Senin, 19 Oktober 2020

Do a deal today or else: Ministers threaten to FORCE Tier 3 on Greater Manchester - Daily Mail

Do a deal today or else: Ministers threaten to FORCE Tier 3 lockdown on Greater Manchester as Boris 'offers £100m' to settle row - but Tory civil war rages as northern MPs accuse government of 'throwing us under the bus'

  • Brutal spat between ministers and Greater Manchester politicians over plunging region into Tier Three curbs
  • Boris Johnson is thought to be offering package worth up to £100million to compensate for new restrictions
  • Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick said he expected spat to be resolved by tomorrow 'one way or the other' 
  • NHS documents claim hospitals in Manchester, Salford, Stockport and Bolton already struggling for beds
  • Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove warned Burnham 'posturing' would cost lives in the covid high-risk city
  • Offer is in line with deals struck with Merseyside and Lancashire, £30m support each for jobs and business 
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Ministers sent an ultimatum to Andy Burnham and mutinous Greater Manchester MPs that they must do a deal on Tier Three lockdown today - or face being forced into tougher coronavirus curbs.

Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick warned that talks had gone on 'too long' and the government could force the issue as early as tomorrow unless the region accepts a package of funding to ease the impact, thought to be worth up to £100million. 

The threat came after doctors voiced alarm that Manchester is at risk of running out of hospital beds for COVID, with the bitter standoff now having delayed a clampdown by days. 

But along with the war of words with Mr Burnham and Labour, the wrangling is also at risk of tearing the Conservative Party apart - as local MPs including 1922 committee chair Sir Graham Brady dismiss the need for the highest levels of restrictions. 

There was a brutal response from 'Red Wall' MPs on Tory WhatsApp groups after colleagues from Tier One sent a letter to Mr Burnham urging him to 'engage' with the Government's regional approach in order to spare other areas 'pain'. 

The intervention - which many believe was orchestrated by Downing Street - sparked furious private rows about an 'all-round shafting', with one MP reportedly jibing at another: 'You just want a promotion and you're happy to throw colleagues under a bus to achieve it.' 

In a round of interviews this morning, Mr Jenrick said: 'I do think it is very clear that having now discussed this for well over a week this does now need to be brought to a conclusion.

'I think everybody in Greater Manchester would agree with that.

'So, I am hopeful that either today, or tomorrow, we will reach a conclusion, one way or the other.'

But Mr Burnham was still signalling defiance today, telling journalists: 'It's not about the size of the cheque, it's about protecting low-paid workers, people who are self-employed and supporting businesses.' 

Liverpool City Region received £30million in support for local businesses when it went into Tier Three, along with £14million for extra contact tracing capacity, and £7million when it entered Tier Two.

Adjusting the total package for the larger population in Manchester would give a figure of around £95million.

Although Mr Burnham has been pushing for furlough to be paid at 80 per cent rather than the two-thirds offered by the government, that is paid centrally and separate from the bailouts. 

In other developments in the coronavirus crisis: 

  • A further 16,982 people have tested positive for coronavirus in the UK yesterday - a leap of almost a third compared to last week
  • Health chiefs reported 67 further deaths from Covid-19 - bringing the total number of fatalities to 43,646
  • England's deputy chief medical officer has called for the nation's 10pm pub curfew to be brought forward to 6pm 
  • A top government advisor said there is 'light at the end of the tunnel' as he predicts a Covid-19 vaccine will be ready by the end of March 2021
Leaked documents have suggested Greater Manchester is on track to run out of beds for coronavirus patients in the weeks ahead, with occupancy rising fast

Leaked documents have suggested Greater Manchester is on track to run out of beds for coronavirus patients in the weeks ahead, with occupancy rising fast

Official data shows the rolling seven day average of coronavirus cases in Greater Manchester has been falling in recent days

Official data shows the rolling seven day average of coronavirus cases in Greater Manchester has been falling in recent days

Pubs curfew should be brought forward to 6pm not 10pm says Jonathan Van-Tam

England's deputy chief medical officer has called for the nation's 10pm pub curfew to be brought forward to 6pm in an effort to reduce the increasing rates of transmission, according to reports.

Professor Jonathan Van-Tam admitted there was little evidence supporting the benefits of a 10pm curfew and said he would prefer a closing time of 6pm instead as he spoke to Greater Manchester MPs during a virtual meeting regarding the city's refusal to enter Tier 3 restrictions.

When asked if the 10pm curfew reduced the rates of coronavirus transmission, the professor said: 'Not really. I'd prefer 6pm, or even earlier.'

However the Government advisor also admitted there was no evidence that shutting pubs down completely under a Tier 3 lockdown would control the virus, according to The Daily Telegraph.

His comments come as scores of revellers today braved the winter chill as they enjoyed a night out in the capital's expanded beer gardens- just a day after London entered Tier Two lockdown.

Pub-goers swapped a night in at home to sit outside the numerous bars in central London's Soho and get round curbs putting a stop to multiple households sitting inside pubs and restaurants.

 

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The war of words grew increasingly bitter yesterday as Michael Gove accused Mr Burnham of 'posturing' amid talks between the PM's top adviser Sir Edward Lister, while the Manchester leader called for a Parliamentary vote on the city's fate to 'break the impasse'. 

Meanwhile, documents leaked to the Guardian suggested Greater Manchester is on track to run out of beds for coronavirus patients in the weeks ahead. 

Some 211 of the city's 257 critical care beds were being used for Covid patients or those with other serious illnesses - with 12 hospitals in the region already at full capacity.

Hospitals in Salford, Stockport and Bolton were already struggling to find beds to put the influx of 110 new patients with covid-19 needing vital treatment on Friday, the document stated. 

Mr Johnson made a bid to break the deadlock last night by offering Greater Manchester tens of millions of pounds in extra support if the region agrees to accept the toughest level of lockdown restrictions. 

