Rabu, 04 November 2020

Coronavirus: Businesses back 'Red Wall' Tories call for post-lockdown road map for recovery - Sky News

Nearly 80 business leaders from the north of England are backing a plea to Boris Johnson from the region's "Red Wall" Tory MPs for a roadmap out of lockdown and a post-Covid economic recovery plan.

In a move turning up the heat on the prime minister as England goes into a four-week lockdown, the business chiefs claim the north is at a critical turning point and needs government action to close the north-south divide.

In a letter to Mr Johnson released just two hours after a large Commons rebellion by Conservative MPs against the new lockdown, 77 northern business leaders have pledged to defend the parts of the north in deepest crisis.

Jake Berry MP is the former minister for the Northern Powerhouse and Local Growth
Image: The PM's former ally Jake Berry is leading the newly formed Northern Research Group

The group writing to the prime minister includes bosses of airports, banks, building societies, power companies, drinks firms, bookmakers and tourist attractions and leaders of employers' organisations and chambers of commerce.

The letter comes a week after more than 50 MPs from the newly-formed Northern Research Group wrote to Mr Johnson urging him to begin work to "level-up the North", which the PM has claimed is his mission after the general election.

The Northern Research Group is headed by former Boris Johnson ally and ex-Northern Powerhouse minister Jake Berry, who has recently called COVID-19 restrictions on the North "London-centric" and "the manacles of state control".

Backing the MPs' demands, the business leaders urge the Prime Minister: "The recovery from COVID can and must go alongside a plan for rebalancing and decarbonising the UK economy.

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"Businesses which are closed or seeing much reduced trade need vital help, as the Chancellor has now committed to, but for those already unemployed we need to start the work of creating new jobs for them.

"We must defend those parts of the North in deepest crisis, and realise the opportunity for higher skilled, better paid opportunities if we unlock that with measures to drive up productivity."

Prime Minister Boris Johnson speaks during Prime Minister's Questions in the House of Commons, London.
Image: The Northern Research Group told the PM 'the North is at a critical tuning point' in a letter

The business leaders are calling for more power and autonomy for the north's metro mayors and local government leaders. Their top priorities for the north are:

  • A clear route out of lockdown;
  • Large-scale infrastructure projects, including HS2 and Northern Powerhouse Rail; and
  • A Northern Economic Recovery Plan to boost jobs and promote economic growth.

"The North is at a critical turning point," the leaders write in their letter to the PM.

They added: "We believe by implementing this plan, we can unlock the North's true economic potential - simultaneously spearheading a recovery for the whole of the UK and turning levelling-up into the reality you promised us."

Welcoming the business backing after the Commons lockdown vote, Mr Berry said: "We outlined clearly in our letter to the Prime Minister last week how the North has seen a level of disruption unparalleled with other parts of the country.

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"Whilst the south has faced fewer restrictions in recent months, the north has been held back under one form of restriction or another - and significant parts have been in Tier 3 restrictions for two weeks prior to today's vote.

"We share concerns that after this second national lockdown ends on 2 December, our northern constituencies are the most likely to go back into the higher levels of the regional tiering system.

"That means the north being subjected to greater restrictions and our economy sustaining greater damage.

He added: "Our constituents have been some of the worst affected by COVID, with many losing jobs and businesses. We cannot allow our region to become locked-in to lockdown indefinitely."

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2020-11-05 00:06:39Z
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What you can do in lockdown 2 that you couldn't in the first one - Metro.co.uk

Pictures of people in lockdown in England, with people wearing masks.
There are some key differences between the rules coming in tomorrow and those imposed in March

England is bracing for harsh new coronavirus restrictions to come in tomorrow after MPs overwhelmingly backed another national lockdown. 

It means that various businesses will be forced to shut, people will again be urged to stay at home and social mixing will be all but banned from Thursday, November 5, to Wednesday, December 2. 

But despite this being the second lockdown of its kind, there are a number of key differences with the restrictions last time around. Many fear that the looser nature of the incoming measures mean they could be extended, or leave the country facing a third lockdown at a later date. 

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Prime Minister Boris Johnson said he faced no alternative to the nuclear option of a lockdown, amid fears that the NHS could be overwhelmed by a new spike in Covid-19 cases and as the likes of France and Germany announced similarly draconian steps. 

Visit our live blog for the latest updates Coronavirus news live

Below, we take a look at some of the changes between the rules for England’s looming lockdown and what people could do last time. 

Children can go to school 

Crucially, schools will remain open this time around – along with nurseries, colleges and universities.

That could have major ramifications for the R rate, with experts suggesting that pupils in secondary schools could continue to spread the virus, blunting the effectiveness of this lockdown and potentially prolonging it. 

