Charles Walker, Vice Chair of the 1922 Tory backbench committee in the Commons tells TWTW that he thinks the government knew it intended to “cancel” Christmas on Wednesday or Thursday but waited for Parliament to rise to do it. Says many of his colleagues find this “egregious.”
When put to Walker that Matt Hancock said this morning that wasn’t the case, it was the briefing on Friday which prompted the decision, Walker says: “Hmm yeah...well I’d have to disagree with the SoS on that.” So he’s either saying Hancock isn’t being truthful or is misinformed.
Walker: “Surely at some stage a senior government minister has say I’ve offered my resignation to the Prime Minister and the Prime Minister has to say- very early I’ve had to accept this.”
Reminder- Charles Walker is Vice Chair of the Tory backbench committee.
Walker heavily implies it’s Matt Hancock he wants to see resign: “I’m not asking for the government to collapse. I’m asking for a Secretary of State to take some responsibility.”
The Charles Walker interview is extraordinary in what he is inferring. A senior Conservative MP is essentially accusing his govt and ministers of deceit about what they knew about the new strain and when and by implication the timing of the new lockdown.
Whether it’s true or not, the nature of the accusation and where it’s come from, is extraordinary and a sign of how febrile the relationship between Number 10 and the backbench is right now.
NB this backbench discontent is likely why we’re hearing a ramped up tone from No10 on no deal.
Charles Walker: “The government in my view knew on Thursday, possibly even on Wednesday they were going to pull the plug on Christmas but they waited til Parliament had gone. That on top of everything else is a resigning matter.”
.@MichealMartinTD: “While we do not yet have firm evidence that the new more virulent strain of the Covid virus is in our country- the rate of growth tells me that the safest and most responsible thing to do is to proceed on the assumption that it is already here.”
Taoiseach confirms that from Christmas Eve to 12th January Ireland will return to Level 5 (most severe restrictions). BUT:
-non essential retail to remain open (Jan sales deferred)
-Gyms, leisure centres, pools only for individual training
-schools to remain open
Christmas mixing to continue in Ireland up to 26th December
Travel outside of county to be permitted up to 26th December inclusive
Places of worship to remain open over Christmas period
So a tightening- but not as significant as that in UK.
"I want to stress we in the UK fully understand our friends' anxieties about the new variant. But it's also true that the risks of transmission sitting alone in the cab is very low. So we hope to make progress."
Something of a backtrack from Saturday, when the emphasis from the prime ministerial podium was just how severe this new strain was.
In trying to offer assurances, a somewhat strained sounding Prime Minister sounds like he's talking to other world leaders as much as the UK.
PM says conversation with President Macron was "excellent" and says he's keen to work out a solution within the next few hours
London and the south east cut off from rest of the country
UK outward freight to Calais cut off
UK travel prohibited for a swathe of countries
More cases reported in last 24 hours than ever before
5 days til Christmas
11 days til the transition ends
on the transition point- the argument always was that a pandemic was so unpredictable that a Brexit extension was necessary. If things go very wrong over the next few weeks, expect that to become a very live political issue.
NEW: Gavin Williamson has sent this letter to headteachers tonight. It contains his response to the unions’ testing statement. He maintains schools are not “driving transmission” of the virus and reiterates his determination to roll out testing but confirms it is “voluntary”.
But as @Peston has pointed out SAGE had estimated that closing secondaries would reduce R by 0.35. Seems inconceivable some form of closure won’t at least be up for discussion if things continue to decline.
Williamson goes on to say schools offering testing will be provided with PPE, “reasonable costs” for the workforce required, army involvement, an additional inset day and “guidance and training for schools”
Still no further detail on where the workforce is going to come from.
Sturgeon: "We do now face a very serious situation. It is probably the most serious and potentially dangerous juncture we have faced since the start of the Covid pandemic in Feb and March...it means we have to act accordingly."
Sturgeon: "The advantage that we have in Scotland unlike some other parts of the UK right now is that we still have the chance to act on a preventative basis."
"We do not yet know how widely this strain of the virus is circling in Scotland. The latest info is that 17 cases have been identified in Scotland through genomic sequencing. But we have to be realistic that that is probably an underestimate."