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    Will the UK go into another lockdown in January?

    The emergence of the Omicron variant is causing concern around the world, not least because it is thought to be highly transmissible and because the 32 mutations of its spike protein suggest it might be able to resist current vaccines.The UK has recorded 246,780 confirmed cases of the strain so far and at least 75 deaths, prompting ongoing fears that more severe social restrictions could soon be imposed on the British public.Although many scientists believe the new variant is milder than previous mutations, it remains unclear how many of the record number of people infected will end up in hospital, severely ill or dying.Prior to Christmas, prime minister Boris Johnson said that no further restrictions would be introduced ahead of the holiday, explaining that “that people could go ahead with their plans”, a decision that allowed him to avoid a repeat of his notorious address of 19 December 2020, when he reluctantly imposed tough new measures at the last minute and dashed the festive hopes of millions.Since then, the UK has continued to experience extremely high levels of Covid infections across the festive period, with total daily cases in England rocketing to a pandemic high of 218,724 on 4 January, according to the UK Health Security Agency.But the government has so far stuck to its guns and refused to impose further Covid restrictions in England for now, with Mr Johnson insisting on Monday that the current “Plan B” restrictions in place remained the “right” course of action, adding: “The way forward for the country as a whole is to continue with the path that we’re on.“We’ll keep everything on the review course we keep all measures under review, but the mixture of things that we’re doing at the moment is I think, the right one.”That stance was supported by vaccines minister Maggie Throup the following morning, who told Sky News: “Plan B is working, as you can see from the number of hospitalisations – it’s far, far fewer than this time last year… It’s important that we follow the data.”The PM reiterated his hope that Britain would be able to “ride out” the assault from Omicron without further measures in a press conference from Downing Street on Tuesday evening, despite several NHS trusts reporting “critical incidents” of staff shortages. In Scotland, however, Nicola Sturgeon announced fresh restrictions on sporting events and large gatherings and cancelled Edinburgh’s annual Hogmanay street party prior to Christmas, having already asked Scots to keep household mixing to a minimum. Wales and Northern Ireland also imposed new curbs, closing nightclubs and limiting hospitality to the rule of six and returning to table service only. ‘Rule nothing out’In his video message from Downing Street on 21 December when he said the holiday season would be allowed to proceed unchecked, Mr Johnson said: “We can’t rule out any further measures after Christmas – and we’re going to keep a constant eye on the data, and we’ll do whatever it takes to protect public health.”He said ministers were monitoring the data “hour by hour” and that the arguments for taking further action were “very, very finely balanced”.“Unfortunately I must say to people that we will have to reserve the possibility of taking further action to protect the public, to protect public health, to protect our NHS,” he added. “We are looking at all kinds of things to keep Omicron under control and we will rule nothing out.”The prime minister is understood to have been waiting for more data on the variant to become available before he made a decision, a stance that saw him accused of “dithering” by scientists and his political opponents.By contrast, London mayor Sadiq Khan had been decisive when he declared a major incident over the extent of the outbreak in the capital on 18 December, while NHS England announced a return to its highest level of emergency preparedness, level four national incident, meaning that the health service’s response will be coordinated as a national effort, rather than led by individual trusts. Chief scientific officer Sir Patrick Vallance is said to have led the call for fresh measures to drive down infection rates and ease the pressure on the NHS, but these have so far been resisted by senior Cabinet ministers loath to further jeopardise the economy and constrain individual freedom without more data to justify it.Sir Patrick’s fellow advisers have been equally outspoken, with Professor Stephen Reicher, a member of the government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), warning that Omicron is “coming at us like an express train” and insisting that the government must give the public a “good, clear message” about how “serious the crisis is”.The prospect of introducing a two-week circuit-breaker lockdown has been mooted – and appears to be broadly popular with the public – with plans made available to ministers for consideration and apparently including a ban on meeting others indoors except for work purposes and limiting pubs and restaurants to outdoor service only. But it is clear the PM hopes the take up of booster vaccines, along with the partial “Plan B” restrictions recently introduced, will be enough to see off the threat.As part of those measures, Britons are currently again being ordered to wear face masks in shops, cinemas, theatres and places of worship and on public transport and to work from home order where possible.The government has further revised its approach to vaccine booster jabs, planning to make them available to all over-18s by the end of December and halving the amount of time between second and third injections from six months to three, all in the hope of staving off the feared “tidal wave” of infections we are already beginning to see. According to official data, almost 34.4m people have received a booster jab to date. Some form of “Plan C” – a circuit-breaker, or tighter restrictions – could be necessary if Omicron starts to disrupt the NHS but there is clearly little political appetite for a fourth national lockdown.But Sage advisers remain unambiguous in calling for stricter curbs, with the influential Professor Neil Ferguson of Imperial College London openly entertaining the possibility for several weeks.The bigger pictureEven before Omicron began to cast its sinister shadow across the globe, many Britons were already glancing anxiously towards the continent as Austria and the Netherlands reintroduced lockdowns in response to spiking cases of Covid-19.The World Health Organisation (WHO) had said it was “very worried” about the spread in Europe and warned 700,000 more deaths could be recorded by March unless urgent action is taken, bringing the total to 2.2 million since the pandemic began.Omicron variant shows just how ‘perilous’ Covid situation is, WHO saysPrior to the latest worrying developments sparked by Omicron, Mr Johnson’s government had been deeply reluctant to reimpose restrictions at all, despite consistently high case numbers.While the vaccines have consistently kept death rates low since the spring, infection levels have remained consistently high, typically hovering around the 40,000-per-day mark but in recent days have been more than double that.Mr Johnson may also be concerned that further restrictions might lead to social disorder, having seen anti-lockdown protests – some of them violent – erupt in Austria, the Netherlands, Belgium, Switzerland, Denmark, Italy and Croatia.Londoners were certainly unhappy about the initial return of the mask mandate, accusing the PM of hypocrisy for declining to wear one himself at several public engagements.However, in other quarters, there appeared to be a clear appetite for new restrictions even before Omicron, at least according to the polls.A survey by Savanta ComRes revealed that 45 per cent of adults would be in favour of a selective lockdown targeting only those who had declined to get their Covid jabs and therefore could pose an ongoing risk to others.But, until Omicron threw a fresh spanner into the works, there was a credible case for believing that the UK was in such a strong position that it could avoid the worst of the outbreak marauding across Europe.Although Britain’s infection rate has remained high for months, it has also been highly stable until recently, lingering at a seven-day average of around 600 daily cases per million people, whereas Austria and the Netherlands have suddenly spiked to 1,500 and 1,250 respectively from well below that starting point since the beginning of October.Part of the reason for this is that the UK was hit by the more infectious Alpha and Delta variants of the coronavirus sooner and was therefore able to tackle them ahead of its European neighbours and unlock earlier. 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    Keir Starmer: Labour leader tests positive for Covid and will miss PMQs

    Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer has again tested positive for Covid and will self-isolate for the sixth time since the pandemic began.Deputy leader Angela Rayner will step in and go up against Boris Johnson at Prime Minister’s Questions on Tuesday, a party spokesman said.Sir Keir is not thought to have any Covid symptoms but the infection was picked up as part of his regular testing routine.The Labour leader previously tested positive for coronavirus on the day of the Budget in late October, before returning to work in early November.His latest positive test will mean it is the sixth period of self-isolation for the Labour leader since the start of the pandemic.On four occasions between September 2020 and July 2021 Sir Keir stayed at home after family members, staff or contacts tested positive.The positive test comes a day after the Labour leader travelled to Birmingham for a major speech setting out his vision for Britain’s future.On Tuesday, Sir Keir addressed an audience where he promised “straight leadership” based on the values of “security, prosperity and respect” if his party is returned to power.The Labour leader also called for an expansion of testing in schools to avoid year groups being sent home and widespread closures. Sir Keir said Labour would back the self-isolation period being cut from seven to five days, so long as scientific advisers recommended it. His own positive result comes as Covid testing rules are set to be eased to reduce the time people have to spend in isolation, with Mr Johnson under pressure to combat staff absences in key parts of the economy and health service.People who test positive on a lateral flow test will no longer need a confirmatory PCR to begin the self-isolation period if they do not have symptoms, potentially allowing them to return to work earlier, under plans being considered by ministers.The change could be announced on Wednesday as the prime minister argues to his cabinet they should stick by the plan B measures in England – despite admitting parts of the health service will feel “temporarily overwhelmed”. More

