Skip to main content

boris johnson has sought to extend covid's 'draconian' rules until next march in case of a winter surge in cases - setting up a new battle with tory backbenchers

Boris Johnson is planning to renew Covid laws for another six months to cover a possible winter surge, setting himself up for a new showdown with lockdown-sceptic Tory backbenchers.

The Coronavirus Act provisions have to be renewed every six months and Downing Street wants a vote on carrying them through to March after Parliament returns next week.

But such a move is likely to lead to fury on Mr Johnson's backbenches, where many MPs want to see the economic recovery given priority.

Some 35 voted against extending the rules in March and given the vaccination programme has progressed significantly since then, it paves the way for a wider rebellion when it comes to a Commons vote later this month.

In march, then health secretary Matt Hancock said it would be 'preferable' if the laws were not renewed again. 

Tory rebel Marcus Fysh, who voted against the act in March, told MailOnline: 'I think this is a very bad, unnecessary move and I and many colleagues will be opposing.'

It came as an exclusive new poll for MailOnline revealed half of Brits believe it is likely Boris Johnson will impose another coronavirus lockdown before the end of this year.   

The Coronavirus Act provisions have to be renewed every six months and Downing Street wants a vote on carrying them through to March after Parliament returns next week.

The Coronavirus Act provisions have to be renewed every six months and Downing Street wants a vote on carrying them through to March after Parliament returns next week.

Mark Harper, the Conservative MP and chairman of the Covid Recovery Group, told the Financial Times the law contained 'the most draconian detention powers in modern British legal history' and should be allowed to lapse.

Mark Harper, the Conservative MP and chairman of the Covid Recovery Group, told the Financial Times the law contained 'the most draconian detention powers in modern British legal history' and should be allowed to lapse.

Tory rebel Marcus Fysh, who voted against the act in March, told MailOnline: 'I think this is a very bad, unnecessary move and I and many colleagues will be opposing.'

Tory rebel Marcus Fysh, who voted against the act in March, told MailOnline: 'I think this is a very bad, unnecessary move and I and many colleagues will be opposing.'

Boris Johnson sends FOUR MILLION Pfizer doses to Australia 

Britain has bailed out Australia by giving the country 4million doses of Pfizer's Covid vaccine in a landmark deal.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison said the doses were 'on the tarmac' ready to leave London and would be distributed in the next few weeks, doubling the amount of vaccines arriving in the country this month.

It has struggled with its vaccine rollout and is scrambling to secure extra jabs from allies around the world after only initially ordering 10million doses in November last year.

Half a million Pfizer doses yesterday landed in Australia after it secured a swap deal with Singapore.

Australia has one of the slowest vaccine rollouts among wealthy countries, with just 36.4 per cent of people over the age of 16 fully vaccinated, according to the Australian Immunisation Register.

The country’s two most populous states — Victoria and New South Wales — are in lockdown and counting on getting their residents vaccinated to contain the outbreak of the Delta variant, which began in Sydney in mid-June.

Face masks are mandatory in all public indoor places — including shops, offices, and common areas of apartment buildings — and outdoors unless exercising.

Those over 18 who do not wear or carry a face mask can be slapped with a $500 (£268) fine, with $80 (£43) and $40 (£21) penalties in place for younger age groups.

 

The analysis by Redfield & Wilton Strategies found 50 per cent of people believe another national shutdown could be on the cards in 2021. Just a quarter, 25 per cent, believe another lockdown is unlikely. 

Meanwhile, a majority of Brits, some 60 per cent, would support Mr Johnson taking such action if coronavirus cases skyrocket. 

Mark Harper, the Conservative MP and chairman of the Covid Recovery Group, told the Financial Times the law contained 'the most draconian detention powers in modern British legal history' and should be allowed to lapse. 

They have to be voted upon every six months to remain in force and automatically lapse in March after two years.