Year eight pupils wear face masks as a precaution against the transmission of the novel coronavirus as they walk along a corridor of Moor End Academy in Huddersfield, northern England on September 11, 2020. - Millions of children across England have returned to school after the Covid-19 lockdown with many schools introducing measures to enable as safe an environment as possible. (Photo by OLI SCARFF / AFP) (Photo by OLI SCARFF/AFP via Getty Images)
Pupils will remain in education, despite fears around the spread of coronavirus in secondary schools (Picture: AFP)

University students are being urged to remain on campuses, amid warnings that if they go home they risk spreading the virus across the country. 

Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have different rules 

Last time around the whole of the UK locked down. But tomorrow’s changes only apply to England. Wales and Northern Ireland are in the midst of ‘firebreak’ and ‘circuit-break’ lockdowns respectively while Scotland has a new five tier system in place. 

You can exercise with one other person outside your household

In March, Brits were only allowed to leave their homes once a day to exercise, but now it is unlimited. 

People exercise in Regent's Park as the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) continues, in London, Britain, March 23, 2020. REUTERS/Hannah McKay
People can exercise with one person from outside their household (Picture: Reuters)

You are also allowed to take this exercise – perhaps a walk in a public park – with one person from outside of your household, while children below pre-school age are not included in that two-person limit.

Care home visits are allowed

Close family and friends will be encouraged to meet their loved ones in care homes through a window or in an outside setting under new Government guidelines. That is a significant departure from the last lockdown, when all face-to-face visits were banned.

So-called ‘ad-hoc’ visits will not be allowed, although care homes ‘will be encouraged and supported to provide safe visiting opportunities’, the Department of Health and Social Care said.

Resident Sally Baker sings with carers Kayleigh Martin (R) and Denise Morris (L) at Fremantle Trust care home, amid the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19), in Princes Risborough, Britain, May 5, 2020. REUTERS/Eddie Keogh
In person visits to care homes were not allowed in March (Picture: Reuters)

Places of worship will be partially open 

Like last time, places of worship, including churches, mosques, synagogues and other venues, will be told to close for communal prayer. However, private prayer for individuals will now be allowed.

No shielding

People who were particularly vulnerable to the virus were told to shield in the spring. But shielding has been put on hold for months and will not be officially reinstated for this lockdown, despite new guidance being published just hours before lockdown.

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People over 60 and those who are clinically vulnerable are being told to be especially careful about following the rules and minimising their contact with others.

Football is on 

Last time around the world of sport was essentially postponed en masse. 

But ‘elite’ sports in England, including Premier League football, will be allowed to continue despite the restrictions for the coming month. Grassroots sport, however, has been cancelled, with gyms also not allowed to open, despite intensive lobbying.

Public toilets are open

In March, there was widespread criticism of the decision to close public toilets, as it made life uncomfortable for people or meant they relieved themselves in unsuitable areas, to the disgust of locals. This time there are likely to be fewer issues of that unsavoury nature.

Bubbles exist

The concept of a ‘support bubble’ had not yet come into place during the last lockdown, leaving people living alone facing isolation. This time around, however, single-adult households can remain in an exclusive support bubble with one other household. 

Customers leave with pints of beer for takeaway at The Ten Bells pub in east London on June 27, 2020.
People could get takeaway pints with other members of their bubble (Picture: AFP)

You could even get takeaway pints together – but like last time you will not be able to have them inside.

Dentists and opticians are open 

There appear to be more allowances for what counts as an ‘essential’ shop this time and among them are services to look after your teeth and eyes. 

The public will be able to access dentists and opticians, as well as garden centres, outdoor food stalls, pet shops, hardware and bicycle stores.

However, homeware stores are not identified as essential retailers, unlike the first lockdown.

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Click and collect options will also be available to customers.

Surge in travel before England's second national lockdown London gridlocked with 1,200 miles of traffic jams as thousands flee ahead of lockdown

You’re unlikely to see big protests

In the first lockdown, people gathered in groups to protest. While there was limited social distancing on show at times, the events were allowed. But this time around Home Secretary Priti Patel has specifically said there will be a ban on protests of any more than two people

You can’t go on holiday

Outbound international travel for holiday purposes is being outlawed for a month, in an unprecedented move which may confuse those who believe banning inbound travel to England would be a more effective way of controlling the virus.

It means you are not allowed to go on foreign holidays for the duration of lockdown. 

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

MORE : 15 things to do before lockdown 2.0 begins

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2020-11-04 22:16:00Z
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EU chief admits 'big problem' amid 'danger' EU states could follow Brexit Britain's lead - Daily Express

As the end of the transition period looms closer, a no deal Brexit is seeming more and more likely as neither side has been able to come to an agreement. Fishing and state aid continue to stall negotiations.

Now, the new Vice-President of the European Economic and Social Committee (ESSC), Cillian Lohan, has warned a no deal outcome would create “enormous difficulties”.

He said: “The no deal would create enormous difficulties for each member state to overcome, some more than others.

“At the level of production and trade, the negative impact is difficult to quantify because it would have a ripple effect on all national economies.

“That said, many companies and the European Union itself are also preparing for this eventuality: we have seen how difficult, sometimes meaningless, negotiations are.”

