak of April and May, when Imperial College researchers have suggested there were more than 100,000 new infections a day.

More from Covid-19

Many of these cases would have been missed at the time as more consistent community testing began in May.

The country reported 4,926 daily confirmed cases on Tuesday.

A further 37 people have died within 28 days of testing positive for COVID-19 as of Wednesday, bringing the UK's total death toll to 41,862.

Hospital admissions are also rising, with 1,469 COVID-19 patients in hospital on Wednesday compared with 1,319 on Tuesday.

Moore added: "It takes around 10 days from developing symptoms to needing hospital care and many scientists fear the surge in cases will lead to increasing pressure on hospitals in early October."

It follows a stark warning from the prime minister on Tuesday as he revealed new restrictions for England.

Boris Johnson addresses the nation
'We'll get through this winter together'

In a televised address to the nation, he announced a curfew for pubs and restaurants, further face mask restrictions, tougher rules for weddings and encouraged office staff to work from home.

Telling Britons they would need to stick to the rules or face further restrictions, he said: "Never in our history has our collective destiny and our collective health depended so completely on our individual behaviour."

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab echoed his comments, telling Sky News' Kay Burley on Wednesday: "I don't think we would speculate about what further could be done.

"But the reality [the restrictions] will be more intrusive or we could end up in a national lockdown. That is what we want to avoid."

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2020-09-23 16:12:55Z
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