'Our vaccine rollout has been a huge success. We have seen a dramatic and welcome fall in people suffering from serious disease and death from Covid as a result,' he said.  

'We are going to have to learn to live with this virus, and retaining sweeping powers of detention in the Coronavirus Act is not consistent with this. What justification can there be for extending these measures?'

A government spokesman said: 'We will allow temporary powers in the Coronavirus Act to expire wherever possible, as we have at previous review points.

'However, it would be irresponsible to allow all temporary provisions to expire. Doing so would remove the government's ability to protect renters from eviction, give sick pay to those self-isolating from day one, and direct schools to reopen where needed, for example. 

'The British public would expect us to retain these powers in case they are needed through the winter.'

The Prime Minister said he wanted the nation's exit from the last lockdown to be 'irreversible'. 

Any attempt to reimpose Covid-19 curbs would spark a furious backlash from backbench Tory MPs. 

In March, the Commons voted 484 to 76, a majority of 408, in favour of keeping the Covid powers in place into the autumn, despite Matt Hancock admitting he cannot rule out trying to renew them again.

Kicking off the debate in the Commons the then health secretary was unable to guarantee it was the last time MPs would be asked to roll-over the powers, which are largely unprecedented in peace time

Covid cases in Scotland soared 170% in 14 days after school return 

Scotland's Covid cases soared by more than two and a half times in the fortnight after schools went back from the summer break, official figures showed today — in a clear warning sign to the rest of the country.

The Office for National Statistics' weekly surveillance report estimated 69,500 Scots, or one in 75 people, were infected with the virus on any given day in the week to August 27, up 170 per cent.

In England infections have plateaued but remain stubbornly high with the ONS estimating 766,100 people had Covid last week or one in 70, barely a change from the previous seven-day spell.

Experts fear infections could spiral as children returned to classrooms in England, Wales and Northern Ireland this week.

The UK's vaccine advisory panel is being lobbied hard by ministers, politicians and some scientists to give the green light to rolling out the vaccine to 12 to 15-year-olds but it has so far resisted the calls.

Britain is becoming an international outlier with France, the US, Canada, Spain, Italy and the Netherlands all already administering jabs to over-12s. Last night Norway became the latest country to OK the move. 

Boris Johnson suffered a significant revolt on his own backbenches as 35 Conservative MPs voted against the renewal of the Coronavirus Act while a further 20 chose to abstain. Some 21 Labour MPs also voted against.

Those who opted to vote against include former cabinet ministers David Davis and Esther McVey.

The Tory rebels had questioned why the laws needed to be kept in place for so long with lockdown scheduled to end in the summer.

The rebellion failed after the vast majority of Labour MPs sided with the Government to support the law. 

But a swathe of the Labour left also opposed it against the party whip.

Former leader Jeremy Corbyn said: 'The Tories can't be trusted with our civil liberties, and are still not taking the action needed for public health, jobs and livelihoods.'

Zarah Sultana, Labour MP for Coventry South, also voted against the act's renewal, saying: 'We need an approach that protects everyone, leaving no-one behind and safeguarding our liberties.

'None of us are safe until we are all safe.'

The MailOnline poll of 1,500 people, conducted from September 1-2, found that 16 per cent of people believe another lockdown this year is very likely.  

Some 34 per cent believe a shutdown is likely while 18 per cent believe it is unlikely and seven per cent believe it is very unlikely. 

The numbers suggest that a majority of the nation would support the Prime Minister making such a move if the scale of infections demanded it. 

Some 26 per cent of respondents said they would strongly support another lockdown if coronavirus cases increased to 'significant levels'. 

Just over a third, 34 per cent, said they would support the step while 12 per cent would oppose it and 11 per cent would strongly oppose it.

Jeremy Hunt today urged ministers to 'get on' with a mass booster Covid vaccine programme

Jeremy Hunt today urged ministers to 'get on' with a mass booster Covid vaccine programme

Jeremy Hunt today urged ministers to 'get on' with a mass booster Covid vaccine programme and not wait on their advisors to sign off on the plans.

