Statement as delivered by the Prime Minister in the House this afternoon
Statement as delivered by the Prime Minister in the House this
afternoon, following the publication of OUR PLAN TO REBUILD:
The UK Government’s COVID-19 recovery strategy Mr...Request free trial
Statement as delivered by the Prime Minister in the House
this afternoon, following the publication of OUR PLAN
TO REBUILD: The UK Government’s COVID-19 recovery
strategy
Mr
Speaker,
with permission, I will make a statement about the
next steps in our battle against coronavirus,
and how we can, with the utmost caution, gradually
begin to rebuild our economy and reopen our society.
For the last two months, the British people have
faced a grave threat with common sense, compassion and
unflinching resolve.
We have together observed the toughest restrictions on our
freedoms in memory,
changing our way of life on a scale unimaginable only
months ago.
All our efforts have been directed towards
protecting our NHS and saving lives.
Tragically, many families have lost loved ones
before their time and we share their grief.
Yet our shared effort has averted a still worse
catastrophe,
one that could have overwhelmed the NHS and claimed
half a million lives.
Every day, dedicated doctors, nurses, and social care
workers, army medics and more have risked their own lives in the
service of others,
and they have helped to cut the Reproduction rate from
between 2.6 and 2.8 in April to between 0.5 and 0.9 today.
The number of covid patients in hospital has fallen by
over a third since Easter Sunday.
Our armed forces joined our NHS to build new
hospitals on timetables that were telescoped from years to
weeks,
almost doubling the number of critical care
beds,
and ensuring that since the end of March, at least a
third have always been available.
Our challenge now is to find a way forward that
preserves our hard won gains, while easing the burden of the
lockdown.
And I will be candid with the House: this is a
supremely difficult balance to strike.
There could be no greater mistake than to jeopardise
everything we have striven to achieve
by proceeding too far and too fast.
We will be driven not by hope or economic revival as
an end in itself, but by data, and science and public health.
And so the Government is submitting to the
House today a plan which is conditional
and dependent as always on the common sense and
observance of the British people,
and on continual re-assessment of the data.
That picture varies across the regions and Home Nations of
the United Kingdom,
requiring a flexible response.
Different parts of the UK may need to stay in full
lockdown longer
but any divergence should only be
short-term
because as Prime Minister of the UK, I am in no
doubt that we must defeat this threat and face the challenge of
recovery together.
Our progress will depend on meeting five essential
tests:
protecting the NHS,
reducing both the daily death toll and the infection
rate in a sustained way,
ensuring that testing and PPE can meet future demand
- a global problem, but one that we must fix,
and avoiding a second peak that would overwhelm the
NHS.
A new UK-wide Joint Biosecurity Centre will measure
our progress with a five-stage Covid Alert System,
and the combined effect of our measures so far has
been to prevent us from reaching Level Five, a situation that
would have seen the NHS overwhelmed,
and to hold us at Level Four.
Thanks to the hard work and sacrifice of the British
people by following the social distancing rules,
we are now in a position where we can move in
stages
to where I hope the scientific advice will
tell us that we are down to Level Three.
But this will only happen if everyone
continues to play their part, to stay alert and to follow the
rules.
We must also deal with the epidemic in care homes, where a
tragic number of the elderly and vulnerable have been
lost
and while the situation is thankfully improving, there is
a vast amount more to be done.
And of course we need a world-leading system for testing
and tracking and tracing victims and their contacts
so I’m delighted that Baroness Harding, the chair of NHS
Improvement, has agreed to take charge of a programme that will
ultimately enable us to test hundreds of thousands of people
every day.
All this means we have begun our descent from the peak of
the epidemic, but our journey has reached the most perilous
moment where a wrong move could be disastrous.
So at this stage, we can go no further than to
announce the first careful modifications of our
measures,
Step 1 in moving towards Covid Alert Level
3,
a shift in emphasis that we can begin this
week.
Anyone who cannot work from home should be actively
encouraged to go to work.
And sectors that are allowed to be open should indeed
be open, but subject to social distancing.
These include food production, construction,
manufacturing, logistics, distribution, scientific research.
And to support this, to explain this again, we are
publishing guidance for businesses on how to make these
workplaces safe. Covid secure.
People who are able to work from home, as we’ve
continually said, should continue to do so,
and people who cannot work from home should talk to
their employers about returning this week and the difficulties
they may or may not have.
Anyone with covid symptoms obviously
– or in a household where someone else has symptoms
–
should self-isolate.
We want everyone travelling to work to be safe, so
people should continue to avoid public transport wherever
possible
because we must maintain social distancing which
will inevitably limit capacity.
Instead people should drive or better still walk or
cycle.
