Rabu, 18 November 2020

Christmas CAN be saved from Covid - but PHE boss says tougher lockdown may be needed - Daily Mail

Lose New Year to save 'five days of Christmas': PHE boss warns get-togethers between Dec 24-28 are 'possible' but will need lockdown curbs before AND after - as data shows hospital Covid admissions have DROPPED in the North West, North East and Midlands

  • Dr Susan Hopkins said she was 'very keen' to give Britons a 'normal' Christmas
  • Warned it could mean bolstered tiered lockdown before and after festive period 
  • Officials considering proposals which would allow multiple households to meet

Dr Susan Hopkins, a senior doctor at Public Health England, said she was 'very keen' to give Britons a normal Christmas

Christmas get-togethers look set to be given the green light but it will mean living with bolstered lockdown measures before and after the festive period, officials warned today. 

Dr Susan Hopkins, a senior doctor at Public Health England, said she was 'very keen' to give Britons a 'normal' Christmas after a tumultuous year that has seen families kept apart for months on end.

There were reports overnight that ministers are mulling a decision to loosen restrictions between December 24 and 28. Government chiefs are also said to be considering proposals which would allow family 'bubbles' of up to four households who will able to meet for Christmas.   

Speaking at a Downing Street press conference today, Dr Hopkins said she believes 'it is possible'. But she warned for every day that measures are loosened, 'we will need two days of tighter restrictions'. It could mean spending New Year in some form of lockdown. 

Dr Hopkins said: 'We are very keen that we have a Christmas as close to normal as possible. That requires all of us to make every effort over this national restriction period, and even in early December, to get the cases as low as possible and to reduce the risk of transmission within households and between families. 

'A final decision, of course, will rest with the Government and we look forward to hearing what those plans are. 

There are rumblings of an upgraded tiered lockdown system when England comes out of its national shutdown on December 2, which could see pubs forced to stay shut and a new 9pm alcohol curfew in Covid hotspots.

Graphs wheeled out at the Government press conference showed hospital admissions for Covid have dropped in the North West, North East and the Midlands, in another promising sign that a normal Christmas could be on the cards.

But Dr Hopkins said Brits shouldn't get complacent, adding: 'Coming into Christmas, we need to be very careful about the number of contacts that we have to reduce transmission before Christmas and get our cases as low as possible. Hopefully the Government will make the decision that will allow us to have some mixing but we will wait and see what that is. 

'And then I think, once we have got past the Christmas period, if there's been a release and some socialisation we will all have to be very responsible and reduce those contacts again.' 

Deputy chief scientific adviser Dame Angela McLean said SAGE had been examining potential relaxation of measures over Christmas. She told today's briefing: 'We did send some advice in over the weekend. But we genuinely don't know what decisions have been made.' 

Work is being done across the UK in hopes of creating a four-nations consensus on meeting at Christmas.  

In other coronavirus developments:

  • Pfizer now says its Covid-19 jab is 95% effective, safe and will even be ready for approval by the end of the week... days after Moderna's breakthrough; 
  • Britain recorded 1.7% fewer coronavirus cases yesterday than last Tuesday with 20,051 new infections - as death toll rises 12.4% in a week to 598;
  • Nicola Sturgeon announced plans to make it illegal to travel outside Level 3 and 4 areas as she plunges 2.3million people in Scotland into toughest restrictions;
  • A devastating report exposed chronic bungling and 'jobs for pals' in rush to source safety gear during pandemic; 
  • Study finds even survivors who had mild COVID-19 are protected for at least 8 months and their immune 'memory' may last MUCH longer; 
  • A new study found even survivors who had mild COVID-19 are protected for at least 8 months and their immune 'memory' may last MUCH longer;
  • Another report claimed cases of Covid-19 in the summer were 16 TIMES higher in the UK than official figures suggest - with more than 5 MILLION Britons infected by the end of August

Dr Hopkins said that ministers are working on what the 'new tiers' will be after the anticipated easing date for lockdown and on a plan for Christmas.

Asked about how Christmas may look like, she told the Government data briefing: 'This is a decision that will be made by Government and I know that they're working hard to develop an outline of what that will look like and what the new tiers will look like post-December 2 and what Christmas will look like.'

Dame Angela said she was confidence Tier 3 measures implemented before the second lockdown were having positive effect.

She told the Government briefing: 'When I look at the North West and the North East, when I look at what's happened with the ONS surveys there, I see interventions that have worked, I see epidemics that are flattening. There is some good news there.' 

In Tier 3 areas, pubs were forced to close and people were not allowed to meet with other households indoors. But shops, restaurants and other amenities were allowed to stay open - making it a much less restrictive intervention than the crude lockdown.

The welcome news came as Downing Street last night declared that Boris Johnson wanted to 'ensure people can spend time with close family over Christmas'. However no decision has yet been made on the plans.

Ministers and experts reportedly want to review the direction of Covid death figures and infection numbers across the UK before green-lighting any proposals.

However hopes of a family Christmas were further boosted last night, after case numbers in the UK continued to flatline.

Under the proposals, reported in the Sun, households would be allowed to mix for up to five days, starting on Christmas Eve. 

Millions of Britons have today been given a major boost that their number one Christmas wish - to be with their family members - could be granted this year. Pictured: Pedestrians wearing face masks walk past Christmas lights on Oxford Street yesterday

Millions of Britons have today been given a major boost that their number one Christmas wish - to be with their family members - could be granted this year. Pictured: Pedestrians wearing face masks walk past Christmas lights on Oxford Street yesterday

The five day period has reportedly been chosen because Christmas Eve falls on a Thursday this year. It will mean many, but not all workers, will then have Christmas Day and Boxing Day off, followed by Sunday, December 27, and a planned Bank Holiday on Monday, December 28

The five day period has reportedly been chosen because Christmas Eve falls on a Thursday this year. It will mean many, but not all workers, will then have Christmas Day and Boxing Day off, followed by Sunday, December 27, and a planned Bank Holiday on Monday, December 28

Ministers and experts reportedly want to review the direction of Covid death figures (pictured above) and infection numbers across the UK before green-lighting any proposals

Ministers and experts reportedly want to review the direction of Covid death figures (pictured above) and infection numbers across the UK before green-lighting any proposals

However hopes of a family Christmas were further boosted last night, after case numbers (pictured) in the UK continued to flatline

However hopes of a family Christmas were further boosted last night, after case numbers (pictured) in the UK continued to flatline

Nicola Sturgeon makes it ILLEGAL to travel outside of Level 3 and 4 lockdown areas as she plunges 2.3MILLION people in 11 areas into toughest restrictions from Friday 

Nicola Sturgeon last night announced parts of Scotland that are home to millions of people will be moved into its toughest coronavirus level at the end of the week as she warned infection rates remain 'stubbornly high'.