But despite the overtures behind the scenes, the public war of words showed no sign of easing.

Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove savaged the Greater Manchester mayor, warning his 'posturing' would cost lives in a city that has one of the highest Covid-19 rates in the country. 

And James Daly, conservative MP for Bury North, said the mayor had still not spoken to him about his thoughts.

He told Sky News: 'I want them to put aside for a moment some of the political positioning that they've indulged in and I want them to work with us in order to ensure that we save lives and protect the NHS.

'Instead of press conferences and posturing, what we need is action to save people's lives.'

The PM's senior adviser Sir Edward Lister held talks with Mr Burnham last night in which he is said to have made a significant new financial offer.

Whitehall sources said the cash could run into 'tens of millions' of pounds to help ensure compliance with the swingeing Tier Three restrictions ministers want to introduce. 

The offer is in line with deals struck with Merseyside and Lancashire, which have both been granted an additional £30million in recent days to help support businesses and jobs. 

But it falls short of Mr Burnham's demand for the furlough scheme to be extended in full to provide 80 per cent of the wages of those unable to work.

Its replacement, the Job Support Scheme, will provide only 66 per cent of wages, although ministers insist the low-paid will also get Universal Credit top-ups.

Mr Burnham's office last night described the talks with Sir Edward as 'constructive', with the mayor expected to consult with other local leaders overnight.

But this morning James Daly, conservative MP for Bury North, said the mayor had still not spoken to him about his thoughts.

He told the Today programme: 'Myself and some of my colleagues in Greater Manchester thought it very important to set out our objections to some of the comments that were made by Labour figures and Mr Burnham yesterday regarding their desire to put greater Manchester into a national lockdown which we thing would be disastrous for both business and jobs

'But Mr Burnham doesn't have statutory responsibility for delivery of coronavirus measures so I think the things that's extremely important is that the Labour leader of Bury council; that he's in the room when the negotiations take place with the government

'Mr Burnham hasn't spoken to me at all regarding what his negotiating position is, hasn't said what he believes the package of support should be, hasn't reached out to me since the weekend to say 'James, what's the issue in Bury, Ramsbottom, Tottington, what do you feel is important?'

'On the information I had from a number of weeks ago, I didn't believe from that stage that we were in a position that justified tier three restrictions.'

Mr Gove yesterday refused to comment when it was suggested to him that Greater Manchester would be in Tier Three from today. 

Ministers fear compliance with new restrictions would be low if Mr Burnham and other local leaders reject the crackdown, although Greater Manchester Police last night confirmed officers would enforce any new regulations, which are likely to include pub closures.

Mr Gove yesterday contrasted Mr Burnham's hardline stance with that of leaders in Merseyside and Lancashire, who have reluctantly agreed to enter Tier Three.

'There is light at the end of the tunnel': SAGE expert Jeremy Farrar predicts a Covid vaccine WILL be ready within first three months of 2021

A top government advisor has said there is 'light at the end of the tunnel' as he predicts a Covid-19 vaccine will be ready by the end of March 2021.

Professor Jeremy Farrar, a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), said the UK faces a 'very, very difficult' period over the next three to six months.

But the Wellcome Trust director said there is 'light at the end of the tunnel', as he believes a Covid-19 vaccine and effective treatment will be ready in the first quarter of 2021.

It comes as England's Deputy Chief Medical Officer Jonathan Van-Tam has said the vaccine being prepared at Oxford University could be ready by December.

Meanwhile, drug giant Pfizer has released a video showing that production of their vaccine is well under way at the manufacturing plant in Belgium. 

 

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South Yorkshire is also thought to be close to agreeing on a package of Tier Three restrictions and support. 

But attempts to isolate Mr Burnham politically have been undermined by the support of local Conservative MPs, who also oppose further restrictions in the region.

Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 Committee of backbench Tory MPs, said politicians across Greater Manchester were 'pretty united' against the plans.

He told the BBC's Broadcasting House show that local MPs and council leaders had 'not been given the evidence it would be effective'.

He added: 'We can see no reason for taking that significant economic hit especially if it does not come with full compensation for the economic hit when there is no evidence being advanced as to why it might work.'

And he warned the PM not to impose the restrictions, adding: 'If you have got a situation where the MPs, the council leaders and the mayor are standing up for the people they represent, it would be unwise to impose it over their heads.'

Mr Burham has also called for a Commons vote this week to decide the level of financial aid for areas that are put into tier three.        

Carl Heneghan, director of the Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine at the University of Oxford, also questioned the value of further measures in Greater Manchester at this stage.

Writing in The Sunday Telegraph, he said average cases in the city had fallen by 20 per cent in the first week of October, suggesting measures might be working already.

'If policy keeps intervening at the first sight of rising cases then we will never learn if any given intervention has worked,' he said. 'The time has come to follow the data, watch the trends and slow down the thinking.'

Mr Burnham acknowledged the region faced a 'serious situation', but accused the Prime Minister of having engaged in an 'exaggeration' of the severity of Covid-19 in the region, saying intensive care bed occupancy was still well below its April peak. 

An estimated 82 per cent of critical care beds in the Greater Manchester area are now being filled by patients with covid-19 - 211 beds out of 257, reports Manchester Evening News.  

If trends continue, a projection from Public Health England leaked to MEN, predicted that around 238 new Covid admissions would be made everyday by the end of October. 

Meanwhile, the latest daily figures revealed a further 16,982 lab-confirmed cases of coronavirus in the UK. It brings the total number of cases to 722,409.

The Government also said a further 67 people had died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19, as of Sunday. This brings the UK total to 43,646. 