With more activity outside our homes, we would now
advise people to wear a cloth face covering in enclosed spaces
where social distancing is not always possible,
and you are more likely to come in contact with
people you do not normally meet.
The reason is face coverings can help to protect
each other and reduce the spread of the disease, particularly if
you have coronavirus like symptoms.
But this does not mean – and I must stress
this – this does not mean wearing medical face masks, 2R or FFP3,
which must be reserved for people who need
them.
We have all lived so far with onerous
restrictions Mr Speaker on outdoor spaces and exercise, and this
is where my honourable friend interjects as I know he’s a keen
swimmer and unfortunately we can’t do anything for swimming pools
but we can do something for lakes and the sea.
and this is where we can go significantly further
because there is a lower risk from outdoors than indoors.
So from Wednesday there will be no limits on the
frequency of outdoor exercise people can take.
You can now walk, sit and rest in parks,
you can play sports and exercise,
and you can do all these things with members of your
own household,
or with one other person from another
household, provided you observe social distancing and remain 2
metres apart from them. And I do hope that’s clear Mr Speaker.
I’m conscious people want to come back and ask questions in more
detail and I’d be very happy to answer.
We shall increase the fines for the small minority
who break the rules,
starting at £100 but doubling with each infringement
up to £3,600.
You can drive as far as you like to reach an outdoor
space, subject to the same rules
and the laws and guidance of the Devolved
Administrations.
I am sorry to say however, Mr Speaker, that we shall continue to
ask those who are clinically vulnerable
– including pregnant women and people over 70,
or those with pre-existing chronic conditions –
to take particular care to minimise contact with
those outside their households.
And we must continue to shield people who are
extremely vulnerable.
They should, I am afraid, remain at home and avoid
any direct contact with others.
I know that easing restrictions for the many will
only increase the anguish of those who must remain shielded,
so the Government will look at every possible way of
supporting the most vulnerable.
Mr Speaker, all of our precautions will count for
little if our country is re-infected from overseas,
so I give notice that we shall introduce new
restrictions at the UK border,
requiring 14 days of self-isolation for international
arrivals, while respecting our common travel area with Ireland.
Every day, we shall monitor our progress,
and if we stay on the downward slope,
and the R remains below 1,
then – and only then – will it become safe to go
further,
and move to the second step.
This will not happen until 1st June at the earliest,
but we may then be in a position to start the phased
reopening of shops;
to return children to early years’ settings, including
nurseries and childminders;
to return primary schools in stages, giving priority to
the youngest children in reception and year 1,
and those in year 6 preparing for secondary school;
and to enable secondary school pupils facing exams next
year to get at least some time with their teachers.
Our ambition – and I stress this is conditional Mr Speaker
–is for all primary school pupils to return to the classroom for
a month before the summer break.
To those ends, we are publishing guidance on how schools
might reopen safely.
Step two could also include allowing cultural and sporting
events behind closed doors for broadcast,
Which I think would provide a much needed boost to
national morale.
But nothing can substitute for human contact and so
the Government has asked SAGE when and how we could safely allow
people to expand their household group to include one other
household, on a strictly reciprocal basis.
Finally, and no earlier than July, we may be
able to move to step three – if and only if supported by the
data, and the best scientific advice.
We would then aim to reopen some remaining
businesses, including potentially hospitality, cinemas and
hairdressers as well as places of worship and leisure
facilities.
And this will depend on maintaining social
distancing and new ways of providing services,
so we will phase and pilot any re-openings to ensure
public safety.
And I must be clear again:
if the data goes the wrong way, if the Alert Level
begins to rise,
we will have no hesitation in putting on the brakes,
delaying or reintroducing measures – locally, regionally or
nationally.
Mr Speaker, our struggle against this virus has
placed our country under the kind of strain that will be
remembered for generations.
But so too has the response of the British people,
from dedicated shopworkers keeping our supermarkets
open,
and ingenious teachers finding new ways of inspiring
their pupils,
to the kindness of millions who have checked on
their neighbours, delivered food for the elderly, or raised
astonishing amounts for charity.
In these and in so many other ways, we are seeing
the indomitable spirit of Britain
And Mr speaker let me summarise by saying that
People should Stay Alert by working from home if you possibly
can,
by limiting contact with other people,
by keeping your distance 2 metres apart where
possible -
by washing your hands regularly,
and if you or anyone in your household has
symptoms, you all need to self-isolate.
Because if everyone stays alert and follows
the rules, we can control the virus, keep the rate of infection
down and the keep number of infections down.
And this Mr Speaker is how we can continue to save
lives, and livelihoods, as we begin to recover from coronavirus,
and I commend this statement to the House.
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