The First Minister said 11 council areas, which include the city of Glasgow, will be subject to Level Four restrictions from 6pm on Friday. The areas have a combined population of approximately 2.3million people.

People living in Level Four areas are banned from meeting with other households indoors while all non-essential shops must close.

In an announcement to the Scottish Parliament, Ms Sturgeon told people in those areas is that they 'should not be going out and about' while the measures are place for the three weeks - until December 11.

The SNP leader also announced she is making it illegal for people to travel into or out of Level Three and Level Four areas 'except for certain essential purposes'.

There is already guidance in place urging people not to make such journeys, but Ms Sturgeon said the advice will become law from Friday. It means rule-breakers face the prospect of enforcement action from the police.

The council areas in Scotland moving to Level Four from Friday are the City of Glasgow, Renfrewshire, East Renfrewshire, East Dunbartonshire, West Dunbartonshire, North Lanarkshire, South Lanarkshire, East Ayrshire, South Ayrshire, Stirling and West Lothian.

Ms Sturgeon said there was 'grounds for continued and significant concern' in all of the areas being moved into Level Four.

As well as the 11 areas being elevated to the top tier, two areas are being moved from Level Three to Level Two while 19 will experience no change.

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The five day period has reportedly been chosen because Christmas Eve falls on a Thursday this year.

It will mean many, but not all workers, will then have Christmas Day and Boxing Day off, followed by Sunday, December 27, and a planned Bank Holiday on Monday, December 28.

Ministers reportedly want to make the Christmas rules standard across England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland - all of which have recently had varying levels of Covid restrictions in place.

According to the Times, the period for easing of restrictions could be much shorter - between two or three days.

The paper also reports that the number of households able to mix in 'bubbles' could be limited to just two or three households.

Scientific advisers have reportedly urged the Government against easing rules too much, with some warning case numbers could double or quadruple over the Christmas period.  

Talks between the four nations are set to take place at a later date, with ministers in the devolved nations said to be keen to wait for more data before making a decision.  

At her coronavirus briefing in Edinburgh today, Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said: 'We are all desperate for some normality around Christmas and I absolutely include myself in that.

'The Scottish Government right now is working very closely and well with the other UK nations to try to agree a way for that to happen - we want to have the same position across the UK given family patterns that exist.

'But we know that people coming together when a virus is circulating will increase the risks of it spreading.'

The First Minister again said that meeting at Christmas requires the prevalence of the virus to reduce in the coming weeks. 

At the Downing Street press conference today, Dr Hopkins also said that every lower tier local authority will have local contact tracing in place by the end of November.

'NHS Test and Trace has increased its testing capacity, that has been a very important intervention and that has allowed us to try and work on decreasing turnaround times for those people who get tested,' she told the Downing Street data briefing on Covid-19.

'We're also working very hard with local authorities to enhance the contact tracing system and by the end of this month, almost every lower tier local authority will have local contact tracing in place so that's really allowed us to step up.

'That's an amazing achievement – in the summer where we were having 1,000 cases a day we were contacting on average 2,000 to 3,000 people per day.

'Right now, with almost 30,000 cases a day across the UK, we are managing to contact over 100,000 people per day.'

England's deputy chief scientific adviser Dame Angela McLean said she did not expect for hospital admissions to halve every three weeks as they did during the first lockdown in March.

She told the Downing Street data briefing: 'During the March lockdown – the number of hospitalisations which was really all we could keep track of at that time – was halving every three weeks.

'I don't think we're going to achieve that – I do not think we will halve before the second of December.'  

It comes amid a split between cabinet members over plans for a 'strengthened' Covid tier system, which could see indoor socialising banned across much of the country for months.

Ministers are preparing for a bitter fight over the details of a beefed-up system of 'regional' restrictions which are due to be published next week.

A Whitehall source said Health Secretary Matt Hancock and Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove were attempting to 'rein in everything' and allow only a modest loosening of restrictions when the current lockdown rules expire on December 2.

However, other senior ministers, including Chancellor Rishi Sunak, Business Secretary Alok Sharma, Trade Secretary Liz Truss, Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden and Home Secretary Priti Patel, are said to be gearing up to push for a wider reopening to allow businesses to salvage part of their Christmas trade. 

The new restrictions are expected to last for months, with only the short break over Christmas to allow more contact with family and friends.

Downing Street yesterday insisted that Boris Johnson, who is in self-isolating having been in contact with a fellow Tory MP who tested positive for Covid, remains determined to end the current restrictions on December 2.

Under the proposals, reported in the Sun, households would be allowed to mix for up to five days, starting on Christmas Eve

Under the proposals, reported in the Sun, households would be allowed to mix for up to five days, starting on Christmas Eve

It comes as Downing Street said yesterday that Boris Johnson wanted to 'ensure that people can spend time with close family over Christmas'

It comes as Downing Street said yesterday that Boris Johnson wanted to 'ensure that people can spend time with close family over Christmas'

A Whitehall source said Health Secretary Matt Hancock and Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove were attempting to 'rein in everything' and allow only a modest loosening of restrictions when the current lockdown rules expire on December 2
However, other senior ministers, including Chancellor Rishi Sunak (pictured), are said to be gearing up to push for a wider reopening to allow businesses to salvage part of their Christmas trade.

A Whitehall source said Health Secretary Matt Hancock (pictured left) and Cabinet Office minister Michael Gove were attempting to 'rein in everything' and allow only a modest loosening of restrictions when the current lockdown rules expire on December 2. However, other senior ministers, including Chancellor Rishi Sunak (pictured right), are said to be gearing up to push for a wider reopening to allow businesses to salvage part of their Christmas trade.

Britain records 1.7% fewer coronavirus cases than last Tuesday with 20,051 new infections 

Britain last night recorded 1.7 per cent fewer coronavirus cases compared to last week in yet another indication the UK's second wave is slowing, new figures show.

The Government announced 20,051 new lab-confirmed Covid cases in the UK today, down from the 20,412 infections confirmed last Tuesday.

The figure is also a fall from the 21,363 cases confirmed on Monday, with the total number of infections in the UK now at 1,410,732 since the start of the pandemic.

The Department of Health announced a further 598 people had died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19 as of Tuesday - up 12.4 per cent from the same point last week, when 532 deaths were recorded.

