211
PM Boris Johnson is moving to repeal in England any pandemic requirements that impinge on personal freedoms, such as self-isolating after a positive COVID test |
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s ‘living with COVID’ plan, scrapping coronavirus restrictions and cutting access to free tests, drew 11th-hour objections on Monday that it was premature and would leave the country vulnerable to new viral variants.
As Hong Kong builds isolation units and Europe retains social distancing and vaccine rules, Johnson is moving to repeal in England any pandemic requirements that impinge on personal freedoms, such as self-isolating after a positive COVID test.
But the plan, geared to help deflect discontent over his scandal-ridden leadership among lawmakers in his Conservative Party that has threatened his grip on power, ran into difficulty just hours before he was due to launch it.
A cabinet meeting of top ministers was delayed just before it was supposed to sign off on the new strategy, and the leaders of Scotland and Wales – both sharply critical of Johnson’s rule – said the policy would make it harder to tackle new coronavirus variants in a timely way, heightening risks to the public.
“Testing has played a pivotal role in breaking chains of transmission and as a surveillance tool helping us detect and respond to emerging variants,” Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford said on Twitter. “It’s essential that this continues.”
Just a day after Queen Elizabeth tested positive for the virus, Johnson was expected to drop legal requirements to self-isolate and replace them with voluntary guidance, bringing COVID-19 into line with how Britain treats most other infections.
The government is also expected to reduce access to free tests, a move that has been blasted by scientists after mass testing helped Britain to spot new variants during the pandemic.
That decision seemed to have a sparked a row between the health and finance ministers before a cabinet meeting over what level of testing should continue and how it should be financed.
A spokesman for Johnson declined to comment on reports of a dispute, saying: “(The cabinet meeting) was postponed until this afternoon so that the prime minister could have both a security briefing and to have further meetings to finalise the plan on living with COVID.”
‘INEXCUSABLE NEGLIGENCE’
Johnson has said he does not want people to “throw caution to the wind” but the vaccine rollout means the government wants to move from state mandation to encouraging personal responsibility, a big priority for Conservative lawmakers. Among adults, 81% have received COVID booster shots in England.
“Today will mark a moment of pride after one of the most difficult periods in our country’s history as we begin to learn to live with COVID,” Johnson is expected to say.
It is not yet clear if the new rules will apply to England or all of the United Kingdom, but the first minister of Scotland also made clear that she did not agree with the plan.
“To allow significant dismantling of the testing infrastructure built up in last 2 years would be inexcusable negligence given ongoing risks,” First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said on Twitter.
The devolved administrations of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have set their own COVID-19 restrictions.
Medical leaders have urged Johnson not to be “gung-ho” with the nation’s health, and government advisers have said that dropping restrictions could lead to rapid epidemic growth.
Scientists say it is unclear how quickly human behaviour will change however, after many people continued to avoid busy areas and wear masks even after previous rules were eased.
So far the government has sought to keep the economy open by combining mass rapid testing with a legal requirement for five days of self-isolation, an approach that enabled the country to navigate the highly transmissible Omicron variant
REUTERS