Images taken within a Liverpool hospital's coronavirus ward last week show a coronavirus patient.  An estimated 82 per cent of critical care beds in the Greater Manchester area are now being filled by patients with covid-19 - 211 beds out of 257. Pictured: Paramedics take Patient into St Thomas' Hospital, Westminster, London

Images taken within a Liverpool hospital's coronavirus ward last week show a coronavirus patient.  An estimated 82 per cent of critical care beds in the Greater Manchester area are now being filled by patients with covid-19 - 211 beds out of 257. Pictured: Paramedics take Patient into St Thomas' Hospital, Westminster, London

Adopting a 'carrot and stick' approach, the Government yesterday criticised Labour mayor Andy Burnham (pictured) in public while offering him additional financial aid in private
Boris Johnson last night offered Greater Manchester tens of millions of pounds in extra support if the region agrees to accept the toughest level of lockdown restrictions

Adopting a 'carrot and stick' approach, the Government yesterday criticised Labour mayor Andy Burnham (left) in public while offering him additional financial aid in private. Boris Johnson (right) offered tens of millions of pounds in extra support

 

A group of women in Manchester sing as the 10pm curfew approached yesterday evening. The city has one of the highest Covid-19 rates in the country

A group of women in Manchester sing as the 10pm curfew approached yesterday evening. The city has one of the highest Covid-19 rates in the country

Labour would shut down the UK again and again over the winter to control coronavirus, senior figures admit 

Labour's plans for a temporary lockdown could see the economy and society shut down 'multiple' times this winter, senior figures admitted yesterday.

Sir Keir Starmer last week called on Boris Johnson to impose an immediate circuit breaker lasting for two to three weeks.

But Labour's Shadow Education Secretary Kate Green yesterday admitted that the lockdown, which would include the closure of shops, pubs and restaurants, might have to last longer than three weeks to be effective. 

And the shadow Cabinet Office minister Rachel Reeves said the exercise might have to be repeated several times in the coming months.

Asked whether Labour accepted that the measure might be required 'multiple' times through the winter and spring, Miss Reeves told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show: 'If that is what is needed then that is the approach that has to be taken, because we've got to get a grip on this virus.'

She added: 'The tiered approach isn't working. Tier Two is just a holding ground before you go into Tier Three.'

Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove yesterday said he was 'concerned' by the admission from Miss Reeves.

Asked if some form of national clampdown was inevitable, he replied: 'No.'

Mr Gove insisted that it made sense to take tough action in the areas of 'highest incidence' rather than imposing blanket national restrictions, which he said would damage the economy while providing little health benefit.

 

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A top government advisor has also said there is 'light at the end of the tunnel' as he predicts a Covid-19 vaccine will be ready by the end of March 2021.

Professor Jeremy Farrar, a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), said the UK faces a 'very, very difficult' period over the next three to six months.

But the Wellcome Trust director said there is 'light at the end of the tunnel', as he believes a Covid-19 vaccine and effective treatment will be ready in the first quarter of 2021.

It comes as England's Deputy Chief Medical Officer Jonathan Van-Tam has said the vaccine being prepared at Oxford University could be ready by December.

Meanwhile, drug giant Pfizer has released a video showing that production of their vaccine is well under way at the manufacturing plant in Belgium. 

Prof Farrar told Sky News' Sophy Ridge on Sunday a circuit-breaker national lockdown is now needed, claiming there could currently be 50,000 coronavirus cases per day across the UK.

He said: 'The ONS (Office for National Statistics) survey, which is the best data in the country at the moment, shows that 27,000 people are getting this infection every day. But that was until the 10th of October.

'Today it will be over 50,000, just as the CMO (England's chief medical officer) Chris Whitty and (the Government's chief scientific adviser) Sir Patrick Vallance suggested some three weeks ago.

'It would be at 50,000 new cases across the country every single day, and that's almost exactly where we are.'

Asked about Christmas, Prof Farrar said he does not believe a vaccine will be ready in time for the festive period.

He added: 'Christmas will be tough this year. I don't think it's going to be the usual celebration it is and all families coming together, I'm afraid.

'I think we have to be honest and realistic and say that we are in for three to six months of a very, very difficult period.

'The temperatures drop, we are all indoors more often, we have the other infections that come this time of year.

'It's much better for us to be upfront and honest now, and say we are in for a really difficult time, but there is light at the end of the tunnel.'

Prof Farrar said a short national lockdown known as a circuit-breaker is needed to reduce transmission rates, as previously recommended by Sage last month.

He said the 'best time' to have introduced the temporary lockdown would have been around September 20, but added 'it was never too late'.

He said: 'The second best time to do this is now, and the worst time to do this is at the end of November when things would have really got considerably worse.

'So it's never too late, it's better to do it now than in a month's time.'

In regard to a potential vaccine and effective treatments, Prof Farrar said he believes they are 'three to six months away'.

Meanwhile, new footage has emerged which shows the vaccine that could end the Covid misery engulfing the planet.

Drug giant Pfizer has already manufactured 'several hundred thousand doses' of the jab at its plant in Puurs, Belgium. They are being stockpiled ready to be rolled out worldwide if clinical trials are a success, and regulators deem it safe and effective.

The US giant hopes to make 100million doses available this year, of which 40 million are destined for the UK – a figure that will be dwarfed by the 1.3 billion jabs the company aims to manufacture in 2021. 

Every patient who receives the vaccine will need two doses.

In an interview with The Mail on Sunday today, Pfizer UK boss Ben Osborn says: 'It was great to see the first vial coming off the manufacturing line. 

'It just brought a tremendous smile to my face to see all of this work actually result in a product.' 

Pfizer, which is working with Germany's BioNTech, is currently running a trial on 44,000 people, and last week said it plans to apply for emergency US approval of its vaccine in November.  

That puts Pfizer in pole position in the race to launch a Covid vaccine.