Today's death toll is the highest recorded in Britain since May 12, when 614 deaths were confirmed. The latest death figure brings the UK total to 52,745. 

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Though households could be banned from mixing when the lockdown ends in a bid to 'save Christmas', according to the Daily Telegraph.

The paper says the ban could last until 'close to Christmas' to allow for a festive 'bubble' system. 

However no decisions have been taken about exactly what structure of tiered restrictions will replace it.

Plans for an 'end of lockdown package', including more details on the country's vaccination programme, is expected to be announced next week.

On Monday, Public Health England director Susan Hopkins, warned that the tier system would have to be 'strengthened' to avoid a resurgence in the virus when the lockdown ends.

She said Tier One – the only level that allowed for indoor socialising – had had 'very little effect'.

Documents released last week from the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling, which reports to the Scientific Advisory Committee for Emergencies (Sage) said that although there was a 'clear effect' on infection rates from strict Tier Three interventions, there was 'much less from Tiers One and Two'.

The SPI-M group believes infections will rise at the same rate as before if the same three-tier system is brought back in on December 2.

But many ministers fear the economy would face another heavy blow if huge numbers of businesses are forced to remain closed in the run up to Christmas.

Tory MPs are also gearing up for a fight over the issue, with one warning that up to 100 could rebel next week if the new restrictions are drawn too tightly.

A Whitehall source acknowledged that the Government would face 'political difficulties' if the hospitality sector is unable to reopen in the run-up to Christmas.

Oxford professor accuses No10 of being 'institutionally racist' for lockdown that sacrificed Diwali for Christmas 

The Government has been accused of following an 'institutionally racist' lockdown policy in England which has sacrificed Diwali in favour of Christmas.

Oxford University medicine professor Dr Soham Bandyopadhyay argued it was unfair that people who celebrate Diwali are now not allowed to see family.

The five-day Festival of Lights, which began on November 14, is celebrated by Hindu, Sikh, Jain and Buddhist people, of whom there are estimated to be more than 1.6million in the UK.

The holiday this year comes mid-way through England's second coronavirus lockdown, meaning people cannot meet up with others indoors, nor in groups of more than two outside.

Dr Bandyopadhyay said the UK Government had 'forbidden' families from reuniting – university students cannot return home, for example – during a time based on a 'celebration of relationships between family and friends'.

He said in a letter titled 'An institutionally racist lockdown policy' that this could have been avoided if Number 10 had heeded SAGE advice to do a 'circuit breaker' around October half term, which scientists were clamouring for it to do at the time.

The Government said it was 'working closely with faith leaders' and had kept places of worship open to help religious people cope with the second lockdown. 

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Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick said yesterday that he hoped to see most hospitality firms allowed to reopen.

But he acknowledged that restrictions were likely to be only 'somewhat easier' after the current lockdown ends.

In a round of broadcast interviews, Mr Jenrick said any extension of the lockdown would require a vote of Parliament.

'It is our hope and expectation that that won't be the case and that people in England will be able to move back into the tiered system,' he said.

Sir John Bell, a member of the Government's vaccines taskforce, said the Government would not be able to 'take our foot off the brake completely' when the lockdown ends.

But he said developments in mass testing could help ease restrictions. 'I am optimistic that we won't have to go into the Christmas period in a lockdown,' he said.

Professor Neil Ferguson, whose modelling led to the original lockdown in March, said reopening pubs and restaurants in the run-up to Christmas would be likely to lead to rising infection levels.

He told BBC Radio 4's PM programme: 'The big question is can we reopen… pubs and restaurants in the run-up to Christmas and still avoid infection levels increasing?

'I suspect we can't, but the decision may be made to do so anyhow on the basis that any increase will be slow and may be able to be counteracted later.'

The British Medical Association last night called for the 'rule of six', which allowed mixing of up to six households, to be replaced with a 'two households' rule. 

It comes as Britain last night recorded 1.7 per cent fewer coronavirus cases compared to last week in yet another indication the UK's second wave is slowing.

The Government announced 20,051 new lab-confirmed Covid cases in the UK today, down from the 20,412 infections confirmed last Tuesday.

The figure is also a fall from the 21,363 cases confirmed on Monday, with the total number of infections in the UK now at 1,410,732 since the start of the pandemic.

Professor Neil Ferguson (pictured), whose modelling led to the original lockdown in March, said reopening pubs and restaurants in the run-up to Christmas would be likely to lead to rising infection levels

Professor Neil Ferguson (pictured), whose modelling led to the original lockdown in March, said reopening pubs and restaurants in the run-up to Christmas would be likely to lead to rising infection levels

How could the new Tiers look? 

Ministers insist no final decisions have been made on the Tier system after December 2, but there have been hints at the kind of measures it could feature.

It also seems clear that in future the rules will be applied on a wider regional basis, rather than to specific towns and cities.

TIER 1

The Rule of Six looks set to continue, and the 10pm curfew on pubs and restaurants would still apply.

However, there is speculation that households could be restricted from meeting in homes after health chiefs said the base level was proving ineffective.

TIER 2

Tier 2 previously involved all the curbs in the first level, plus a ban on mixing with other households in any indoor setting - including pubs and restaurants.

TIER 3

Tier 3 is the highest set of restrictions currently available in the system

There is a ban on socialising indoors and in private gardens. Pubs and bars must shut unless they are able to operate as eateries.

There are restrictions on staying overnight in other parts of the country unless it is for essential work.

TIER 4?

Ministers have been hinting at another bracket of restrictions above the existing highest level - as is already the case in Scotland.

There are suggestions it could 'embed' some of the bolt-ons to the Tier 3 restrictions already being deployed in some areas.

For example, Nottinghamshire has imposed a ban on alcohol sales after 9pm, while other areas have shut gyms and leisure centres.

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The Department of Health announced a further 598 people had died within 28 days of testing positive for Covid-19 as of Tuesday - up 12.4 per cent from the same point last week, when 532 deaths were recorded.

Yesterday's death toll is the highest recorded in Britain since May 12, when 614 deaths were confirmed. The latest death figure brings the UK total to 52,745.

However, separate data from the UK's statistic agencies suggest there have been more than 68,000 deaths involving Covid-19 in the UK.

These include deaths where the virus has been mentioned on the death certificate, together with additional data on deaths that have occurred in recent days.

Meanwhile, figures released by the Office for National Statistics yesterday showed the number of people dying with Covid-19 rose by 40 per cent in the first week of November - when the virus was to blame for one in every six deaths in England and Wales. 