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    England to stick with plan B Covid restrictions, Boris Johnson announces

    Health leaders have warned of patient care coming under threat after Boris Johnson insisted that England can “ride out” the Omicron wave of Covid-19 without new restrictions, despite admitting that NHS hospitals will feel overwhelmed as infections surge in the coming days and weeks.As daily confirmed infections topped 200,000 for first time, the prime minister said the health service was being put on “war footing” ahead of what he acknowledged will be a very difficult period.But he refused to tighten plan B curbs, insisting that high vaccination rates and public compliance with existing restrictions gave England a chance to “find a way to live with this virus” without shutting down social and economic life.The Royal College of Nursing’s general secretary Pat Cullen said that nurses watched his statement at a Downing Street press conference “in disbelief”.“One described to me today that the NHS feels more broken than she’s ever known it,” said Ms Cullen. “This is not hysteria, this is blowing the whistle on falling standards as patient care comes under real threat.“We have called for an honest conversation with the public about how overstretched health and care services are and, tonight, the PM did not start one.”And the chief executive of the NHS Confederation, Matthew Taylor, said: “The prime minister’s attempts to reassure the public that the NHS is not being overwhelmed does not chime with the experience of staff up and down the country who are facing fast-rising hospital admissions, intense pressures on all parts of the health and care system and widespread staff absence.”Some 12 hospitals in England have already declared “critical incidents” – a status that enables health leaders to request assistance from nearby NHS trusts to ensure they can continue to provide essential services.The latest NHS data show that there are 15,044 people with the disease in English hospitals – a figure that has doubled over the past two weeks. Roughly two-thirds of these patients are receiving care primarily for Covid, officials have said.Current hospitalisation rates in England are some way off the levels reached during the 34,000 peak of the second wave.But chief medical officer Sir Chris Whitty said the numbers were nonetheless “significant”, saying: “If we went back to mid-December when we were still with the Delta wave the numbers were between 6,000 and 6,500. A very substantial increase.”Pressures have been exacerbated by mounting staff absences due to the spread of Omicron in hospitals and the continuing high demand for urgent care services.As staff shortages disrupted not only healthcare but also schools and transport, Mr Johnson announced plans for daily lateral flow tests for 100,000 critical workers from 10 January to keep key services up and running.He revealed that troops could soon be sent into hospitals, with officials tasked with identifying the trusts most likely to need military assistance.Mr Johnson has previously said that plan B restrictions imposed on 8 December – involving mandatory face coverings in public places, Covid passes for mass-audience events and work from home guidance – would be tightened if the NHS was at risk of being overwhelmed.He today refused to define the term “overwhelmed”, but conceded: “I think that different trusts in different places at different moments will feel at least temporarily overwhelmed, and hospitals at the moment are sending out signals that they are feeling the pressure hugely.”Plymouth’s Derriford Hospital became the latest to adopt the emergency stance on Tuesday, with just under 500 of its staff off sick or isolating due to Covid.“Attendances in our emergency department are high; there are ongoing challenges in discharging patients who are well enough to leave hospital, and we are seeing an increase in staff sickness, all of which leads to longer waits than we would like for patients to be seen and admitted,” said Jo Beer, chief operating officer of the University Hospitals Plymouth NHS Trust.Latest figures showed a daily total of 218,724 positive coronavirus tests recorded across the UK on Tuesday – well above the highest tallies reached during earlier waves of Covid-19.But deaths remained low compared to previous peaks, with 48 reported on Tuesday and 909 over the past week, against a daily record of more than 1,200 in January 2021.The PM has come under pressure to step up restrictions in line with Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland to rein in soaring numbers of infections.And he acknowledged: “Anyone who thinks our battle with Covid is over is profoundly wrong. This is a moment for the utmost caution.”But he said that he will on Wednesday recommend to cabinet no tightening of plan B restrictions to match Scotland, where nightclubs have been closed and hospitality venues limited to table service, or Wales, where strict limits have been imposed on public gatherings and two-metre social distancing reintroduced in offices and public premises.Mr Johnson said it was important to recognise that curbs on normal life were not “cost-free” in terms of livelihoods and disruption to the education of young people.He accepted that the NHS was under “a lot of pressure”, but said he was “confident that we can get through it”.“We now have a substantial level of protection,” said the prime minister. “So, together with the plan B measures we introduced before Christmas, we have a chance to ride out this Omicron wave without shutting down our country once again.“We can keep our schools and our businesses open and we can find a way to live with this virus.”Mr Johnson said the weeks ahead will be “challenging” but added: “If we all play our part in containing the spread of this virus, the disruptions we face can be far less severe than a national lockdown, with all the devastation that would bring for livelihoods and the life chances of our children.”Mr Johnson said: “There will be a difficult period for our wonderful NHS for the next few weeks because of Omicron. I just think that we have to get through it as best we possibly can.”Infectious disease specialist Professor Paul Hunter of the University of East Anglia said that recent modelling had suggested that tougher control measures could actually extend the Omicron wave without having much impact on its severity.“The balance of evidence is supportive of not increasing restrictions at the moment,” said Prof Hunter.TUC general secretary Frances O’Grady said Mr Johnson’s lateral flow test scheme was “hopelessly inadequate”, reaching only one in 100 of the UK’s 10.6 million key workers:“Key workers do their vital work in teams,” said Ms O’Grady. “Surgeons and nurses need cleaners and porters. Food supply needs producers, warehouse staff, drivers, and retailers.“Ministers must explain who is left out, and what they should do if they can’t get tested. The prime minister has known about the shortage of tests for weeks. It beggars belief that he is doing so little, so late.” More