Separately, Osborn said Pfizer's laboratory in Sandwich, Kent, has unearthed drugs that could provide a potential cure for Covid-19. 

It comes as it was today reported that the NHS is preparing to introduce a coronavirus vaccine soon after Christmas.

The row over local lockdowns came as the Mayor of Greater Manchester (pictured: People enjoy a night out in Manchester), Andy Burnham, blamed Chancellor Rishi Sunak for being 'the problem' in the standoff over moving the region into Tier Three

The row over local lockdowns came as the Mayor of Greater Manchester (pictured: People enjoy a night out in Manchester), Andy Burnham, blamed Chancellor Rishi Sunak for being 'the problem' in the standoff over moving the region into Tier Three

Meanwhile, in Leeds, people were also out on the town last night despite the area being on the brink of a Tier Three lockdown

Meanwhile, in Leeds, people were also out on the town last night despite the area being on the brink of a Tier Three lockdown

The UK's deputy chief medical officer, Jonathan Van-Tam, reportedly told MPs last week that stage three trials of the vaccine created at Oxford University, which is being produced by Astra Zeneca, could be rolled-out in December, reports the Sunday Times.  

According to the paper, he said: 'We aren't light years away from it. It isn't a totally unrealistic suggestion that we could deploy a vaccine soon after Christmas. 

'That would have a significant impact on hospital admissions and deaths.' 

Thousands of NHS staff are to undergo training to administer a vaccine before the end of the year, the paper adds.

Meanwhile, Boris Johnson is under growing pressure from furious Tory grandees to set out a 'clear end date' for local lockdowns.

Senior Conservative Party figures have warned the Prime Minister he must announce a 'strategy for returning life to normal' as they said an indefinite cycle of localised shutdowns is not acceptable and would wreck the economy. 

 The lockdown ghost towns: More than a MILLION hospitality and retail jobs may vanish by end of the year as venue owners in northern cities brand coronavirus restrictions a 'death sentence' for business

The Covid-19 catastrophe is creating 'ghost towns' across Britain and threatens to wipe out more than a million jobs, experts warned last night.

A record 11,120 household-name retail outlets and around 125,000 store jobs were lost after the first lockdown supercharged a move away from high streets.

However, this is just the tip of the iceberg, with fears the job loss total at shops, pubs and restaurants could soar as new lockdowns are rolled out this winter.

London, Essex and York were placed into Tier Two at the weekend, joining areas including Birmingham and Manchester, while Liverpool and Lancashire are already in the most stringent Tier Three.

The Covid-19 catastrophe is creating ‘ghost towns’ across Britain and threatens to wipe out more than a million jobs, experts warned, Pictured: Janet Watson, landlady at the Tillotsons Arms in Chipping, Preston, says she is at 'breaking point' financially, and warns new restrictions imposed on the area will 'push us over the edge'

The Covid-19 catastrophe is creating 'ghost towns' across Britain and threatens to wipe out more than a million jobs, experts warned, Pictured: Janet Watson, landlady at the Tillotsons Arms in Chipping, Preston, says she is at 'breaking point' financially, and warns new restrictions imposed on the area will 'push us over the edge'

Hospitality industry leaders say that as many as 750,000 jobs could go in their sector alone by early next year – and a total of 255,000 retail jobs could be lost by the end of 2020.

Kay Neufeld, of the Centre for Economics and Business Research, said it was 'plausible' that there could be more than one million job losses in the retail and hospitality sectors alone.

The Social Market Foundation, an independent think-tank, said: 'Reduced demand for office space, and a seemingly inevitable decline of traditional retail, risk creating ghost town and city centres.'

The British Chambers of Commerce is warning of 'hundreds of thousands of job losses' amid the closure of the furlough scheme, which currently supports more than two million workers, this month.

More than one in four of the UK's 39,700 pubs may not survive the pandemic, according to the British Beer and Pub Association.

Greene King plans to close 79 pubs, putting 800 jobs at risk, while Young's, Wetherspoons, Fuller's and City Pub Company have all said they will cut several hundred staff.

Nick Mackenzie, of Greene King, said: 'Pubs are becoming increasingly unviable.' He added: 'This means extending furlough to cover all hospitality venues hit by restrictions, not just those forced to close, extending the VAT cut and business rates holiday and cutting beer duty.'

Pub and restaurant operator Mitchells & Butlers, which owns Harvester and All Bar One, said that the industry was facing 'exceptionally challenging and uncertain circumstances'.

They added: 'We strongly urge the Government to step up the level of support it is offering to an industry which has been repeatedly singled out and taken the full brunt of restrictions.'

The Government said it had already provided £200billion worth of support to help companies get through the crisis.

A spokesman said: 'We know this continues to be a very difficult period for businesses. That's why we have put in place a substantial package of support.'

'These restrictions are a death sentence': Hospitality business owners earning as little as £20 a night say new restrictions will 'devastate' their livelihoods

New rules have killed us

The move to Tier Two has been a 'death sentence' for one Northern bar after it took just £20 on Saturday night.

Mark and Amy Hanson, owners of Edge Venue, said they had just two customers all evening – and Saturday is the only day they say is worth opening anyway.

Mrs Hanson posted a video of the deserted venue in Stockton-On-Tees, County Durham, saying: 'Two very kind customers have turned up a little while ago and are trying desperately to drink so we can pay bills... For all those people who think Tier Two is a great thing or a wonderful idea, I know I'm not the only one who thinks actually it's a death sentence.'

The couple were operating as an events venue until March but reopened as a bar last month to try to survive the pandemic. Mr Hanson said the first three weeks 'were doing the job' and keeping them afloat, but after the new rules were introduced this week 'it's just killed us again'.