It was not explained last night why deaths have risen sharply, though it could be a delayed spike following a rise in Covid cases last week.  

The figures comes as Nicola Sturgeon last night announced that parts of Scotland that are home to millions of people will be moved into its toughest coronavirus level at the end of the week as she warned infection rates remain 'stubbornly high'.

The First Minister said 11 council areas, which include the city of Glasgow, will be subject to Level Four restrictions from 6pm on Friday. The areas have a combined population of approximately 2.3million people.

People living in Level Four areas are banned from meeting with other households indoors while all non-essential shops must close.

In an announcement to the Scottish Parliament, Ms Sturgeon told people in those areas is that they 'should not be going out and about' while the measures are place for the three weeks - until December 11.

The SNP leader also announced she is making it illegal for people to travel into or out of Level Three and Level Four areas 'except for certain essential purposes'.

There is already guidance in place urging people not to make such journeys, but Ms Sturgeon said the advice will become law from Friday.

It means rule-breakers face the prospect of enforcement action from the police.

Nicola Sturgeon today announced 11 local authority areas are being moved into the toughest coronavirus level from Friday

Nicola Sturgeon today announced 11 local authority areas are being moved into the toughest coronavirus level from Friday

The council areas in Scotland moving to Level Four from Friday are the City of Glasgow, Renfrewshire, East Renfrewshire, East Dunbartonshire, West Dunbartonshire, North Lanarkshire, South Lanarkshire, East Ayrshire, South Ayrshire, Stirling and West Lothian.

Ms Sturgeon said there was 'grounds for continued and significant concern' in all of the areas being moved into Level Four.

As well as the 11 areas being elevated to the top tier, two areas are being moved from Level Three to Level Two while 19 will experience no change.

The £18bn coronavirus PPE fiasco: Devastating report exposes chronic bungling and 'jobs for pals' in rush to source safety gear during pandemic

By Daniel Martin and Emine Sinmaz for the Daily Mail

A devastating report today lifts the lid on the cronyism and ineptitude that has characterised the Government's £18billion rush to source PPE and other equipment during the coronavirus crisis.

Michael Gove and Dominic Cummings were both drawn into the debacle after the spending watchdog said officials failed to consider potential conflicts of interests involving companies linked to them.

The National Audit Office revealed that officials had signed contracts for hundreds of thousands of facemasks which turned out to be unusable – wasting hundreds of millions of pounds.

The National Audit Office report found more than 1,300 contracts worth £10.5billion were awarded by the Government with no competition whatsoever

The National Audit Office report found more than 1,300 contracts worth £10.5billion were awarded by the Government with no competition whatsoever

The bombshell report found:

  • Two of the companies named in the report have links to the Prime Minister's former chief adviser;
  • More than 1,300 contracts worth £10.5billion were awarded by the Government with no competition whatsoever – increasing the chance of money being wasted;
  • Ministers set up a separate VIP procurement route which allowed some companies to be fast-tracked for a decision – as long as they had the right connections;
  • One in ten suppliers processed through this high-priority lane (47 out of 493) obtained contracts compared with less than one in 100 suppliers that came through the ordinary lane (104 out of 14,892).

Rachel Reeves, Labour's Cabinet Office spokesman, said: 'The country deserves to have confidence their money is being spent effectively by the Government – and to know without doubt that friends and donors to the Conservative Party aren't profiting from this pandemic.'

The NAO's report looked at 8,600 contracts awarded by the Government between January and July. 

These were worth £18billion, of which £17.3billion were new contracts rather than contract extensions. Most of the money, £12.3billion, went on PPE, with the remainder going on other equipment and virus testing.

Ministers, MPs and civil servants could refer businesses to a 'high-priority' lane and firms which were granted this VIP access were more than ten times as likely to be awarded a contract as those in the ordinary lane. 

Leads came into a dedicated mailbox, but officials only recorded the sources in half of cases, although many were from ministerial offices following tip-offs from MPs about firms in their constituencies.

The NAO highlighted one £840,000 contract with Public First for focus groups and communications. 

Dominic Cummings was drawn into the debacle after the spending watchdog said officials failed to consider potential conflicts of interests

Dominic Cummings was drawn into the debacle after the spending watchdog said officials failed to consider potential conflicts of interests 

The policy and research firm is owned by James Frayne and his wife Rachel Wolf, both of whom have previously worked for Michael Gove, the minister for the Cabinet Office. Miss Wolf co-wrote Boris Johnson's 2019 manifesto.

The NAO said there was no evidence Mr Gove had been involved in the award, but 'we found no documentation on the consideration of conflicts of interest'.

Mr Cummings's association with Mr Frayne dates back to at least 2000, when they worked together on a campaign against Britain joining the euro. They also co-founded a Right-wing think tank.

The report discussed another potential conflict of interest in reference to Lord Agnew, a minister in the Treasury and the Cabinet Office. 

He owned shares in Faculty, an artificial intelligence firm given three coronavirus contracts worth £3million for data analysis.

Faculty is also linked to Mr Cummings. It worked with him on the Vote Leave campaign in 2016, and The Guardian reported that he donated £260,000 to the firm from his company Dynamic Maps in 2018 and 2019.

A Faculty spokesman said: 'The NAO found no evidence that Lord Agnew was involved in these procurements, which were contracted under delegated authority in different departments, none of them his own. 

The National Audit Office said there was no evidence Mr Gove had been involved in the award

The National Audit Office said there was no evidence Mr Gove had been involved in the award

'It also found that the minister had disclosed his interests. Lord Agnew retains ownership of his shares through a blind trust.'

The report did not mention Mr Cummings's connection to either Public First or Faculty. Mr Frayne, of Public First, said: 'We agreed a pay-as-you-go deal where we could be terminated at any point if they weren't happy with our work.'

A government source said Mr Gove had no involvement with the Public First contract.

Cabinet Office minister Julia Lopez, said: 'We have robust processes to ensure we get critical equipment to where it needs to go as quickly as possible, whilst also ensuring value for money for the taxpayer.' 

Mr Cummings did not reply to a request for a comment. 

Dominic Cummings has links with two of the four companies picked out in the National Audit Office's damning report.

The former chief adviser to the Prime Minister, 48, has connections to artificial intelligence firm Faculty and research company Public First, which have secured contracts worth more than £3.8million.

Mr Cummings was not named in the public watchdog's devastating report, which found that bidders with 'VIP access' to ministers were ten times more likely to win Covid contracts than those who did not.

Mr Cummings worked with Faculty – which was awarded three contracts worth £3million for data analysis – on the Vote Leave campaign in 2016.