The Irish national also noted a "problem" for the EU which now "affects all member states".

He said: “Many British citizens voted in favour of Brexit because they no longer recognised themselves in the European institutions, they looked too disconnected from their reality.
“It is a big problem, but it now affects all member states.”

Mr Lohan went on to explain how the “danger exists” for other member states to follow Britain and leave the EU.

When asked by EU News whether similar risks are on the horizon, Mr Lohan said: “Not concretely, at the moment.

READ MORE: Joe Biden’s FURY at ‘toxic’ Boris Johnson puts trade deal in doubt

Since Britain left the EU, many have speculated other member states - such as Italy - may follow the UK.

Last month, Italexit campaigner, Gianluigi Paragone, told Express.co.uk it is time for Italy to plan new bilateral agreements with third countries across the world to resuscitate its economy as an independent and sovereign nation outside of the bloc.

Asked how he would respond to those who say it is “too late” for Italy to go back to its national currency after the euro, he said: “Too late for which chronometer, for which clock?

“If the clock is that of history, ‘too late’ is really too relative."

Additional reporting by Maria Ortega

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2020-11-04 21:57:00Z
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Boris Johnson walks out of Commons as Theresa May rips into lockdown plans - Metro.co.uk

The Prime Minister walked out of the House of Commons just as Theresa May began tearing into his plans to lock England down for a second time.

Boris Johnson’s predecessor stopped for a second and grimaced while other MPs expressed their disapproval at the sudden escape.

The PM stood up and left the chamber as May said she did not ‘envy’ the decisions his Government are faced with.

But Johnson wasn’t there to hear her accuse him of choosing data to fit his own coronavirus policies, urging the Government to reveal the economic cost of England’s second lockdown.

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The new measures will come into force from midnight tonight after MPs backed the proposals.

Johnson had already spent time in the chamber for Prime Minister’s Questions and decided to depart once Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer had made his speech during the debate on the new Covid-19 lockdown restrictions.

It is understood the Prime Minister later sent a note of apology to May as he had to leave the chamber to attend a scheduled meeting.

Boris Johnson clearly had other places to be (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)

An ally of Johnson said: ‘It was not a deliberate snub in any way. He has great respect for her.’

Speaking as MPs considered regulations for a second lockdown, May said: ‘This pandemic has challenged governments across the world and ministers have been under relentless pressure in dealing with this issue.

‘But, just as ministers are making tough decisions, so are Parliament, and Parliament will make better decisions if it is fully and properly informed.’

She criticised Labour’s circuit-breaker proposal, claiming it could have ended up being repeated ‘again and again and again’.

But turning her fire on the projections used by the Prime Minister, she said: ‘It appears the decision to go towards this lockdown was partly, mainly, to some extent based on the prediction of 4,000 deaths a day.

Theresa May looked taken aback as her successor swiftly left the chamber (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)

‘Yet, if you look at the trajectory showing in that graph that went to 4,000 deaths a day, we would have reached 1,000 deaths a day by the end of October.

‘The average in the last week of October was 259, by my calculations. Each of those deaths is a sadness and our thoughts are with the families, but it’s not 1,000 deaths a day.

‘So the prediction was wrong before it was even used. And this leads to a problem for the Government – for many people it looks as if the figures are chosen to support the policy rather than the policy being based on the figures.

‘We need these proper analyses. We need to know the details behind these models. We need to be able to assess the validity of those models.’

May also raised concerns about a lack of data on the cost of the Government’s Covid-19 decisions, including on mental health, domestic abuse, non-Covid-19 treatments, “possibly more suicides” and to the economy.

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She told MPs: ‘Jobs lost, livelihoods shattered, businesses failing, whole sectors damaged. What sort of airline industry are we going to have coming out of this? What sort of hospitality sector? What sort of small independent shops will be left?

‘The Government must have made this analysis, made this assessment – let us see it and make our own judgements.’

On public worship, May added: ‘My concern is that the Government today making it illegal to conduct an act of public worship, for the best of intentions, sets a precedent that could be misused for a Government in the future with the worst of intentions.’

Sir Graham Brady, chairman of the Conservative backbench 1922 Committee, outlined his opposition to the regulations and questioned whether the Government had ‘any right’ to take some of the measures.

He said: ‘The thing that troubles me most is that the Government is reaching too far into the private and family lives of our constituents. I think there is an, unintended perhaps, arrogance in assuming the Government has the right to do so.

The PM has since sent an apology to May as he had to attend a scheduled meeting (Picture: AFP/Getty Images)

‘That it has the right to tell people whether they can visit their elderly parents in a care home, whether it has the right to tell parents they can’t see their children or grandchildren, whether it has any right – for heaven’s sake – to tell consenting adults with whom they are allowed to sleep. Does it have the right to ban acts of collective worship?’

Senior Conservative MP Sir Charles Walker added that people were being “coerced” rather than asked to follow the rules.