Mark and Amy Hanson, owners of Edge Venue, said they had just two customers all evening – and Saturday is the only day they say is worth opening anyway

Mark and Amy Hanson, owners of Edge Venue, said they had just two customers all evening – and Saturday is the only day they say is worth opening anyway

We're at breaking point

Andy Jones, owner of Jones and Sons in Dalston, north London, said 540 people who had been booked in on Saturday had cancelled

Andy Jones, owner of Jones and Sons in Dalston, north London, said 540 people who had been booked in on Saturday had cancelled

It had been the centre of village life for generations – but with Lancashire being thrust into the highest level of lockdown restrictions, the future looks bleak for the Tillotsons Arms in Chipping, Preston. 'I'm absolutely devastated,' landlady Janet Watson said. 'It's a total shock – I didn't expect we'd be placed in Tier Three so soon.'

While the pub does serve food, its remote location in a community of just 1,000 people means it may no longer be viable. 'We're a little village in the middle of nowhere,' Mrs Watson said.

In addition to backing greater support for hospitality staff who lose their jobs, Mrs Watson believes more should be done to help businesses like hers. She added: 'We're already at breaking point with the restrictions as they are, but this is going to push us over the edge... If we have to close, it tears the heart out of the village.'

Ludicrous and frustrating

The owner of a restaurant said his sales were down 40 per cent on Saturday due to new lockdown rules in the capital.

Andy Jones, owner of Jones and Sons in Dalston, north London, said 540 people who had been booked in on that day had cancelled.

The restaurant normally seats 400 in two sittings, but the vast majority of the tables are indoors meaning only household groups are allowed.

Mr Jones said the lost bookings, which across the day included brunch and dinner, amount to around £25,000 in revenue. 'It's ludicrous... this is the worst outcome for hospitality possible,' he said.

'Couples who don't live together aren't allowed to go out on dates, colleagues aren't allowed to go out after work for a drink together. That economy in London is huge.' Mr Jones said this year he has lost more than £600,000 in revenue due to Covid restrictions, but still has a £110,000 annual rent bill to pay.

He added: 'It's very, very frustrating to see eight years of my life potentially go down the drain because no one is standing up [for] the industry.'

Bars and pubs were also busy in London, which has recently been moved into Tier 2 of the new alert system

Bars and pubs were also busy in London, which has recently been moved into Tier 2 of the new alert system

Labour: We'd shut down UK again and again 

Labour's plans for a temporary lockdown could see the economy and society shut down 'multiple' times this winter, senior figures admitted yesterday.

Sir Keir Starmer last week called on Boris Johnson to impose an immediate circuit breaker lasting for two to three weeks.

But Labour's Shadow Education Secretary Kate Green yesterday admitted that the lockdown, which would include the closure of shops, pubs and restaurants, might have to last longer than three weeks to be effective. 

And the shadow Cabinet Office minister Rachel Reeves said the exercise might have to be repeated several times in the coming months.

Asked whether Labour accepted that the measure might be required 'multiple' times through the winter and spring, Miss Reeves told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show: 'If that is what is needed then that is the approach that has to be taken, because we've got to get a grip on this virus.'

She added: 'The tiered approach isn't working. Tier Two is just a holding ground before you go into Tier Three.'

Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove yesterday said he was 'concerned' by the admission from Miss Reeves.

Asked if some form of national clampdown was inevitable, he replied: 'No.'

Mr Gove insisted that it made sense to take tough action in the areas of 'highest incidence' rather than imposing blanket national restrictions, which he said would damage the economy while providing little health benefit.

Pictured: Student, 19, who died in halls at Manchester University after suffering 'severe anxiety' during campus lockdown - as his Cambridge academic father criticises the lack of support given to his son

Finn Kitson, 19, was found dead at halls of residence at the University of Manchester

Finn Kitson, 19, was found dead at halls of residence at the University of Manchester

A teenage university student, who is the son of a leading Cambridge academic, died in his halls of residence after suffering with 'severe anxiety' during a campus 'lockdown', his family say.

The 19-year-old student, named by his family as Finn Kitson, was found dead at halls of residence at the University of Manchester. 

His death, ten days ago, came after a spike in Covid-19 in cases in Manchester.

The surge in cases resulted in hundreds of students self-isolating and others at neighbouring university Manchester Metropolitan forced into lockdown.

Officials say the death of Mr Kitson, who was staying at the University of Manchester's Fallowfield campus, was not Covid-19 related. Police also said they were not treating it as suspicious.

A video shared by Cambridge Celts manager Nic Mitham today showed the joyous moment Finn, No.10, was surrounded by his team mates as they celebrated a goal he'd scored. 

Mr Mitham tweeted a tribute along with the video reading: 'It was an honour to manage Finn Kitson at Cambridge Celts and I'll always remember him for playing the game that he loved. Rest in peace Finn.'

But today Mr Kitson's father, Michael Kitson, hit out at the 'little support' students have been receiving while locked down in a tribute tweet to his son.

Finn Kitson, left, joins his Cambridge Celts team mates to celebrate him scoring a goal, in a video shared by the team's manager Nic Mitham

Finn Kitson, left, joins his Cambridge Celts team mates to celebrate him scoring a goal, in a video shared by the team's manager Nic Mitham

Mr Kitson, who is an economist at Cambridge University's business school, Cambridge Judge, said on Twitter: 'If you lockdown young people because of Covid-19 with little support, then you should expect that they suffer severe anxiety.

'The student referred to below is our son - and we love and miss him so much.'

Mr Kitson was responding on Twitter to a now-deleted post by a local radio news source, which had tweeted that the student's death was not Covid-19 related and not being treated as suspicious, he said: 'This is untrue.'

Other members of the family have also paid tribute, including sister Beth Kitson.

Responding to a post by her father on Twitter, she said: 'My wonderful kind and darling brother. He is and will always be so loved.'

She urged those reading the tweet to donate to charities Mind and Samaritans. 

