Boris Johnson to scrap most of England’s Covid
rules from 19 July
PM will make England most unrestricted country in
Europe despite saying cases could soar to 50,000 before date is reached
Jessica
Elgot and Ian Sample
Mon 5 Jul
2021 20.43 BST
Boris
Johnson will revoke hundreds of Covid regulations and make England the most
unrestricted society in Europe from 19 July despite saying new cases could soar
to 50,000 a day before masks and social distancing are ditched.
In a sign
the government may reimpose restrictions this autumn, the prime minister warned
the public against going “de-mob happy”, however. He said opening up –
including the lifting of all limits on sports events and nightclubs – would be
safest during the school summer holidays and did not say the changes would be
irreversible.
Johnson
told a Downing Street press conference: “We must be honest with ourselves that
if we can’t reopen our society in the next few weeks, when we will be helped by
the arrival of summer and by the school holidays, we must ask ourselves: when
will we be able to return to normal?”
He said the
aim in revoking the rules was to “move from a universal government diktat to
relying on people’s personal responsibility” but added: “Obviously, if we do
find another variant that doesn’t respond to the vaccines, if, heaven forbid,
some really awful new bugs should appear, then clearly we will have to take
whatever steps we need to do to protect the public.”
The planned
changes announced by Johnson on Monday are set to make England an outlier in
much of the rest of the world where restrictions remain to combat infections.
The so-called “big bang” reopening was described as reckless by Labour and the
dropping of the legal requirement for masks prompted a backlash from bereaved
families and regional mayors.
Businesses
that chose to enforce mask-wearing would need to take legal advice on their
responsibilities under the Equality Act, Downing Street said.
The only
remaining regulations will be a requirement to isolate after testing positive
for Covid-19, plus restrictions on international travel and mandatory social
distancing at airports and other ports. Directors of public health will also
retain some powers to act in a crisis situation.
Johnson
also announced an acceleration in vaccinating the under-40s, who will have the
gap between doses cut from 12 weeks to eight in line with the over-40s. This
means every adult will have been offered two jabs by mid-September. There will
no longer be any specific recommendation to work from home, and restrictions on
the number of named care home visitors will be lifted.
The final
decision to scrap the remaining restrictions will be made next week but Johnson
said this was the firm direction of travel. Plans will also be announced this
week allowing those who have been double-vaccinated to avoid quarantine rules
when contacted by NHS test and trace or on their return from amber-list
countries, although the start dates for these measures are yet to be revealed.
Sajid
Javid, the health secretary, told the Commons that schools should expect to
stop sending home “bubbles” of children from 19 July, in time for many
children’s summer holiday camps.
Standing
alongside the prime minister, England’s chief medical officer, Prof Chris
Whitty, warned that the epidemic was “significant and rising”. While
hospitalisations were increasing, modelling suggested the health service would
be able to handle the pressures, Whitty said.
“What the
modelling would imply is that we will reach that peak before we get to the
point where we have the kind of pressures we saw in January of this year. But
inevitably, with all models you have to say that there’s some degree of
uncertainty,” he said.
He said he
expected this coming winter “may be very difficult for the NHS and I don’t
think that’s a particularly controversial statement,” saying the health service
would face the additional pressures of flu and waiting lists.
No 10
sources said contingency measures to deal with a significant rise in infections
in the autumn would depend on booster jabs and surge testing and include the
possibility of a wider use of Covid passports for mass events. “The aim is to
avoid any repeat of the kind of restrictions we have seen for the past year,” a
source said.
Ministers
will hold on to powers to “reimpose economic and social restrictions at a
local, regional or national level” if needed to suppress a dangerous new
variant, according to a Whitehall document published on Monday.
Those
measures would be a “last resort to prevent unsustainable pressure on the NHS,”
the government said. It also said Covid status certificates could be introduced
in the autumn or winter “if the country is facing a difficult situation” as a
means of keeping events going and businesses open.
Keir
Starmer called Johnson’s announcement “party management, not the public
interest”. Johnson’s former adviser turned chief critic Dominic Cummings said
the prime minister was in “‘let it rip’ mode”.
NHS
representatives also reacted angrily. Jude Diggins, an interim director at the
Royal College of Nursing, said: “This disease does not disappear on 19 July. No
available vaccine is 100% effective … Public mask-wearing is straightforward
and well-established – government will regret the day it sent the wrong signal
for political expediency.”
But Tory
MPs heralded the change, shouting “hallelujah” in the House of Commons.
The
government announced a further 27,334 UK Covid cases on Monday, with nine
deaths within 28 days of a positive test. The chief scientific adviser, Sir
Patrick Vallance, said the data showed that vaccines had “weakened the link
between cases and hospitalisation … [it’s] not a completely broken link”.
Johnson,
Vallance and Whitty all said they would continue to wear their masks in crowded
spaces or if asked by others, as opposition to the move mounted from regional
mayors and trade unions.
Scientists
advising the government also sounded alarm. Prof Calum Semple, who sits on the
government’s Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), said it was
essential that people took responsibility themselves if no guidelines were in
place. “It’ll be for the silent and sensible majority to take the lead,” he
said.
Prof John
Drury, a member of a subgroup to Sage, said the opening up was a clear signal
that high infection rates would be the price of freedom. “It’s a political
choice about the extent to which it’s OK that some people get very ill,”he
said.
Labour said
lifting all restrictions would leave millions of people who have not had both
jabs, including children, susceptible to long Covid. Starmer called for a
rethink. “We all want the restrictions to be lifted. We are going to have to
find a way of living with the virus. But that can’t just be a soundbite. We
need a proper plan and to throw off all protections at the same time, when the
infection rate is still going up is reckless. We need a balanced
approach.”

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