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He said: ‘This legislation goes against my every instinct, perhaps an instinct even more fundamental than the love and touch of my family.’

Conservative Philip Davies (Shipley) warned that lockdowns ‘cost lives as well as livelihoods’.

He added: ‘People are not stupid, they can see that the rules do not make any sense, and that is why they, like me, no longer have any faith in the people at the Department of Health and Public Health England who are making these decisions.

‘I never thought I would see the day a so-called Conservative minister would stand up and urge Parliament to further sacrifice our most basic of freedoms, collapse the economy and destroy jobs – all to pursue a failed strategy.’

Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@metro.co.uk.

For more stories like this, check our news page.

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2020-11-04 20:39:00Z
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Coronavirus UK news – England to enter second lockdown TONIGHT after MPs back Commons vote 516 to 38 - The Sun

MPs voted for a second lockdown by 516 votes to 38 as Covid deaths more than doubled in a fortnight.

Lockdown measures from tomorrow will include forcing non-essential retail shops, gyms and hospitality venues to close. Schools and universities will stay open.

At least 20 Tory MPs were prepared to vote against the measures but the Prime Minister could rely on votes from the opposition.

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer pledged support for the restrictions, having urged Boris Johnson to put the country on a circuit-breaker lockdown for weeks.

Coronavirus deaths have risen by 492 in the largest daily increase since May, but Boris Johnson has shown optimism in UK testing sites.

The PM said that he "sees light ahead" in the fight against the pandemic as 3,000 armed forces and scientists have stepped in to help mass testing.

Ben Wallace revealed top Ministry of Defence biomedical scientists will oversee troops from the 8 Engineer Brigade, the Royal Anglian Regiment and the King’s Royal Hussars as part of the first trial in testing a whole city.

And he hinted the Liverpool deployment was the first of many, saying: "As the latest testing technologies and developments in combating the virus come into play, Defence stands ready to support local communities, and the nation, to benefit from them as soon as possible."

Despite fatalities rising by 397, cases have continued to level off as 20,018 more people tested positive for the bug today - as the country faces a second lockdown from tomorrow.

Follow our coronavirus blog for the latest news and updates...

  • CARE HOMES TOLD VISITORS & RESIDENTS 'CAN MEET AT WINDOWS & OUTSIDE'

    Care home visitors will be encouraged to meet their loved ones through a window or in an outside setting under new Government guidelines.

    So-called “ad-hoc” visits will not be allowed as England moves into its second national lockdown on Thursday, although care homes “will be encouraged and supported to provide safe visiting opportunities”, the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) said.

    The guidelines follow clamour from care organisations and Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer to ensure visitors are allowed to see their loved ones amid concerns about the emotional damage to residents and their family members.

    In its guidance, issued less than 12 hours before new lockdown measures are introduced, the DHSC cited a number of ways care homes could allow visitors, including having designated visitor pods with floor-to-ceiling screens and separate entrances.

    Outdoor visits with one other person will be permitted, provided the area can be accessed by the loved one without going into the main building.

    It also approved visits at windows, “where the visitor doesn't need to come inside the care home or where the visitor remains in their car, and the resident is socially distanced”.

  • YEOVIL CELEBRATES GUY FAWKES NIGHT EARLY TO AVOID LOCKDOWN

    Locals in Yeovil, Somerset, were treated to an early fireworks display so it wouldn't have to be cancelled due to the coronavirus lockdown.

    The fireworks night was brought forward to tonight from Saturday November 7, so the display could go ahead before the new Covid-19 lockdown comes in at midnight.

  • ASPIRIN COULD HELP COVID PATIENTS RECOVER

    Brits suffering from Covid-19 in hospital will be given aspirin in a new trial to see if the cheap drug prevents lethal blood clotting on the lungs.

    Some studies have shown that nearly 80 per cent of people who die of Covid-19 have thrombosis – or blood clotting – in the lungs, which prevents oxygen from moving through the body and can be fatal.

    Scientists are hopeful that blood thinners, like aspirin, may help avoid the devastating clotting that can lead to death, The Telegraph reports.

  • BRAZIL REPORTS 24,000 NEW COVID CASES

    Brazil reported 23,976 additional confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus in the past 24 hours, and 610 deaths from Covid-19, the health ministry said on Wednesday.

    The South American country has now registered 5,590,025 cases since the pandemic began, while the official death toll has risen to 161,106, according to ministry data, in the world's most fatal outbreak outside the United States.

  • ITALY TO LOCKDOWN SIX REGIONS

    Italy will lockdown a large part of the country, including its northern regions, in a bid to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

    Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte announced that the measures, the most drastic since the nationwide lockdown in March, will take effect on Friday.

    Three of the regions spanned the country’s northwest and included Lombardy, which is the home of Italy’s financial capital Milan, Piedmont and Aosta Valley.

    The southern regions were Calabria, Puglia and the island of Sicily.