Since Mr Kitson's tweet, there has been outpouring of sympathy, with scores of people paying tribute to him on Twitter and offering sympathy to his shattered parents and siblings Beth and Harry.

Mr Kitson, a former Cambridge City FC youth player, was discovered at the university's Fallowfield Halls residential centre on October 8.

In an initial tweet, his father said: 'Our beautiful brilliant son and brother has passed away. We are all devastated. Please give anything you can towards mental health charities.'

Players at his former team, Cambridge City FC, also stood for a minute's silence in tribute at their ground.

Dr Simon Merrywest - director for the student experience at the University of Manchester - said: 'We can confirm that very sadly one of our students was found deceased in their hall of residence at around 5pm on Thursday, October 8.

'We are providing all possible support to their family and friends and our utmost sympathies go out to them.

'The family have asked us to make it clear that this incident is not Covid-19-related and that they would wish to see their privacy respected at this difficult time.

'The university is working closely with the Manchester's Coroner's Office, so we will not be able to comment any further.'

Mr Kitson's death came just days after two 18-year-old freshers died in a Newcastle University student accommodation block after they were thought to have taken class-B drug ketamine.

In separate incidents, an 18-year-old man from nearby Washington, died on Saturday and a 21-year-old Northumbria University student died the same weekend as Finn after allegedly taking drugs.

Mr Kitson, a former Cambridge City FC youth player, was discovered at the university's Fallowfield Halls residential centre

Mr Kitson, a former Cambridge City FC youth player, was discovered at the university's Fallowfield Halls residential centre

MailOnline contacted the University of Manchester for a response, but a spokesperson declined to comment.   

In a statement, Greater Manchester Police said: 'At around 5pm on Thursday, October 8, police received a report of concern for the welfare of a man at a property off Moseley Road, Manchester.

'Emergency services attended and a 19-year-old man was sadly pronounced dead at the scene.

'His next of kin has been informed. There are believed to be no suspicious circumstances surrounding his death.'

At the time of Mr Kiton's death, Fallowfield was one of the worst-hit student areas for coronavirus outbreaks in Britain with five per cent of people tested positive for the disease in the week ending October 2.

The University of Manchester, where there have been more than 1,000 cases since September 21, shifted to online learning earlier this month.

However, students were not put into lockdown, unlike students at neighbouring Manchester Metropolitan University, where more than 1,000 students were told to remain in their halls of residence after a Covid-19 outbreak.

For confidential support, call the Samaritans on 116123 or visit a local Samaritans branch. See www.samaritans.org for details

Wales' 17-day circuit break

Wales could be put into a full lockdown lasting 17 days by Labour leaders.

Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford is expected to make an announcement today.

The circuit-breaker would run from 6pm on Friday until the evening of November 8.

A leaked letter from the Welsh Confederation of Passenger Transport suggested it had already been given the green light.

It said the restrictions 'will take us back to the situation in March'. Primary schools would reopen after half-term but secondaries could remain shut for the lockdown.

Cases in Wales reached 950 today with the Health Minister saying local lockdowns across the nation were not effective and so could be replaced by a full 'circuit-breaker' lockdown

Cases in Wales reached 950 today with the Health Minister saying local lockdowns across the nation were not effective and so could be replaced by a full 'circuit-breaker' lockdown

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2020-10-19 08:32:17Z
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EU's masterplan laid bare: Brexit talks orchestrated to 'lure Johnson into tunnel of doom' - Express

Mr Johnson has said he believes a trade deal with the EU is not likely and that the UK should now get ready to leave the bloc’s single market and customs union at the end of the year without a new agreement in place. Speaking from Downing Street in a televised speech at the end of last week, Mr Johnson kept the door open for further talks but blamed Brussels for refusing to “negotiate seriously” in recent months. He said he would always be willing to hear from the EU side negotiators if they came back to the UK with “a fundamental change of approach”.

Last month, the UK Government set a deadline of October 15 for an agreement to be struck - or clearly be within sight - saying there would be no point continuing talks beyond this week without adequate progress.

The UK's chief negotiator David Frost and his EU counterpart Michel Barnier are set to hold further discussions.

However, after a summit with the bloc's leaders concluded on Friday, it has become apparent sticking points on fisheries and the level playing field remain.

As tensions are set to rise in the coming days, a recent report by a civil servant close to the negotiations suggests Mr Johnson might have been right to not believe in the "good faith" of Brussels, urging the country to prepare for no deal, instead.

Caroline Bell argued each step in the Brexit negotiation has been carefully orchestrated to undermine Mr Johnson and lure him "into the tunnel of doom".

She wrote: "The conclusions of the European Council on Brexit were entirely predictable. The communiqué has been published in draft in the European press and widely trailed in the media for the past two weeks. We knew that the Council would not be reaching any decision on a trade deal with the UK, but instead listening to a 'stock take' of progress in the talks by Michel Barnier. The UK’s lack of engagement would be duly deplored, and the EU would double down on its untenable demands of full access to UK waters, control of the UK economy through state aid legislation and judicial governance by the European Court of Justice (ECJ)."

Ms Bell noted how the French have been mightily busy in the past few weeks preparing exactly this scenario.

She explained: "They have repeatedly misrepresented the UK’s offer on fisheries, which is, quite frankly, more than any EU state has a right to expect, in order to try to affect the trade off with the far more important issue of obtaining a stranglehold over the UK economy enforceable in the ECJ ('governance' is a polite cover for the kind of oversight the EU wants). Boris’s deadline of an acceptable outline of a deal being clear by October 15 has been openly mocked.

"'We will carry on talking until October 31', announced Michel Barnier.

JUST IN: Boris Johnson and Macron 'NOW bound together by common Brexit desire'

"This week the French foreign minister Yves Le Drian pushed the deadline to the middle of November. Today the French president of the European Central Bank (ECB) Christine Lagarde seemed to suggest that a deal could be reached at midnight on December 31."