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    Public overwhelmingly against Tony Blair knighthood, poll finds

    Voters are overwhelmingly opposed to the decision to grant Tony Blair a knighthood, a poll has found.Just 14 per cent of the public agreed with the decision announced in the New Year honours – only three per cent strongly.By contrast 63 per cent were against the move to turn Mr Blair into Sir Tony, 41 per cent of whom said they were strongly against the move.The poll, by YouGov, comes after a petition to block the gong for the ex-Labour prime minister topped 600,000 signatures.The petition argues that Sir Tony’s role in the Iraq war makes him “personally responsible” for many deaths and accuses him of “war crimes”.He has never faced any charges in court over the allegations. On 1 January, Sir Tony was made a member of the Order of the Garter, England’s oldest and most senior chivalric order. In contrast to the wider public, the move was widely welcomed by establishment figures and in Westminster.Keir Starmer, who now leads Labour, on Tuesday morning rejected suggestions that the issue was divisive or “thorny”. “I don’t think it’s thorny at all – I think he deserves the honour,” the opposition told ITV’s Good Morning Britain. He added: “Obviously I respect the fact that people have different views.”Sir Keir, himself made a Knight Commander of the Order of the Bath (KCB) in the 2014 New Year Honours, added: “He won three elections, he was a very successful prime minister.” YouGov poll a representative sample of 2441 GB adults on 4 January 2022. The pollster found opposition to the move across the political spectrum, with Labour voters against by 21 to 56 per cent, and Tory voters against by 10 per cent to 79 per cent.Liberal Democrat voters were the most positive over the decision, opposing it by 44 per cent to 31 per cent.Leave voters were especially hostile, with 59 per cent strongly disapproving, with a total of 77 per cent against to eight in favour. Remainers were 55 per cent against to 25 per cent against. More