    The country will be essentially divided into three levels of infection, dubbed “red, orange and yellow.” Areas that fall into those respective categories will be subjected to automatic restrictions.

  • NINE TORY PEERS BACK 'FATAL MOTION'

    Nine Conservative peers backed the “fatal motion” in an attempt to block the second lockdown for England, according to the division list.

    They were: Viscount Astor, Lord Fairfax of Cameron, Lord Hamilton of Epsom, Lord Mancroft, Baroness Morrissey, Viscount Ridley, Lord Robathan, Viscount Trenchard and Lord Young of Graffham.

    Seventeen independent crossbench peers also supported the motion, including former Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales Lord Woolf, former High Court judge Baroness Butler-Sloss and former head of the army Lord Dannatt.

    Labour's Baroness Drake and three non-affiliated peers also backed the motion.

    The bid to block the regulations was defeated, with 165 Conservative peers among those who opposed it.

  • CHILE GIVES GO-AHEAD TO ASTRAZENECA COVID VACCINE TRIAL

    Chilean President Sebastian Pinera said on Wednesday the country's health regulators had given the go-ahead to a clinical trial of the AstraZeneca Covid-19 vaccine.

    Pinera said the AstraZeneca trial would follow one by America's Johnson & Johnson that is already underway and another by China's Sinovac, whose first vaccine doses arrived in Chile on Wednesday.

    He said Chile had been working “for months” to ensure sufficient and timely access to COVID vaccines, and hoped to start rolling them out to vulnerable populations “in the first few months of next year.”

    “We all know that a safe, effective and readily-available vaccine to all those who need it will be a huge contribution to the fight against Coronavirus,” he said.

    He said Chile had signed a purchase agreement with Pfizer Inc and Germany's BioNTech SE for 10 million doses of the vaccine they are jointly developing, and was working on similar agreements with AstraZeneca, Johnson & Johnson and Sinovac.

    Chile's government has previously said it had reserved 14.4 million doses of the AstraZeneca vaccine and incorporated a clause into its agreement for the Sinovac trial for the preferential purchase of 20 million doses.

  • DENMARK TO CULL MINKS AFTER COVID MUTATION SPREADS TO HUMANS

    Denmark will cull its mink population of up to 17 million after a mutation of the coronavirus found in the animals spread to humans, the prime minister said on Wednesday.

    Health authorities found virus strains in humans and in mink which showed decreased sensitivity against antibodies, potentially lowering the efficacy of future vaccines, Prime Minister Mette Frederiksen said.

    “We have a great responsibility towards our own population, but with the mutation that has now been found, we have an even greater responsibility for the rest of the world as well,” Frederiksen told a news conference.

    The findings, which have been shared with the World Health Organization and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, were based on laboratory tests by the State Serum Institute, the Danish authority dealing with infectious diseases.

    The head of the WHO's emergencies programme, Mike Ryan, called on Friday for full-scale scientific investigations of the complex issue of humans – outside China – infecting mink which in turn transmitted the virus back to humans.

  • NHS WORKERS TAKING PAY DISPUTE TO SCOTTISH PARLIAMENT

    A union will stage a demonstration outside the Scottish Parliament later on Thursday as part of a dispute over the pay deal for NHS workers.

    Unison has invited Health Secretary Jeane Freeman and other MSPs to meet its members to discuss what working conditions have been like during the coronavirus pandemic.

    The union's “pay up now” campaign is calling for the three-year NHS pay deal to be renegotiated in light of the extra costs incurred by healthcare workers.

    Union officials say they are moving to a consultative ballot on industrial action after failing to see progress from the Scottish Government.

    Ms Freeman has said several options are available, including reopening the final year of the current three-year deal.

    Some 25 Unison members are due to take part in the socially distanced demonstration on Thursday.

  • LORDS CLEAR WAY FOR CORONA LOCKDOWN

    Peers have voted against a bid to block the second national lockdown in England.

    Tory former minister Lord Robathan's so-called fatal motion to the regulations was defeated by 30 votes to 376, majority 346.

    From Thursday, pubs, restaurants and non-essential shops will again be forced to close their doors after the Commons voted by 516 to 38 – a Government majority of 478 – for the new restrictions.

    However, in a bigger than expected rebellion, 32 Tory MPs defied the whips to vote against the measures, with two more acting as tellers for the noes.

  • NHS WON'T 'COLLAPSE' UNDER COVID STRAIN

    A health expert has said she was confident the NHS wouldn't “collapse” in the fight against Covid-19 but did warn non-coronavirus treatments were at risk.

    Dr Alison Pittard, dean of the Faculty of Intensive Care Medicine, said it was important that public support for the health service was not undermined by the spread of misinformation.

    “If we don't have the support of the public in the next wave and we hear rumours and quite frankly lies that are being told in the media, that isn't going to help anybody,” she said.

  • CYPRUS UNDER NIGHT TIME CURFEW

    Cyprus has announced it is to bring in a night time curfew starting on Thursday.