According to Ms Bell, the thinking in Paris is clear: President Macron believes that Mr Johnson’s willingness to extend talks over the summer indicates that he is desperate to take whatever crumbs fall from the EU’s table.

He has convinced the EU27 that the Prime Minister is bluffing about walking out of talks if there is no progress.

She added: "So the game plan is to call his bluff in the expectation that the EU can string out the talks until mid-November and beyond, even though Boris would immediately lose all credibility – both at home and abroad – as well as his considerable negotiating leverage. The EU would then double down on its unreasonable demands, pepper him with sneers and insults, refuse to discuss any UK proposals or agree legal text, and then offer up a last-minute concession (like accepting our generous fisheries proposals) while they stuff the legal small print on the level playing field and governance provisions with EU rules and judicial control which would hamstring us for all eternity.

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"Should the PM fail to accept whatever pig in a poke was produced by such a method, Macron would probably prefer no deal – that way he can strengthen his position in the EU in the hope that we would be forced on our knees back to the negotiating table sometime next year. Meanwhile his poll ratings would improve (there is nothing like a bit of Brit-bashing to boost a French presidential campaign) and he would have seriously undermined German dominance in the EU by forcing Angela Merkel to swallow a strategy for which German businesses would pay a heavy price. So he would regard it as a political win – and for France, politics will always trump economics."

The civil servant concluded for her piece in Briefings for Britain: "Each step in the Brexit negotiation has been carefully orchestrated to undermine Boris Johnson and lure him into the tunnel of doom-

"It is a cleverly staged production, but farcical nonetheless.

"And it has played for far too long. It is time for the Prime Minister to bring down the curtain and end talks now. If the EU27 really want a deal, they will have a humongous bust-up amongst themselves and return in short order with some common sense and fresh proposals which respect the UK’s position as an independent country. If not, no deal is certainly better than a bad deal."

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2020-10-19 08:38:00Z
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Archbishops decry 'disastrous' Brexit bill | News - The Times

All five of Britain and Ireland’s most senior archbishops and bishops have written a rare joint letter saying the Internal Market Bill will set a “disastrous precedent” by equipping ministers to break the law.

They warn that the bill, which is to be debated in the House of Lords today, would have “particularly disturbing” consequences for the Good Friday agreement and for democracy.

Ministers want to give themselves the power to renege on Boris Johnson’s deal with the EU. Last month Brandon Lewis, the Northern Ireland secretary, told parliament the legislation would allow the UK to break international law in a “very specific and targeted way”.

The letter of protest, published today in the Financial Times, was written by the archbishops of Canterbury and

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2020-10-19 08:00:00Z
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Wales set to go into two-week circuit breaker lockdown with all pubs & shops shut from Friday - The Sun

WALES is set to be thrown into a two-week "circuit breaker" lockdown with all pubs and shops to be forced to shut from Friday.

First Minister Mark Drakeford is expected to announce the drastic measures later today to try and fend off a massive surge in coronavirus infections.

⚠️ Read our coronavirus live blog for the latest news & updates

Wales could be thrown into a "circuit breaker" lockdown from Friday
Wales could be thrown into a "circuit breaker" lockdown from FridayCredit: AFP or licensors
Mark Drakeford is expected to unveil the drastic measures today
Mark Drakeford is expected to unveil the drastic measures todayCredit: PA:Press Association

The set of draconian measures will mean England will be the only part of the UK which won't have some form of national "circuit breaker" lockdown as Boris Johnson furiously refuses to cave to pressure to shut down the country again.

According to a leaked letter from the transport industry in Wales, Mr Drakeford is expected to announce a lockdown from 6pm this Friday until November 9.

The Welsh Director of the Confederation of Passenger Transport John Pockett warned members a lockdown starting at 6pm on Friday would "take us back to the situation in March".

The tough measures will mimic those of the first punishing lockdown in March, with all but essential retail outlets closed.

There were almost 1,000 new coronavirus cases in Wales, and hospital admissions were up 40 per cent in the last week.

The First Minister put Welsh people on alert that they could be thrown into tougher measures at the end of last week.

He said minister would spend the weekend looking "very carefully" at introducing a "time-limited fire-break" lockdown to stop the soaring case numbers.

Mr Drakeford said: "This would be a short, sharp shock to the virus, which could turn back the clock, slowing down its spread and buying us more time and vital capacity in the health service.

"A fire-break would also however mean a short, sharp shock to all our lives.

"We would all have to stay at home once again, to save those lives. This time it would be for weeks, and not for months."

Welsh circuit breaker rules

A NEW lockdown in Wales would act as a "fire-break" to turn back the clock and buy time to try and stem coronavirus cases. Welsh people were warned last week they could be given stay at home orders again, but there is uncertainty over whether schools would be forced to shut given the massive impact on kids further closures would have.

  • Pubs and restaurants could be closed
  • All non-essential retail could be forced to shut up shop
  • Welsh people could be given fresh "stay at home" orders
  • No mixing with any other households indoors or outdoors
  • No leaving your local area

The First Minister warned last week the shorter the lockdown was "the sharper" the restrictions would have to be and people in Wales could find themselves living under "stay at home" orders once again.

And he set himself on a collision course with Mr Johnson by saying Wales' border would be closed to people from coronavirus hotspots in England.

Anyone breaking the border ban would even be fined £50.

But the demands fell flat when the Police Federation of England and Wales said "policing in Wales is already over-stretched due to the pandemic" and it would be difficult to enforce measures.

Northern Ireland and Scotland are both in the middle of circuit breaker lockdowns to try and get on top of new coronavirus infections after the Government's Sage committee of experts threw their support behind short national shutdowns.