The former health secretary said the situation in Covid-ravaged Israel should serve as a warning sign that even highly-immunised countries are vulnerable to another wave. 

Britain's Covid vaccine advisory panel has hinted that it will give the go-ahead to boosters for 'millions' but is yet to formally make the recommendation or decide who will be eligible.  

Boris Johnson last night appeared to jump the gun and get hopes up as he told elderly Britons and patients with underlying conditions to prepare for their third doses this autumn. 

It may be weeks before the final details of the booster programme are set out by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation . 

At the moment only 500,000 people with very weak immune systems are being invited to come forward for a third Covid vaccine. 

But Mr Hunt urged the Government to press ahead with a wider programme and not wait a moment longer, adding: 'In a pandemic I think even a few days can make a big difference.'

He told the BBC Radio 4 Today programme: 'If you look at what's happened in Israel, they have a higher vaccination rate even than us – 80 per cent of adults – and they have found a Delta variant does lead to increased hospital admissions, but two weeks after they introduced boosters those admissions started to go down again.

'I understand why scientists are taking their time but I think in a pandemic politicians can also read the rooms and see the direction of travel.   

Israel is recording the highest infection rate in the world and deaths and hospitalisations have risen sharply in the past month - despite 80 per cent of adults being vaccinated with two doses. 

The country has been offering booster jabs to people over the age of 60 since July, and the scheme has helped to curb rising hospital admissions. 

It came as official data showed Scotland's weekly Covid cases have nearly trebled in the fortnight after schools went back after summer there

There are fears the rest of the UK will be hit with a similar bang in cases now that classes are resuming this week. 

While Israel is seeing record case numbers, the jab is still offering protection against severe illness with Covid deaths running at about half of the level of the second wave, even though fatalities have been rising sharply since last month. There is now growing pressure for Britain to roll out a booster vaccine programme like Israel is doing

Britain's independent vaccine advisory panel, said it was waiting on more evidence that these people would benefit from another dose and claimed that the 'vast majority' of Britons still had high protection — despite the UK's cases trending in the same direction as Israel's

Israel has been offering booster jabs to people over the age of 60 since July and has managed to curb rising hospital admissions in the age group as a result. Professor Eran Segal, a mathematician at the country's Weizmann Institute, tweeted today that hospitalisations had started to fall just two weeks after the top-up campaign started. This graph shows how Covid hospitalisations have started to level off in Israel just two weeks after its booster programme began. When the drive was started hospitalisations were doubling every week. Predictions suggested this would continue (green line). But just two weeks after the jabs were given out actual hospitalisations have slowed (blue line)

Israel has been offering booster jabs to people over the age of 60 since July and has managed to curb rising hospital admissions in the age group as a result. Professor Eran Segal, a mathematician at the country's Weizmann Institute, tweeted today that hospitalisations had started to fall just two weeks after the top-up campaign started. This graph shows how Covid hospitalisations have started to level off in Israel just two weeks after its booster programme began. When the drive was started hospitalisations were doubling every week. Predictions suggested this would continue (green line). But just two weeks after the jabs were given out actual hospitalisations have slowed (blue line)

'So I think we should just get on, not wait for that advice, get on with a booster programme.'

The NHS had originally been instructed to start giving boosters to up to 32million people from Monday, but ministers are still waiting for the JCVI to sign off the programme.

Mr Johnson said last night: ‘The priorities now are the older generation going into autumn and winter, and we have always said there would be a booster programme in September – in this month – and we are going ahead with that.

‘What I would also say is 16 to 17-year-olds are eligible, they have been approved, they are a very important group for potential transmission ... It is very encouraging to see more and more 16 to 17-year-olds taking the jab, but we need to go faster with those.’

He added: ‘I would just urge everybody who hasn’t yet had a jab to go and get one.’