Dominic Cummings has connections to artificial intelligence firm Faculty and research company Public First

Dominic Cummings has connections to artificial intelligence firm Faculty and research company Public First

He also has long-standing links to Public First, run by James Frayne and his wife Rachel Wolf, who co-wrote the Conservative Party's 2019 manifesto.

His association with Mr Frayne dates back to at least 2000, when they worked on a campaign against Britain joining the euro.

The NAO report criticised the fact that the £840,000 Public First contract was awarded retrospectively. The report states that Public First invoiced for £550,000 in total for work covered by the contract.

It identified that the company's founders have also worked for Michael Gove, the Cabinet Office minister. The report said there was no evidence that Mr Gove had been involved in the awarding of the contract, but added that it 'found no documentation on the consideration of conflicts of interest'.

There is no evidence to suggest that Mr Cummings played any role in either firm securing the contracts.

Another company scrutinised in the report is Ayanda Capital, which was handed a £253million contract to supply PPE. 

The deal was brokered by Andrew Mills, who was one of 12 advisers to the Board of Trade, chaired by International Trade Secretary Liz Truss. Mr Mills is also a 'senior board adviser' to Ayanda Capital.

Some 50million masks, worth £155million, delivered by the company were of the wrong specification and cannot be used. 

Ayanda said last night: 'Suggestions that the masks are not fit for purpose or are somehow unsafe to use by frontline NHS workers are simply untrue and we are advised defamatory.' 

On top of the three companies identified in the NAO report, the Mail can reveal 12 more included in the graphic above. They include Meller Designs, which secured £163million in PPE contracts. It is run by Tory donor David Meller.

P14 Medical Limited was awarded three contracts worth £272million to supply PPE. Its director is former Tory councillor Steve Dechan.   

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2020-11-18 12:24:00Z
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Jeremy Corbyn won't have Labour whip restored after 'undermining' antisemitism fight, says Sir Keir Starmer - Sky News

Former Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn will not have the party's whip restored, his successor Sir Keir Starmer has announced.

It means that Mr Corbyn will still not officially be a Labour MP, despite his suspension as a party member having been lifted by a disciplinary panel on Tuesday evening.

In a statement on Wednesday, Sir Keir said that Labour's disciplinary process "does not have the confidence of the Jewish community", adding: "That became clear once again yesterday."

He reiterated his intent to establish a new independent disciplinary process "as soon as possible" and revealed that Mr Corbyn would not yet be readmitted as a Labour MP.

LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 29: Leader of the Labour Party Sir Keir Starmer leaves his home on October 29, 2020 in London, England. The long-awaited report from the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) which was initiated in 2019 after Jewish groups alleged the party was institutionally antisemitic in its handling of complaints under the leadership of Jeremy Corbyn, is due to be published today. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)
Image: Sir Keir Starmer has continued to withold the Labour whip from Mr Corbyn

The Islington North MP had been suspended by Labour several weeks ago following his response to a damning report by the Equalities and Human Rights Commission (EHRC).

"I'm the leader of the Labour Party, but I'm also the leader of the Parliamentary Labour Party," Sir Keir said.

"Jeremy Corbyn's actions in response to the EHRC report undermined and set back our work in restoring trust and confidence in the Labour Party's ability to tackle antisemitism.

More from Jeremy Corbyn

"In those circumstances, I have taken the decision not to restore the whip to Jeremy Corbyn. I will keep this situation under review."

The EHRC's report was critical of the party's handling of antisemitism complaints under Mr Corbyn's leadership.

But, immediately after the report's publication last month, Mr Corbyn claimed "the scale of the problem" of Labour antisemitism allegations was "dramatically overstated for political reasons by our opponents".

He also said he did not accept all of the EHRC report's findings in comments that prompted his suspension.

Mr Corbyn subsequently sought to clarify his remarks and a five-member disciplinary panel of Labour's National Executive Committee decided that he should be reinstated on Tuesday.

But Sir Keir faced pressure from angry MPs not to allow Mr Corbyn back into the parliamentary party.

Senior Labour MP Dame Margaret Hodge had posted on Twitter on Tuesday: "I simply cannot comprehend why it is acceptable for Corbyn to be a Labour MP if he thinks antisemitism is exaggerated and a political attack, refuses to apologise, never takes responsibility for his actions & rejects the findings of the EHRC report. Ridiculous."

Dame Margaret said on Wednesday that it was the "right decision" to continue to withhold the Labour whip from Mr Corbyn.

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29 October - Corbyn responds to Labour suspension

Sir Keir's statement on Wednesday came less than an hour before he was due to appear in the House of Commons for Prime Minister's Questions.

Fiona Sharpe, spokesperson for the Labour Against Antisemitism group, said: "The decision to continue to withhold the whip from Jeremy Corbyn is a welcome gesture.

"However, it must not be used to obscure the disgraceful events of the last 24 hours or the calamity of institutional antisemitism in the Labour Party.

"Having announced that his leadership signalled new management of the Labour Party, Keir Starmer's authority has been completely undermined by the lifting of Mr Corbyn's suspension yesterday.

"Less than three weeks on from the publication of the damning EHRC report into anti-Jewish racism in the Labour Party, the Jewish community has again been ignored and failed.

"Until an independent complaints process is introduced, and all historical cases of antisemitism from 2015 onwards are reviewed in full, the Labour Party will not be a safe space for British Jews."

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2020-11-18 11:48:45Z
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PMQs LIVE: Boris slaps down Starmer in furious devolution row 'Do you want to destroy UK?' - Daily Express

In a Commons first, the Prime Minister took part in the session via video link after being forced to self-isolate following an encounter with Tory MP Lee Anderson, who later tested positive for COVID-19. In the chamber, Sir Keir questioned the Prime Minister’s comments this week where he branded the devolved admiration in Scotland a “disaster”.

Sir Keir described the creation of the Scottish parliament in 1999 as “one of the proudest achievements of the last Labour government”.

The Prime Minister then condemned the record of the SNP on domestic policy and then turned the table onto Sir Keir and accused Labour of trying to break up the union.

He said: “I think what has unquestionably been a disaster is the way in which the Scottish National Party have taken and used devolution as means not to improve the lives of their constituents, not to address their health concerns, not to improve education in Scotland, but constantly - and I know this is actually a point of view that is shared by [Starmer] - but constantly to campaign for the break-up of our country.