    The restrictions will cover the hours between 11pm to 5am and last until November 30.

    On Wednesday, the Mediterranean island reported 166 new cases, bringing the total number of infections to 5,100. There have been 26 deaths.

  • FRANCE REPORTS 40,500 NEW COVID CASES

    France has reported 40,558 new confirmed coronavirus cases in the past 24 hours.

    On Tuesday it recorded 36,330 new cases.

  • ITALY PLACES LOMBARDY AND PIEDMONT IN COVID 'RED ZONE' RESTRICTIONS

    Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte has placed the Lombardy and Piedmont regions under tough Covid “Red Zone” restrictions and infections rise.

    The red zone restrictions are the harshest the country has after it introduced yellow, orange and red levels.

    Yesterday Puglia and Sicily were put under orange measures.

    In the red zone areas people are urged to stay indoors as much as possible with all public spaces forced to close.

  • COPS HAND OUT FINES OF £10K AFTER TWO COVID RULE BREACHES IN TWO DAYS

    A man and a woman have been handed fines of £10,000 each after police in Greater Manchester shut down two separate parties in two days for breaching coronavirus regulations.

    Local authorities said the behaviour showed “a level of reckless selfishness that is almost beyond comprehension,” and praised the actions of officers.

    Greater Manchester Police (GMP) were called to a warehouse in Salford on Tuesday evening and dispersed a group of about 200 people who were attending a wedding reception.

    GMP said that screens had also been put up in an attempt to prevent the event – which featured catering, musicians, an MC and sound equipment – from being seen from outside.

    Following the dispersal of guests, a man, believed to be the organiser, was issued with a £10,000 fine for the breach of coronavirus legislation.

    On Monday night officers were called to an address in Bolton following reports of a house party and dispersed a crowd of about 40 people.

    A woman, believed to be the party's organiser, was also issued with a £10,000 fine.

  • LONDON IN GRIDLOCK

    Parts of central London were in gridlock this evening as people fled the capital ahead of the second coronavirus lockdown.

    Traffic along Regent Street came to a virtual stand-still with the lockdown due to start at midnight.

    Pubs, along with restaurants, hairdressers and shops selling non-essential items will have to close Thursday until at least December 2.

  • LORD LILLEY SAYS LOCKDOWN BASED ON 'DODGY DATA'

    Conservative peer Lord Lilley said the restrictions are “based on dubious law and dodgy data”.

    Former minister Lord Lilley, who had also tabled a regret motion against the Government's new restrictions, told peers: “These measures involve grave restrictions on the economy and on our liberties.

    “They may be necessary, but we should only take them on the basis of sound law and solid data. Unfortunately they are based on dubious law and dodgy data.

    “I may not be a lawyer but I did the Institute of Statisticians exams half a century ago and since then have been allergic ever since to statistical jiggery-pokery.”

    Lord Lilley continued: “In short, instead of evidence-based policy we've seen policy-based evidence.

    “I am not claiming that a second wave is not serious – it is, and I am not suggesting that no action is required – it may be, but using a weak legal base and playing fast and loose with the statistics can only undermine trust in what is proposed in these regulations.”

  • FIVE MEN FINED £10K EACH OVER HOUSE PARTY

    Five young men who together hosted a party for almost 80 people at a house, face a total fine of £50,000 after Covid-19 police swooped and handed each of them a £10,000 fixed penalty fine.

    Neighbours alerted police to the noisy party which had even spilled out into the back garden of a house in Canterbury, Kent, last Saturday evening.

    Officers said that there were between 60 and 80 people in the rooms of the house, all clearly breaching the coronavirus regulations.

  • BIDEN TO ISSUE NATIONAL COVID STRATEGY IF HE BECOMES PRESIDENT

    Presidential hopeful Joe Biden has said he will issue a national strategy to tackle the coronavirus pandemic, if he gets into the White House.

    The policy is expected to include a mask mandate and clearer guidance on testing and school reopenings.

    He has also promised to work more productively with health officials.

    But a Republican Senate could reject Cabinet appointees they deem too liberal, forcing Biden to opt for consensus picks that might frustrate those on his party's left wing.

  • UK TO GET JUST 4M OXFORD UNI VACCINE THIS YEAR

    Britain will receive just 4million doses of the shot this year, the head of the UK's vaccine procurement programme said on Wednesday.

    In May, Britain agreed a deal for 100 million doses of the vaccine, developed by Oxford University and licensed to AstraZeneca , with 30 million doses estimated for delivery by September 2020.

    UK Vaccine Taskforce Chair Kate Bingham said that the target of 30 million doses of the vaccine by September had not been achieved, and she estimated that Britain would get 4 million doses by the end of the year instead.

    “The predictions that were made in good faith at the time were assuming that absolutely everything would work and that there were no hiccups at all,” she told lawmakers.

    She said the scale-up in manufacturing usually took years to do but instead was moving at unprecedented speed, adding that the full 100 million doses would be delivered next year.