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    ‘Absolutely crazy’ to refuse vaccine and end up in intensive care, Boris Johnson says

    Boris Johnson has said it is “absolutely crazy” that people are being put into intensive care because they are refusing the Covid vaccine.The prime minister told a news conference on Tuesday afternoon that there were ample slots for people to get vaccinated but some people were still not being jabbed.His chief medical officer Chris Whitty added that he was “saddened” by the numbers of unvaccinated people in intensive care, adding that “the great majority of them are not anti-vaxxers”.It comes after the prime minister said he was minded to stick to the government’s so-called Plan B approach and not bring in further restrictions to fight the Omicron wave.Mr Johnson told reporters: “How absolutely crazy it is, absolutely crazy, that there are two million slots this week for people to get vaccinated and yet the majority of people in ICU for Covid are not vaccinated – 61 per cent.”It is sad but it is also a huge opportunity for us to correct it.”Unvaccinated people are disproportionately likely to become severely ill from Covid and require hospital treatment or even die.Professor Sir Chris Whitty has said there is “misinformation” on the internet “a lot of it deliberately placed” about the potential side effects of the jabs.”In so far as I am frustrated it is simply people deliberately trying to scare away fellow citizens from something that is potentially going to be life-saving for them,” he added.Meanwhile Patrick Vallance, the government’s chief scientific officer, said it would be “untenable” for everyone to be given booster shots “every three or six months”.He added: “That is not the long-term view of where this goes to. There may be some people who will require an additional dose, but longer term I would think that as this becomes a disease which is endemic… it will be something like an annual vaccine like flu or of that order.”Sir Patrick also said: “The good news is that as you get vaccinated more the immune system broadens its response so that it covers more variants.”Over 90 per cent of people over 12 years old in the UK have had their first Covid vaccine dose as of the New Year, with more than 51.7 million Covid vaccines delivered up and down the country.The government says there has been an almost 50 per cent surge in people coming forward for their first Covid vaccine as the booster programme continues. More

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    Nationality and Borders Bill would make people like me second-class citizens, warns peer

    The controversial Nationality and Borders Bill will make Black and Asian Britons second-class citizens as they face the possibility of having their UK citizenship revoked without notice, a peer has warned.Lord Woolley, an equalities activist, said he would also face being stripped of citizenship under Clause 9 of the bill in this way as his mother was born in the Caribbean.Under the proposed legislation, which is being debated in the House of Lords on Wednesday, those who are eligible for citizenship of another country could be quietly stripped of UK status if it were deemed to be in the “national interest”.“This will further exacerbate the reality that millions of British people, many of African, Caribbean and Asian descent, are second class citizens,” Lord Woolley told The Independent.“I’m a lord of this realm and yet I’d be rendered as such because my mother was born in Barbados.“For those of us born here to foreign parents, our citizenship is precarious; the government has called it a ‘privilege and not a right’ that can be stripped away and in some cases without appeal.”The amendments to the bill that the House of Lords will vote on are yet to be decided, but The Independent understands Labour peers would be minded to back a move to remove the controversial clause.Lord Woolley, who set up the Operation Black Vote organisation, also pointed to similarities with the Windrush scandal. The Home Office has recently come under fire for human rights breaches by numerous Black claimants.“Surely the Windrush scandal has taught us that when you have a tiered citizenship system, you’re not only viewed as less than, but at times of political stress, you can shockingly be treated as such,” he said.“The Lords must show leadership in its response to this bill.” More

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    Boris Johnson announces 100,000 critical workers will be tested for Covid every day

