Boris Says Freedom Day WILL Go Ahead On The 19th, But With Caveats

Boris Johnson tonight confirmed that the government is pulling the trigger on ‘Freedom Day’ by axing almost all legal restrictions from next Monday – but warned that they might need to return unless people keep wearing masks and avoid rushing back to offices.

As the UK recorded another 34,471 Covid cases, up a quarter on the same day last week, the PM insisted the pandemic was ‘not over’ but insisted the surge had been ‘foreseen’ and could be managed if Britons ‘do the right thing’.

Shifting the balance from state diktats, Mr Johnson pleaded with people not to ‘tear the pants’ out of the loosening. New Government guidance will say individuals are ‘expected and recommended‘ to keep wearing masks in crowded places, while any return to offices this summer should only be ‘gradual’.

Ministers are also ‘encouraging‘ the continued use of Covid certification at major events, saying the ‘need for caution and restraint is more important than ever‘.

Questions have been raised about whether the rules will be tougher in reality – as the government admits that train companies might well make face coverings a ‘condition of carriage‘ for travel. 

But Labour branded the unlocking, which was delayed from the original date of June 21 due to the emergence of the Delta variant, ‘high risk‘.

Mr Johnson’s stance during the Downing Street briefing this evening contrasted sharply with the more bullish tone previously, when cases were running at a lower level.

It is absolutely vital that we proceed now with caution and I cannot say this powerfully or emphatically enough: this pandemic is not over,‘ he said. ‘This disease, coronavirus, continues to carry risks for you and your family. We cannot simply revert instantly from Monday July 19 to life as it was before Covid. We will stick to our plan to lift legal restrictions and to lift social distancing, but we expect and recommend that people wear a face covering in crowded and enclosed spaces where you come into contact with those you don’t normally meet, such as on public transport.

He said there is ‘no obvious date‘ for ending restrictions as hospital admissions and deaths from coronavirus will rise.

We’ve come to a stage in the pandemic when there is no easy answer and no obvious date for unlocking,‘ he said.

He was supported by chief medic Chris Whitty, who said ‘there is no such thing as an ideal date‘. Experts on SAGE today signed off on the plans after estimating there will be 10 times fewer deaths and half as many hospital admissions in the third wave compared to previous peaks.

Modelling by the expert group said it was realistic to expect between 100 to 200 daily fatalities and 1,000 to 2,000 hospital admissions at the worst of the current outbreak this autumn, following the unlocking on July 19.

The premier also highlighted that as part of the ‘cautious‘ approach the government will ‘keep the test, trace and isolate system in place‘ and maintain its ‘tough border policy, including quarantine for those arriving from red list countries‘.

The new regime will be subject to a review in September. The go-ahead for the bonfire of legal curbs – albeit caveated – came despite Manchester Mayor Andy Burnham renewing his assault over dropping the legal requirement to wear face coverings on public transport.

Nicola Sturgeon has also criticised the PM for pushing ahead too fast, insisting masks will still be mandatory in some settings in Scotland after July 19.  

So-called ‘Freedom Day’ is meant to herald a return to normality but the PM is also publishing new ‘guidance’ setting out precautions people should continue to take.

Mr Johnson has said that July 19 is the right time to ease coronavirus restrictions because of the ‘natural firebreak‘ of the school holidays.

The Prime Minister told the Downing Street press conference: ‘We also know if we were to now delay this fourth step, for instance to September, or later, then we would be reopening as the weather gets colder and as the virus acquires a greater natural advantage and when schools are back. We think now is the right moment to proceed when we have the natural firebreak of the school holidays in the next few days.

However, the PM backed off claims that the end of Covid restrictions is ‘irreversible’ following warnings from top scientists that easing restrictions could end in disaster.

He said he ‘hoped‘ that was the case, but the best way of avoiding a return to restrictions was to be cautious.

Prof Whitty said going slowly through the next step was ‘essential‘ to reduce the impact of the ‘exit wave‘.

He said there was wide agreement between the scientific community that the four-week delay to the final stage of the road map was important to reduce the number of people admitted to hospital and deaths.