READ MORE: Brexit LIVE: Boris promises to 'not give in’ – last minute Macron plot

Boris Johnson Keir Starmer

PMQs live: Boris Johnson faces Keir Starmer (Image: BBC)

Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson is self-isolating for 14 days (Image: Number10 )

"To turn devolution, otherwise a sound policy for which I myself personally benefited when I was running London - but turn devolution into a mission to break up the UK.

"That, in my view, would be a disaster."

In a second exchange, Mr Johnson then pointed the finger towards former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair for the rise of the SNP after Sir Keir branded the Prime Minister a “threat” to the future of the Union.

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Keir Starmer

PMQs Live: Keir Starmer scrutinises the Government (Image: GETTY)

Keir Starmer said: “The single biggest threat to the future of the United Kingdom is the Prime Minister every time he opens his mouth".

Mr Johnson replied: "It is Tony Blair himself, the former Labour leader, who has conceded that he did not foresee the rise of a separatist party in Scotland, he did not foresee the collapse of Scottish Labour."

Follow Express.co.uk for live PMQs updates from 12pm: 

Sir Lindsey Hoyle

Sir Lindsey Hoyle approved the virtual session (Image: PA)

12.38pm update: Scottish whisky could be saved from shackles of US-EU trade deal

The Prime Minister has hinted that the tariffs currently applied on Scottish whisky by the US as part of a trade deal agreed with the EU could disappear under a new agreement.

The US has placed tariffs on EU manufacturers as part of a trade dispute.

With the UK still trading the the US on EU terms, it has severely impacted Scottish whisky manufactures.

However, responding to a question from a Tory MP, the Prime Minister has said Liz Truss is working hard to ensure the tariffs do not remain in a UK-US trade deal outside of the EU. 

12.33pm update: PM hints at cutting 14 day isolation rule

Boris Johnson said the Government is "working very fast" to see if it can replace the current quarantine arrangements for every category of self-isolation, after Conservative chair of the 1922 Committee Sir Graham Brady highlighted the impact on the aviation industry.

12.30pm update: Disgraced MP Margaret Farrier asks a question

Margaret Farrier, who was booted out of the SNP last month for breaking coronavirus rules when she travelled from Westminster to Scotland, has made a contribution to PMQs.

However, she has not attended in person, instead giving a question via an audio only link.

She has previously already returned to the chamber following the outrage of her breaking isolation rules.

She has refused to resign as an MP - asking a question at PMQs it appears that remains her plan.

12.27pm update: Boris says Britain will bounce back from coronavirus crisis

Labour MP James Murray has demanded an explanation to from the Prime Minister as to why the UK has seen more coronavirus deaths than many other countries and seen the deepest recession of any of member of the G20.

Not entertaining the question, the Prime Minister hits back that the pandemic has hit every country hard but he is confident the UK will bounce back.

Mr Johnson said: “A global pandemic and one in which the UK has, as he rightly says, been badly affected and we mourn every life that has been lost, and of course we are supporting businesses.

"I've got absolutely no doubt that we will get through this strongly by next spring as our scientific advisers and the medical officers have said.”

Ian Blackford

Ian Blackford described the Prime Minister and the Westminster Parliament as a 'disaster' (Image: BBC)

12.24pm update: Speaker Lindsay Hoyle cuts of Boris Johnson

After a number of frosty exchanges between the Speaker of the Commons and the Prime Minister in the House of Commons today, Lindsay Hoyle appears to have lost his patience.

Making use of having Boris Johnson appearing virtually at PMQs, the Speaker has just cut off the Prime Minister half way through his answer to a question from Ian Blackford.

He felt the Prime Minister was taking too long to answer.

12.22pm update: Boris accuses SNP of "surrender" to Brussels

The Prime Minister has said the UK is "bigger, better and more important than what we can do as individual nations and regions".

The Conservative leader has launched a full throttle rebuttal to Mr Blackford and the SNP's independence argument.

He adds the SNP want to hand power back to Brussels, something he describes as "surrender".

12.20pm update: Boris Johnson attacks SNP for policy failures

Ian Blackford has described the Prime Minister and the Westminster Parliament as a "disaster", listing off his perceived failures of Whitehall while lauding the successes of Holyrood.

However, Mr Johnson has hit back, saying the SNP's attempts to break up the UK are the real disaster and he should "focus on the real priorities of the people of Scotland on educations, health and tackling crime".

12.18pm update: PM slams Starmer over financial support – ‘We've given £13.5 billion’

The Prime Minister has said the Government has provided more the £13bn to the self-employed as Keir Starmer outlines criticism over financial support to encourage people to self-isolate.

The Labour leader said: "As far as the £500 scheme is concerned, only one in eight workers qualifies for that scheme.

“The PM always does this talking about the number of people he's helping but ignoring the huge numbers falling through the gap.

"It's estimated that only about 11% of people self-isolate when they're asked to do so. 11 percent, that isn't because they don't want to, it's because many don't feel that they can afford to... We need to make easier and affordable for people to do so."

Mr Johnson said: "We continue to encourage people to do the right thing. It does break the chain of transmission of the disease ... We've given £13.5 billion so far in support for self-employed people, uplifted Universal Credit."

Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson took aim at Tony Blair during PMQs (Image: BBC)

12.17pm update: Boris says government moved ‘heaven and Earth’ over PPE

Boris Johnson added the Government moved “heaven and earth” to get PPE into the country amid criticism over the spending of taxpayers money during the crisis.

12.16pm update: Boris lashes out at Starmer's 'hindsight' criticism

Boris Johnson has erupted in anger at Keir Starmer for attacking him on the Government's PPE contracts. The labour leader accused the Tories of giving contracts for PPE supply to close friends and associates rather than going through the appropriate channels.

However, the Prime Minister has said he will refuse to apologise for doing what he can do get protecting equipment to the front line as quickly as possible.

12.15pm update: PM lashes out at Tony Blair over independence row

Boris Johnson has pointed the finger towards former Labour Prime Minister Tony Blair for the rise of the SNP after Keir Starmer branded the Prime Minister a “threat” to the future of the Union.

Keir Starmer said: “The single biggest threat to the future of the United Kingdom is the Prime Minister every time he opens his mouth".

Mr Johnson replied: "It is Tony Blair himself, the former Labour leader, who has conceded that he did not foresee the rise of a separatist party in Scotland, he did not foresee the collapse of Scottish Labour."

Keir Starmer

Keir Starmer questions Prime Minister over devolution remarks (Image: PA)

12.12pm update: PM hits out at Starmer over devolution

Boris Johnson has defended his comments over devolution being a “disaster” and has claimed Labour supports the SNP’s plans for independence.