    Boris Johnson has pledged to “fortify” critical services against Covid with a ramped-up testing plan.The prime minister announced on Tuesday afternoon that 100,000 critical workers would be given rapid tests for the virus every day.He said organisations covered would include food processing, transport and border security workers.It comes after the UK recorded a further 218,724 cases of Covid-19 in the previous 24 hours.”We’ve identified 100,000 critical workers in areas from food processing to transport to our border force and from 10 January we’ll be rolling out lateral flow testing available on every working day,” the prime minister said in virtual a press conference. “We’ll be sending testing kits directly to these organisations and liaising with them on logistics.”Mr Johnson said he believed the UK could get through the wave of the omicron variant of Covid without a lockdown or closing businesses.”As the NHS moves to a war footing I will be recommending to Cabinet tomorrow we continue with Plan B because the public have responded and changed their behaviour buying valuable time to get boosters in arms,” he said.But he warned that the latest record Covid case figures showed that those who believed the pandemic to be over were “profoundly wrong”.”Previous waves of the pandemic didn’t have a single day with more than 100,000 new cases reported, one day last week we had 200,000 people test positive,” he added.”And the latest figure today is another 218,000, though that includes some delayed reports.”So anyone who thinks our battle with Covid is over, I’m afraid is profoundly wrong. This is a moment for the utmost caution.” More

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    Whitehall departments consider military help to combat Covid staff shortages

    Government departments in Whitehall are considering whether emergency help from the military might be needed if staff absences soar due to Covid.Downing Street said all departments has been asked to look at plans to cope with huge workforce shortages – and would whether military aid to the civil authorities (Maca) requests would be useful.Boris Johnson’s official spokesman said: “All departments have been asked to look at how they would mitigate against large-scale absences across their relevant workforces, up to 25%.”He added: “In some circumstances that might require making a Maca request, a military aid request, in other circumstances it might not. There is no blanket requirement for military aid.”Government officials have said any applications for military help were still at the planning stage, but soldiers could be asked to drive ambulances and assist Border Force according to The Times.It comes as business leaders warn that staff absences could soon wreak havoc for the economy, as the latest figures show more than one million people in the UK have tested for the virus over the past week.Iceland has been hit by staff absence rates of about 11 per cent, around 3,300 workers, according to the BBC.Richard Walker, managing director of the supermarket, is among the business leaders calling on the government to cut the Covid isolation period from seven to five days. “The government needs to amend the isolation policy.”Rail passengers have faced cancellations and reduced services to Covid absences. Almost one in 10 rail workers are currently off work, the Rail Delivery Group said.Meanwhile, Mr Johnson’s government refused to rule out the rationing of Covid tests, as No 10 conceded there were periods during recent days when tests had become unavailable online.The PM’s spokesman, asked whether ministers was preparing to “ration” tests in the days ahead, said: “We would obviously need to keep under review, as prevalence is incredibly high, what the right approach might be and we continue to take advice on whether that is necessary.”Pressed on whether government could ruling out the rationing of tests, the spokesman replied: “Without seeking to predict the course of the epidemic and this current wave that we’re in, at the moment those who need tests can get them and there may be times during the day when tests are unavailable.”No 10 said it was “massively increasing capacity” for both PCR and lateral flow tests. “That’s doubled to 900,000 tests available per day and we want to go further and increase that,” said the PM’s spokesman.He added: “We’re doing, I think, roughly around 1.5 million tests across the system each day, which, as I say, is the largest in the world, so there is testing capacity available for those who need it. But we will keep that under review, depending on how prevalence tracks over the coming weeks.”Earlier on Tuesday Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said a lack of “sufficient” Covid tests almost two years on from the start of the pandemic was “simply unacceptable”.Sir Keir said the government is “right to say we need tests twice a week for those in secondary school” but insisted “they’re nowhere near achieving that”.Calling for a huge expansion of testing in schools, he explained: “If there’s a number of outbreaks in a school or there is an individual case, we can’t go back to the bubbles or classes all going home. Children spent far too much time out of school for that.”Mr Johnson will hold a virtual press conference at around 5pm Tuesday to answer questions on his government’s approach to tackling the rapid spread of the Omicron variant. More