Secondly, there is extremely wide agreement that whenever we go through the next step, there is going to be what’s called an exit wave – there will be a wave associated with that,‘ he told a Downing Street press conference. ‘And that the slower we take it, the fewer people will have Covid, the smaller the peak will be, and the smaller the number of people who go into hospital and die. So, going very slowly through this step is really essential, and this again is the overwhelming view of the scientific people who have looked at this and of the medical profession. This is an overwhelming view. We should go slowly and steadily and cautiously, as the Prime Minister has laid out.

Earlier, Health Secretary Sajid Javid said going ahead with stage four of the roadmap was a ‘step closer to the life we used to live‘, adding that ‘we all want this to be a one-way journey‘.

The case numbers will get a lot worse before they get better,‘ he said. ‘But we do not believe that infection rates will put unsustainable pressure on the NHS.

He added: ‘This is the right time to get our nation closer to normal life… To those who say ”why take this step now” I say ”if not now, when?” There will never be a perfect time to take this step.

Nightclubs, which have been closed since the first lockdown in March last year, will be allowed to open their doors but will be encouraged to use certification to minimise the risks.

Other ‘large events‘ will also be encouraged to use vaccine passports, with customers able to prove their status using the NHS app.

The return of employees to the workplace, seen as key for helping town and city centre businesses which rely on commuters, is not expected to happen overnight, with firms encouraged to take a gradual approach.

Mr Javid also warned there are no guarantees the freedoms will stay for good, saying the Government will ‘come down hard at the moment we detect a new variant‘.

He reiterated that cases are rising and could reach 100,000 a day later in the summer – with the average number of daily cases currently more than 26,000, which has doubled over the past 11 days.

He said hospital admissions are also rising but said they are lower in this wave compared to a previous wave, noting people over the age of 65 – who are more likely to be double-jabbed – accounted for 31 per cent of Covid admissions last week compared to 61 per cent in January.

He went on: ‘Even as we look to ease restrictions, we will maintain tough measures at the borders and we will expand our capacity for genomic sequencing … so that we can come down hard at the moment we detect a new variant.

The announcements were broadly welcomed by the stricken hospitality industry.

But Shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth told the Commons the Government’s plan to continue with the road map next week could lead to more mutant variants of Covid-19, likening it to the Health Secretary ‘putting his foot down on the accelerator while throwing the seat belt off‘.

Mr Ashworth said: ‘The Secretary of State has taken a high risk, indeed fatalistic, approach. Trying to guess what might happen in the winter, deciding that infections are going up anyway. He admits that could mean 2,000 infections a day. That means potentially thousands suffering debilitating long Covid. It means as more cases arise potentially more escape and the threat of new more transmissible variant emerging.

Mr Ashworth warned Israel had reintroduced masks and the Netherlands had to close reopened nightclubs after two weeks.

Michael Kill, Chief Executive of the Night Time Industries Association, said: ‘The decision to go ahead with reopening on the 19th of July is the correct one. After 16 months of crippling restrictions, businesses in the night time economy are ready to play our part in the safe reopening of society. Today should mark the beginning of nightlife’s long journey to rebuild itself. There are some important hurdles ahead for our sector, including self isolation rules which have the potential to throw the recovery off course, but for those businesses that have made it this far in the pandemic, I feel confident that the sense of community and togetherness the sector has shown to this point will help us overcome these challenges.

We look forward to the Government providing more guidance for businesses owners – this should be practical and easy to navigate. But from today’s statement we can say that the Government are right not to mandate the use of Covid status certification systems. Much of the night time economy relies on spontaneous consumers, and by permitting businesses to opt out, the Government have allowed for this trade to continue.

Sir Iain Duncan Smith has accused ministers of ‘losing their nerve’ over the lifting of restrictions. He said: ‘This is not freedom at all. Ministers are being beaten up by the scientists in the media and they are beginning to wobble. The question for the scientists is: do they believe the vaccines work? If they work – and they clearly do to reduce hospitalisations and deaths – then we should not be continuing to sacrifice the economy on the altar of some misguided zero Covid policy.

While Steve Baker, deputy chairman of the Covid Recovery Group of lockdown sceptic Tory MPs, accused ministers of a ‘shift in policy‘ and said that it was ‘torturing the nation‘.

Arguing that for some people wearing a mask is a ‘terrible thing‘, he added: ‘It’s not fair snatching away people’s hope, it’s psychologically, profoundly destructive.