  • IRELAND RECORDS EIGHT COVID DEATHS

    Eight further deaths of people with Covid-19 and 444 new cases of the virus have been reported by the National Public Health Emergency Team.

    There has been a total of 1,930 Covid-19 related deaths and 63,483 cases in Ireland.

  • FORMER PM THERESA MAY ABSTAINED IN LOCKDOWN VOTE

    She had launched an attack on the Government for using out of date data to justify the tough new measures.

  • 34 TORY MPS VOTE AGAINST LOCKDOWN

    It is more than the 20 MPs expected to reject the measures earlier today.

    They include former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith, former cabinet ministers Esther McVey and Tim Loughton, Peter Bone and Steve Baker.

    They were supported by four DUP MPs.

    Lockdown will be imposed from midnight tonight after the bill passed by 516 votes to 38.

  • FARAGE: LOCKDOWN OPPOSITION NEEDED

    Nigel Farage said an opposition to lockdown is needed.

    It comes as MPs voted by 516 to 38 to impose new lockdown restrictions from midnight.

    Brexit Party leader Mr Farage tweeted: “An opposition voice to lockdown is needed.”

    He is set to relaunch his Brexit Party as the Reform Party, dedicated to fighting lockdown.

  • PM SEES TORY REVOLT FIRST HAND

    Boris Johnson saw the boiling Tory revolt in the Commons today ahead of the lockdown vote.

    Former PM Theresa May led a furious charge arguing the data and graphs used to impose the lockdown were out of date.

    Some projections used could even be up to four times wrong.

    The lockdown passed by 516 votes to 38 as Keir Starmer rallied his Labour troops to back the Government.

    Read more here.

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2020-11-04 19:19:01Z
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Covid: Care homes advised to allow visitors in England during lockdown - BBC News

Elderly man sitting in a chair
SPL

Care homes must provide a Covid-secure environment - such as floor-to-ceiling screens or visiting pods - to allow families to visit loved ones during the new lockdown, the government says.

The updated guidance for care homes in England comes into effect on Thursday.

It says all residents should be able "to receive visits from their family and friends in a Covid-secure way".

However, charities have criticised the guidance for suggesting measures that won't be practical for some residents.

  • Locked down and lonely: 'Why doesn't anyone want us?'
  • 'We sprang Grandma from the care home'
  • Covid care home policies 'violated human rights'

All face-to-face visits were banned during the first national lockdown at the height of the pandemic in the spring.

Guidance in England over recent months has allowed visits on a "limited basis" where alternative arrangements were not possible, but visits have been severely curtailed or prohibited entirely in those areas subject to enhanced restrictions, which have applied to large parts of England.

Under the updated government guidance, care homes - especially those who haven't allowed visits since March - "will be encouraged and supported to provide safe visiting opportunities".

It says visits should be "tailored to residents and facilities and should prioritise residents and staff's safety" to limit the spread of coronavirus, with measures such as social distancing and personal protective equipment (PPE).

The guidance also suggests:

  • Visitors and residents enter through different entrances, meet in Covid-secure areas/pods separated by floor-to-ceiling screens, and visitors should not enter or pass through the care home
  • Window visits where visitors don't need to come inside the care home or they remain in their car, and the resident is socially distanced
  • Outdoor visits - with one other person - in areas which can be accessed without anyone going through a shared building
  • Virtual visits, with care homes encouraging the use of video calls

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said care homes "should feel empowered by this new guidance to look at safe options to allow visits to care homes that suit their residents and facilities".

"We've seen some really innovative solutions used to help families see each other safely, face-to-face, which has been life-changing for some.

He said he knew "how heart-breaking and incredibly frustrating it has been for families and friends who haven't been able to see their loved ones" during the pandemic, adding that "we must allow families to reunite in the safest way possible".

'Prison-style screens'

However, Kate Lee, chief executive at Alzheimer's Society, said: "We're devastated by today's new care home visitor guidance - it completely misses the point: this attempt to protect people will kill them."

She said the pandemic had left people with dementia isolated and thousands had died. The guidelines "completely ignore the vital role of family carers in providing the care for their loved ones with dementia that no one else can", she added.

She said the "prison-style screens" proposed by the government with people speaking through phones were "frankly ridiculous when you consider someone with advanced dementia can often be bed-bound and struggling to speak".

That view was echoed by Caroline Abrahams, charity director at Age UK, who said she was "acutely aware" that the methods being sanctioned were "unlikely to be useable by many older people with dementia, or indeed sensory loss".

She added: "Overall we think this new guidance is too restrictive. In practice we fear it will result in many care homes halting meaningful visiting altogether, because they will be unable to comply with the requirements laid down."

The government has outlined plans to carry out testing on visitors to care homes, with trials to begin later this month.

It also said a new national programme for weekly testing of professionals who regularly visit care homes would be "rolled out in the coming weeks" following a pilot in Cambridgeshire, Peterborough and Northamptonshire.