Keir Starmer asked Mr Johnson why he said Scottish devolution was "a disaster".

Keir Starmer said: "Devolution in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland is one of the proudest achievements of the last Labour government. Until now, whatever our disagreements, there has been a very broad consensus about devolution.

"So why did the Prime Minister tell his MPs this week that Scottish devolution is, in his words, a disaster?"

Mr Johnson replied: "I think what has unquestionably been a disaster is the way in which the Scottish National Party have taken and used devolution as means not to improve the lives of their constituents, not to address their health concerns, not to improve education in Scotland, but constantly - and I know this is actually a point of view that is shared by [Starmer] - but constantly to campaign for the break-up of our country.

"To turn devolution, otherwise a sound policy for which I myself personally benefited when I was running London - but turn devolution into a mission to break up the UK.

"That, in my view, would be a disaster."

12.10pm update: Starmer asks the Prime Minister to thank Labour

Keir Starmer has told the Prime minister he should be thanked for helping the Government pass its latest lockdown measures, accusing Tory MPs of rebelling.

He adds that Conservative MPs are plotting behind Boris Johnson's back to sabotage any future measures.

Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson appears virtually in the Commons (Image: BBC)

12.05: Boris quizzed on foreign aid budget

Labour’s Anna McMorrin has questioned the Government over its commitment to foreign aid as outlined in the election 2019 Tory manifesto.

The Prime Minister said the UK can be proud of its aid record.

12.02pm update: Boris updates House on coronavirus leak inquiry

In his opening remarks, Mr Johnson addressed the House on the inquiry into the leak of lockdown information. 

He said: "I take this matter extremely seriously and I commit to returning to update the House in due course.”

12.00pm update: PMQs begins in the House of Commons

Boris Johnson has connected to the Commons for the first virtual PMQs. 

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2020-11-18 11:24:00Z
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Covid spending: Watchdog finds MPs' contacts were given priority - BBC News

Doctor putting on FFP2 mask in emergency room of a hospital
Getty Images

Companies recommended by MPs, peers and ministers' offices were given priority as the government raced to obtain Personal Protective Equipment, the National Audit Office found.

Over half of the £18bn spent on pandemic-related contracts was awarded without competitive tender, it said.

The spending watchdog said the government was not transparent about suppliers and services.

It also found there was inadequate explanation of key spending decisions.

The findings are part of an NAO investigation into government procurement during the COVID-19 pandemic.

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The watchdog found not enough was done to address potential conflicts of interest by ministers and other government officials.

It found more than 8,600 coronavirus contracts had been awarded by 31 July, ranging in value from less than £100 to £410m.

Of these, £10.5bn-worth were awarded directly without a competitive tender process.

Personal protective equipment (PPE) accounted for 80% of the number of contracts awarded.

Contracts breakdown

The report comes after the BBC revealed on Tuesday that a Spanish businessman who acted as a go-between to secure protective garments for NHS staff in the pandemic was paid $28m (£21m) in UK taxpayer cash.

Gabriel Gonzalez Andersson had been in line for a further $20m of UK public funds, documents filed in a US court reveal.

He worked with Florida-based jewellery designer Michael Saiger who set up a business at the start of the pandemic to supply PPE to governments.

Michael Saiger
Getty Images

Meg Hillier, chairwoman of the Commons Public Accounts Committee, called for ministers to "come clean" and publish all information about the contracts awarded.

The government acknowledged it had procured services with "extreme urgency" during the crisis but it said it had "robust processes in place".

When asked about the $28m paid to the Spanish businessman, Business Secretary Alok Sharma told Radio 4's Today programme: "The Department of Health did look at that contract at the time."

"At the time there was huge pressure to get PPE into the system and that's what we did," he added.

'Tip of the iceberg'

NAO head Gareth Davies said it remained "essential that decisions are properly documented and made transparent if government is to maintain public trust".

Ms Hillier, a Labour MP, said the failings uncovered may be the "tip of the iceberg".

"The government overlooked a serious conflict of interest, paid consultants for months before giving them contracts and purchased masks it knew weren't up to scratch.

"It's bad enough that it set up a 'high-priority lane' to fast-track companies with the right connections.

"But the failure to track how half the companies had ended up on it made it impossible to ensure proper safeguards were in place."

Declared interests

The NAO looked in detail at 20 contracts including:

  • A deal with research firm Public First, whose owners had "previously advised or worked with" Cabinet minister Michael Gove.
  • Artificial intelligence company Faculty, which was awarded contracts worth almost £3m. Cabinet Office minister Lord Agnew owned a £90,000 stake in the firm but has since relinquished it.
  • Ayanda Capital supplied 50 million masks that could not be used for their original purpose at a cost of £155m. The deal was brokered by a businessman who was an adviser to the government's Board of Trade at the time.
  • PestFix, a pest control company, was given contracts worth £350m, which included delivery of 600,000 masks which cannot be used for their original purpose.

The NAO concluded that in cases of potential conflicts of interest involving ministers, all had properly declared their interests and it found "no evidence of their involvement in procurement decisions or contract management".

The spending watchdog acknowledged the pandemic required acting with "extreme urgency" and the Public Contracts Regulations allowed an emergency response, including awarding deals directly without a formal competition.

Cabinet Office Minister Julia Lopez said: "We have been dealing with an unprecedented global pandemic that has posed the biggest challenge to the UK in a generation.

"As this report rightly recognises, we needed to procure contracts with extreme urgency to secure the vital supplies required to protect frontline NHS workers and the public and we make no apology for that.

"We have robust processes in place for spending public money to ensure we get critical equipment to where it needs to go as quickly as possible, whilst also ensuring value for money for the taxpayer.

"It is important to maintain the public's confidence in how we manage their money, and we welcome the NAO's scrutiny of our processes and recommendations on how they can be improved."

Tom Sasse from the think tank the Institute for Government, told Radio 5 Live's Wake Up To Money that procurement processes exist to make sure taxpayers get the best value for money.

"The NAO point to some pretty serious problems with how public procurement has happened during the pandemic," he said.

"We've also seen a big story in August around £150m that went on PPE that couldn't be used. So there are questions about how this process is working."

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2020-11-18 10:48:00Z
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Jeremy Corbyn will not return as Labour MP, says Sir Keir Starmer - BBC News

Jeremy Corbyn
Reuters

Jeremy Corbyn will not sit as a Labour Party MP in the Commons, Sir Keir Starmer says.

The former leader was reinstated as a member of the party on Tuesday, having been suspended over his response to a human rights watchdog report on anti-Semitism in Labour ranks.