Last week, Mr Johnson said that mask wearing would become ‘a personal choice‘ after July 19.

Several senior ministers, including Chancellor Rishi Sunak and Environment Secretary George Eustice said they would be ditching their masks at the earliest opportunity.

But Mr Zahawi said yesterday: ‘The guidelines that we’ll set out tomorrow will demonstrate that, including guidelines that people are expected to wear masks in indoor enclosed spaces.

He also suggested the government is looking at a test and release scheme to replace self-isolation for those who come into contact with a positive case, amid fears that millions of healthy people will be doomed to house arrest as infections rise. 

If you do test positive you have to and should rightly then self-isolate but it is important to look at that in a new context of this massive vaccination programme and make sure that it is fit for purpose for this new world,‘ he said.

Meanwhile, Sadiq Khan is still considering a bid to force passengers to keep wearing masks on trains, Tube and buses in London.   

The level of nerves among the wider public was demonstrated yesterday as research by Opinium (allegedly) found 50 percent would prefer the unlocking slated to happen a week tomorrow to be delayed. Some 31 per cent thought the timing was about right, while just 10 per cent said it should have been earlier.

See more here: dailymail.co.uk

Header image: Devex

PSI editor’s note: If the government will ‘come down hard’ on discovering a new variant, they will be coming down hard for years to come, and will destroy what is left of our economy in the process.

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Comments (5)

  • Avatar

    itsme

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    well, most of us in the know, know where this is going
    we’ll be ‘punished’ for been naughty, and will be shut down in September (or maybe slightly earlier)
    and as for the NHS been overwhelmed, well i get the feeling it will be, but not with so called covid 19.

    Reply

    • Avatar

      SteveT

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      Yes. The flu season runs from Sept to Apr in the Northern hemisphere; The NHS is overwhelmed EVERY year. Have a wild guess what is going to happen.
      COP 26 in Glasgow is also in play here.

      Reply

  • Avatar

    Leonard Winokur

    |

    Illegal is not synonymous with unlawful. Do whatever you please as long as it’s lawful; that is, does no harm to another, does not cause another a loss, doesn’t entail perpetrating a fraud, and doesn’t breach the peace. End of.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    tom0mason

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    “… As the UK recorded another 34,471 Covid cases, …

    CASES ARE NOT INFECTIONS!
    Cases are, in the main, just the number of people who have shown a positive PCR result.
    I’ve had such response on every PCR test but not had any symptom for COVID.
    Being over 65 years old, apparently I’m in a higher risk group. I’ve have VISITED friends and relations (63 to 76 years young), we’ve have all tested positive and some have had some short lived flu-like symptoms but nothing too upsetting. Note none of us have co-morbidities, none are are overweight, and none have problems with blood/sugar levels.
    IMO UK’s version of the PRC shows next to nothing!
    As a hypothetical question — what would happen if a large group of recently tested PRC positive people were to get together and have a party (or barbecue) together with advisory signs indicating that it is for PCR positive individuals only. What would the police do? What could the courts do? The logistics of police station(s) or court(s) with large numbers of acknowledged PCR positive people may prove difficult to handle.

    Reply

  • Avatar

    Karma Singh

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    “the PM insisted the pandemic was ‘not over’ …”
    Of course it’s not: It can’t be over until it has begun!
    The whole thing is a fake from start to finish; it’s visible in “the Field” that there is no “dangerous disease” present and never has been; the symptoms, progress, prognosis and morbidity are absolutely identical to the ‘flu, i.e. the fantasy disease “Covid-19” has no actual existence but is merely the ‘flu re-named for the purpose of crashing the economy to enable the re-imposition of a feudal-like society with the bankers at the top.
    Many millions of us are to be killed off and this is the sole purpose of the pseudo-vaccines.
    When will somebody finally get their act together and issue writs of Habeas Corpus which requires that the government prove that this phantom-disease exists and is dangerous. They can’t do this of course because it’s all a fantasy and with that declaration from the courts all restrictions related thereto are automatically illegal and immediately terminated.
    Even the Master of the Rolls has almost “begged” for someone to do this so that he can rule on it. WHY DON’T YOU????

    Blessed be
    Karma Singh

    Reply

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