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2020-11-04 18:35:00Z
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Coronavirus: England to enter lockdown as MPs approve plan - but PM witnesses Tory revolt - Sky News

England's fresh month-long lockdown has been confirmed, with MPs officially approving the new shutdown.

In a House of Commons vote on Wednesday, MPs supported the new coronavirus measures by 516 to 38, a majority of 478.

It means that, from one minute past midnight, pubs, bars, restaurants and non-essential shops will close across England and stay shut until 2 December.

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PM: 'Future is bleak' if R number isn't reduced

People will also be told to stay at home except for when attending school, college, university or work, or going food shopping.

A total of 34 Tory MPs rebelled against the lockdown, including former Conservative leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith and Sir Graham Brady, the chair of the powerful 1922 Committee of Tory backenchers.

Another 21 Tory MPs had no vote recorded, including ex-prime minister Theresa May - despite her having spoken in the debate prior to the vote.

During the debate, Mr Johnson told MPs he hoped businesses would be able to re-open again in the run-up to Christmas.

More from Boris Johnson

But he warned that, without acting now, the country could suffer deaths "on a grievous scale", with hospitals in "extraordinary trouble" by next month.

Moments before the Commons vote result came, it was announced a further 25,177 people had tested positive for COVID-19 in the UK and another 492 had died after contracting the virus.

The prime minister saw the lockdown approved with Labour's support. However, he witnessed a string of unhappy Conservative MPs using the Commons debate to criticise his coronavirus strategy.

Sir Graham told MPs he would vote against the lockdown "with greater conviction" than any other vote he had cast in his 23 years in the Commons.

"The thing that troubles me most is that the government is reaching too far into the private and family lives of our constituents," he said.

"I think there is an, unintended perhaps, arrogance in assuming the government has the right to do so."

Sir Iain said he would not support the lockdown, telling MPs it "was not necessary now".

He also attacked the "appalling" leak of the government's lockdown plan to the media, prior to its announcement.

Sir Charles Walker told MPs he believed the legislation was "terribly unjust" and "cruel" in parts.

"I will have no part in criminalising parents seeing their children, and children for seeing their parents," he said.

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Mark Harper said he did not believe ministers had adequately made the case for the lockdown and criticised "several flaws" in the government's COVID data.

And Philip Davies said that both he and the public "no longer have any faith" in the government's strategy.

Meanwhile, the prime minister sent a note of apology to his predecessor after he walked out of the Commons during Mrs May's contribution to the debate.

The ex-premier had raised concerns about a lack of data on the impact of the government's COVID decisions on the economy, mental health, domestic abuse and non-coronavirus treatments.

"The government must have made this analysis, made this assessment: let us see it and make our own judgments," she said.

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PM leaves Commons as May attacks govt over data

Analysis: Boris Johnson will be worried by Tory rebellion - by Tom Rayner, political correspondent

Boris Johnson did not lose the vote, but many of his own MPs appear to be losing faith in him.

Downing Street's efforts to neuter the rebellion by offering scientific briefings to backbenchers in recent days appears to have had limited effect.

The final number of Conservative MPs to vote against the government was 32, a higher number than had been expected.

But even that was not a true reflection of the level of antipathy felt by many of them towards the government's lockdown proposals. The vote itself may have been binary, but the debate was far from black and white.

By no means did all the Tory MPs who expressed concerns with aspects of the new lockdown rules vote against the proposals when it came to it. Some made clear they would give the benefit of the doubt this time, but not without caveats.

Former minister Nusrat Ghani said she would reluctantly vote in favour of the legislation, but warned she was putting the government "on 28 days notice".

Former prime minister Theresa May lambasted the government over the way scientific data had been presented, and the decision to make religious services illegal. She did not rebel, but her abstention nonetheless represents a major rebuke to her successor.

Labour's backing for the measures meant that a rebellion large enough to defeat the government was never a realistic possibility, but the prime minister will be worried about who did choose to take a stand.

Overall, this was not a tantrum by serial trouble-makers - it was a rebellion of some of the most senior and influential Conservatives not on the government pay-roll.

The chairman of the 1922 Committee, Sir Graham Brady, his vice chair Sir Charles Walker, former party leader Iain Duncan Smith and former chief whip Mark Harper are notable on the list of those who voted against.

Alongside MPs from the Brexiteer libertarian wing of the party, such as former cabinet minister Esther McVey, Peter Bone and John Redwood, were a number of former ministers normally associated with what was once seen as the 'Remainer' centrist side of the camp - Steve Brine, Johnathon Djanogly, and Jackie Doyle-Price.

The make-up of this rebellion is not like any we have seen before.

Will there be consequences for the rebels? Earlier this afternoon, a spokesman for Mr Johnson made clear that was unlikely, pointing to the fact the prime minister "understands where his MPs are coming from" and has been open about the regrets he feels himself.

That is not a tone we normally hear from Downing Street.

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2020-11-04 17:36:57Z
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