But his successor said his remarks had "undermined... our work in restoring trust" with the Jewish community.

Sir Keir said he would keep his decision under review.

The Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) published a report last month, saying Labour had broken the law over its handling of anti-Jewish racism complaints by party members during Mr Corbyn's tenure.

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Sir Keir Starmer said those who think the issue had been "exaggerated" should "be nowhere near the Labour Party".

But later, Mr Corbyn released a statement, saying the scale of anti-Semitism had been "dramatically overstated" by his opponents, and he was suspended by the party.

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2020-11-18 11:18:00Z
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COVID-19: Still too early to know if households can mix over Christmas, minister says - Sky News

A government minister has told Sky News it is too early to plan for Christmas, amid reports households could be allowed to mix for a number days over the festive period.

Business Secretary Alok Sharma refused to be drawn on COVID-19 rules for the looming festive season when asked about it by Kay Burley on Wednesday.

He said: "Christmas is of course going to happen come what may. I would love to have members of my family round, but we just have to wait and see where we're at."

A Downing Street source told Sky News that "no decisions have been made".

Live updates on coronavirus from UK and around world

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'We want families to come together at Christmas'

His comments come after The Sun reported that ministers are considering letting families choose a small number of households they can socialise indoors with for five days, starting on Christmas Eve.

But it would mean no household mixing when national lockdown ends in England on 2 December, with all parts of the country under at least Tier 2 restrictions, according to The Daily Telegraph.

More from Covid-19

Earlier this week, government adviser Dr Susan Hopkins suggested England may have to toughen its tier system when national restrictions come to an end.

The epidemiologist and interim chief medical officer of Test and Trace said that Tier 1 rules "had very little effect" in keeping coronavirus cases down.

The key difference between Tier 1 and the higher tiers was that household mixing was allowed indoors, as long as in groups of six people or less.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has repeatedly stated his intention for England to return to its previous localised tier system once the national lockdown ends, but the measures will likely differ somewhat from before.

Image: Shops and other businesses await news on when they will be able to reopen

While Downing Street will decide on an end-of-lockdown package for England at the end of this month, what happens over the festive period for all four UK nations is still under consideration.

People in Wales have been strongly advised not to mix with people they don't live with indoors since its "circuit break" lockdown came to an end, and the same will be for when Northern Ireland's finishes later this week.

In Scotland, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon announced on Tuesday that 11 local authority areas will be put under the country's toughest Level 4 measures from Friday until 11 December.

The "short and sharp" restrictions are "specifically intended to have an impact in advance of Christmas and the most challenging winter period", she said.

Today, her deputy John Swinney told Kay Burley the current rules will "enable us all to be able to proceed to enjoy and appreciate the connections we all want to have with family around Christmas time".

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Hancock wants a 'portfolio' of vaccines

Reports that the first round of Pfizer/BioNTech vaccines could be rolled out by mid-December had sparked hopes of a more "normal" Christmas, but the festive period remains uncertain.

Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick told Sky News on Tuesday that parliament will vote on what system is imposed in England beyond 2 December.

He said it is his "hope and expectation" that England will "move back into the tiered system", but he did not reveal any plans for Christmas.

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2020-11-18 09:03:16Z
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Driving FARCE: Fury at petrol and diesel car ban in just 10 YEARS 'Makes NO sense!' - Express

The changes mean that sales of brand new petrol and diesel cars will no longer be allowed after 2030 in a bid to phase out polluting models to meet a 2050 zero-carbon target. The move will force drivers to switch to hybrid and electric models which will put major pressure on the green-friendly industry.

Howard Cox, spokersperson for Fair Fuel UK attacked the new proposals, addding that drivers would be "devastated" that their cars would "become worthless" within just years. 

He warned that the "death sentence" on many cars was a political betrayal of drivers and would seriously harm those on lower incomes. 

He said: "Drivers across the UK will be devastated their valued car, van or truck, at just the stroke of a Ministers pen, will nosedive in value and become worthless.

"The anti-driver policies pouring out of the Government on a daily basis were not in the Tory’s election manifesto.

"Putting a 9-year death sentence on diesel and petrol vehicles is tantamount to a political and economic betrayal of UK’s 37m voters who drive.

"Especially on those on low incomes and businesses surviving on low margins."

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Currently just one percent of UK cars run on electric power with sales still just a shadow of the petrol and diesel market. 

Latest figures from the Society of Motor Manufacturers (SMMT) revaled that sales of fully electric cars accounted for just 5.5 percent of the total market sales this year. 

A total of 76,000 electric cars were sold compared to almost 800,000 petrol models and 230,000 diesel cars. 

This is in a year which has proven difficult for the car industry with sales of petrol models down 39 percent on 2019. 

RAC head of roads policy Nicholas Lyes has warned that the car industry has an “enormous task” on its hands to ensure the switch is a success.

They warned that running an electric car is “very different" to a petrol or diesel car with drivers set to face a “big learning curve”.

He added: “With the Government formally bringing forward the date for banning the sale of new petrol and diesel cars to 2030, the car industry and those responsible for charging infrastructure now have an enormous task on their hands.

“By investing heavily in the national charging network, battery production and providing incentives will help.

“The concession for hybrids will be a welcome stepping stone for fleets and individuals before going fully electric.

“One of the biggest challenges will be for carmakers to change more than 100 years of combustion engine production to cater for an electric future within a decade.”

In the new £12billion green budget, it is expected that £1.3billion will help to accelerate the roll-out of new charging infrastructure across the UK. 

Surveys have previously shown that concerns over charging an electric car was one of the biggest barriers to take-up and will need to be addressed before the end of the decade. 

It is expected that £582million wlll help drivers to afford zero or ultra-low emission cars with almost £500million spent on producing batteries for electric models. 

Amanda Stretton, Transport editor at Centrica said: We welcome the Government bringing forward the ban to 2030 to encourage electric vehicle uptake, it’s something we’ve been asking for a while.

"However, it’s important that we now address the supporting structures needed to deliver the ban."

Fiona Howarth, CEO of Octopus Electric Vehicles says she supports the new measures which she described a "landmark moment" for British motoring. 

She added that drivers were able to make the switch to electric cars immediately to enjoy "thousands" of pounds worth of extra savings on vehicle running costs. 

She said: "Drivers don’t have to wait until 2030 to go electric – the cars, the charge points, and the affordable prices are here today.

"By switching now, drivers can save thousands in fuel, tax and maintenance costs, and make the most of generous government incentives that won’t be around forever. 

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2020-11-18 08:06:00Z
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