Members of the JCVI said ‘many millions’ are likely to get third jabs, including the elderly, clinically vulnerable and healthcare workers.

But they are yet to decide which age groups should be included and whether patients should ‘mix and match’ vaccines, for example receive a Pfizer jab after two first doses of AstraZeneca.

The JCVI is facing mounting political pressure to speed up its decision-making. MPs and scientists have warned there is no time to lose in boosting the immunity of the vulnerable and elderly with the threat of a resurgence of coronavirus in the winter.

They are pointing to the situation in Israel, where the case rate is currently the highest in the world, but where over-12s are being offered third doses – helping to curb hospital admissions.

However, the JCVI say they need to see initial findings from the Cov-Boost study, due next week.

The trial by University Hospital Southampton has looked at nearly 3,000 Britons to test their immune response to third doses.

Yesterday Professor Anthony Harnden, deputy chairman of the JCVI, said a decision might take weeks. ‘I think it’s highly likely that there will be a booster programme,’ he said. ‘It’s just the question of how we frame it.’

On Wednesday it was announced that third doses will be offered to half a million people with severely weakened immune systems, who were not sufficiently protected by two doses.

The decision was made separately to deliberations over boosters, which ‘top up’ someone’s immune response.

Yesterday Professor Peter Openshaw, a member of the New And Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group, said the JCVI should not wait too long to make a decision.

He said: ‘If we wait for everything to report before making a judgment, we may well be past the time when we should have been making a decision.’ 

Meanwhile, senior ministers are said to be increasingly embittered at the failure of Government experts to authorise the rollout of Covid vaccines to under-16s.

A Whitehall source said there was ‘palpable frustration’ among Government figures with the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation , which has so far not approved the jab.

Both Boris Johnson and Health Secretary Sajid Javid are said to be keen to get on with vaccinating secondary school children.

Ministers fear the new academic year will trigger a fresh wave of the virus in classrooms.

This means that without a jab, children could face more disruption to their education throughout autumn and winter.

France, Spain, Italy, the Netherlands and the US are among the nations now offering jabs to children aged 12 to 15. Norway yesterday followed suit.

UK medical regulators cleared the Pfizer jab for use on 12- to 15-year-olds in June, declaring it ‘safe and effective in this age group’.

The Moderna vaccine was also authorised last month.

Ministers had hoped to vaccinate children during the school holidays to prevent a repeat of the massive disruption seen in schools over the past 18 months.

However, with schools already going back this week and next, hundreds of thousands of pupils will be mixing for weeks before any rollout is approved by the JCVI – if it is approved at all.

Scotland's Covid cases soared by two and a half times after schools went back, official figures suggested today in a clear warning sign to the rest of the country.

Office for National Statistics weekly surveillance estimated 69,500 Scots or one in 75 people were infected with the virus on any given day in the week to August 27, up 170 per cent in a fortnight.

In England infections have plateaued but remain stubbornly high with the ONS estimating 766,100 people had Covid last week or one in 70, barely a change from the previous seven-day spell.

Experts fear these infections will start to spiral as children return to classrooms this week and next. There are concerns these will then spill over into older age groups, who are vulnerable to the virus.

Boris Johnson today sought to extend his Covid powers by another six months, in an attempt to clear the way for the country to be plunged into further restrictions and yet another lockdown this winter. 

Questions and Answers about the Government's booster roll out plans

So what has happened to the promised booster rollout?

It was announced this week that ‘third doses’ – technically not boosters – are to be offered to 500,000 people with severely suppressed immune systems, such as patients with HIV, or those on medication including chemotherapy.

It is because two doses are not enough to generate a strong antibody response.

Why are these different from booster jabs?

Third doses are part of the ‘primary immunisation schedule’ for the severely immunocompromised, given from eight weeks after the second dose.

In contrast, booster jabs are designed to extend waning protection in people who have successfully generated antibodies after two doses, and are given several months after jab two.

So why haven’t boosters been approved yet?

The Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation is waiting for more trial data from UK studies. They have not decided who needs a booster or whether people should get ‘mix and match’ doses – say a Pfizer shot after two intial AstraZeneca jabs.

Wasn’t the rollout supposed to start next week?

Yes, the NHS was hoping to begin the programme on Monday. Ministers still hope to start the programme this month to address fears over declining immunity.

What do we know about declining Covid immunity?

Research suggests immunity begins to decline about five to six months after vaccination or infection, falling faster in the elderly. Data shows the proportion of elderly Britons with antibodies has dropped since May.

So are boosters necessary?

Scientists are divided over whether healthy adults need boosters. But most agree that those with the weakest immune systems –including the elderly and people with other health conditions – will certainly benefit from a top-up dose at some point.

How will a booster programme work?

The NHS has made plans to offer boosters to up to 32million people, including all over-50s, from Monday. These would be delivered at existing vaccine centres, and patients could also get the flu jab at the same time – one shot in each arm.

What is happening in other countries?

Many European nations, including France, are offering boosters to the elderly and vulnerable. Israel, the US and Hungary are giving all adults a third dose. 

But the JCVI believes the UK is in a unique situation because it adopted a eight to 12-week gap between the first two doses, rather than four weeks. They think this means Britons have better immunity than other nations.

Popular posts from this blog

Study Abroad USA, College of Charleston, Popular Courses, Alumni

Thinking for Study Abroad USA. School of Charleston, the wonderful grounds is situated in the actual middle of a verifiable city - Charleston. Get snatched up by the wonderful and customary engineering, beautiful pathways, or look at the advanced steel and glass building which houses the School of Business. The grounds additionally gives students simple admittance to a few major tech organizations like Amazon's CreateSpace, Google, TwitPic, and so on. The school offers students nearby as well as off-grounds convenience going from completely outfitted home lobbies to memorable homes. It is prepared to offer different types of assistance and facilities like clubs, associations, sporting exercises, support administrations, etc. To put it plainly, the school grounds is rising with energy and there will never be a dull second for students at the College of Charleston. Concentrate on Abroad USA is improving and remunerating for your future. The energetic grounds likewise houses various

Best MBA Online Colleges in the USA

“Opportunities never open, instead we create them for us”. Beginning with this amazing saying, let’s unbox today’s knowledge. Love Business and marketing? Want to make a high-paid career in business administration? Well, if yes, then mate, we have got you something amazing to do!   We all imagine an effortless future with a cozy house and a laptop. Well, well! You can make this happen. Today, with this guide, we will be exploring some of the top-notch online MBA universities and institutes in the USA. Let’s get started! Why learn Online MBA from the USA? Access to More Options This online era has given a second chance to children who want to reflect on their careers while managing their hectic schedules. In this, the internet has played a very crucial in rejuvenating schools, institutes, and colleges to give the best education to students across the globe. Graduating with Less Debt Regular classes from high reputed institutes often charge heavy tuition fees. However onl

Sickening moment maskless 'Karen' COUGHS in the face of grocery store customer, then claims she doesn't have to wear a mask because she 'isn't sick'

A woman was captured on camera following a customer through a supermarket as she coughs on her after claiming she does not need a mask because she is not sick.  Video of the incident, which has garnered hundreds of thousands of views on Twitter alone, allegedly took place in a Su per Saver in Lincoln, Nebraska according to Twitter user @davenewworld_2. In it, an unidentified woman was captured dramatically coughing as she smiles saying 'Excuse me! I'm coming through' in the direction of the customer recording her. Scroll down for video An unidentified woman was captured dramatically coughing as she smiles saying 'Excuse me! I'm coming through' in the direction of a woman recording her A woman was captured on camera following a customer as she coughs on her in a supermarket without a mask on claiming she does not need one because she is not sick @chaiteabugz #karen #covid #karens #karensgonewild #karensalert #masks we were just wearing a mask at the store. ¿ o