Scots are unable to drink alcohol in pubs and restaurants, which all have to close at 6pm daily.

But they haven't been given the severe lockdown measures Mr Drakeford is expected to impose today.

People in Northern Ireland are also living under strict rules, with pubs, schools and restaurants forced to close for four weeks.

The dramatic introduction of a "circuit breaker" in Wales would pile further pressure onto Mr Johnson to bring one in in England.

Labour politicians, including Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham and Sir Keir Starmer, are demanding the whole country is put under tight lockdown rules for two weeks.

But over the weekend, Labour frontbencher Rachel Reeves admitted England could face a series of lockdowns to stop new infections.

Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick flatly rejected out a short lockdown this morning.

He said: "The argument for a national circuit-breaker is not one that I, personally, find, at all persuasive.

"This is to apply on a blanket level - the same approach in Nottingham, the city which my constituency is next to, where the number of cases today is well over 700, to Somerset or Herefordshire, where the number of cases per 100,000 is below 40.

"The damage to the economy and to our broader health and wellbeing that would be brought about by a circuit-break, I think, would be very, very significant.

"And so the Government's approach is a localised, a proportionate and localised, approach for as long as there is such wide variations in infection."

Wales to BAN English people from coronavirus hotspots visiting from Friday

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2020-10-19 08:23:00Z
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Covid-19: Talks to resume over Greater Manchester restrictions - BBC News

Greater Manchester Covid restrictions delay 'puts lives at risk'

Published
People wearing face masks walk past a advertisement on Market Street in Manchester
image copyrightPA Media

Further delays to a decision on Greater Manchester's Covid restrictions will "put people's lives at risk", the communities secretary has said.

Robert Jenrick said he hoped he could reach an agreement with the region's MPs, and its mayor Andy Burnham, "in the next day or two".

Local leaders want better financial support before they agree to being moved up to the top tier of rules.

Talks will continue later after a weekend of discussions.

Mr Jenrick indicated that "tens of millions" of pounds given to the Liverpool City Region and Lancashire - the two parts of England already in tier three - could be on offer for Greater Manchester.

He told BBC Breakfast the Greater Manchester talks had gone on "too long" as coronavirus case numbers remain "seriously high".

"Delay I'm afraid will only make the situation worse, will only put people's lives at risk, and will only make the economic fallout for the city worse in the long term," he added.

  • What Covid tier is my area in?
  • Tier system: The street split down the middle
  • What is a circuit-breaker?

It comes as the Welsh Government is due to announce whether it will introduce a two-week national lockdown.

The cabinet will meet this morning to make a final decision over a so-called circuit-breaker, after considering advice from experts, with First Minister Mark Drakeford expected to make an announcement shortly after midday.

A further 16,982 people tested positive for the virus in the UK as of Sunday, figures from the Department of Health showed, with a further 67 deaths occurring within 28 days of a positive test.

The dispute over which tier of restrictions Greater Manchester should be in intensified on Friday after Boris Johnson said that he might "need to intervene" if local leaders did not accept a move to tier three curbs.

But Mr Burnham wants the government to re-introduce the 80% furlough scheme used previously in the pandemic to support the low paid affected by tier three closures.

He said businesses that will be closed under tier three - pubs, bookies and gyms - "are places where people are on low wages".

Mr Burnham said he had a "constructive call" with the PM's team on Sunday.

BBC deputy political editor Vicki Young said Treasury sources insisted there would not be a more generous offer on wages but pointed to other financial support packages agreed with Liverpool and Lancashire.

On Sunday, Liverpool City Region's metro mayor Steve Rotherham said his area would receive an additional £44m and a similar package worth £42m was given to local leaders in Lancashire last week.

BBC political correspondent Iain Watson said a package of around £75m for Greater Manchester would be roughly equivalent to the packages agreed for Liverpool City Region and Lancashire, based on population size.

In a letter to the PM and other party leaders released before he had spoken to Mr Johnson's chief strategic adviser Sir Edward Lister on Sunday, Mr Burnham said Parliament should hold an urgent debate to end the deadlock.

He said the prospect of tier three restrictions on hospitality and other areas "is not just a Greater Manchester issue".

He wrote: "Establishing clear national entitlements of the kind we had during the first lockdown will create a sense of fairness which in turn would help build public support for, and compliance with, any new restrictions."

The Greater Manchester mayor has received some support from within Tory ranks, including from Sir Graham Brady, the influential chairman of Conservative backbenchers' group the 1922 committee.

Sir Graham, MP for Altrincham and Sale West in Greater Manchester, said the region's Labour and Tory MPs were "pretty united" in resisting tier three restrictions, adding that positive tests were "flattening".

But five other Tory MPs in Greater Manchester have written to Mr Burnham to oppose Labour's support of a circuit-breaker in favour of local measures.

One of the letter's signatories, James Daly, who has also resisted Greater Manchester being put into tier three, said a circuit-breaker would be "disastrous" for the economy.

Mr Daly, who is MP for Bury North, told Radio 4's Today programme that while all of Greater Manchester's MPs were "united" in wanting to do the best for their constituents, they needed better communication from Mr Burnham who had not "reached out" to them ahead of talks with the government.

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Tory MPs representing areas on the lowest tier of England's Covid alert system had called on Mr Burnham to accept a move to the highest tier, rather than allow restrictions through a circuit-breaker across England.

Meanwhile, the NHS in Manchester said it was monitoring the situation "very very closely" after the Guardian reported that it was running out of beds and that 82% of critical care beds were taken on Friday.

But a spokesperson added: "It's not unusual for 80-85% of ICU beds to be in use at this time of year and our hospitals work together if there are particular pressures in any one area, to ensure the best care for patients who need the high level of support ICU provides, both for Covid and for other reasons."

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2020-10-19 07:23:00Z
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