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Coronavirus in UK

The number of people claiming unemployment benefit in the UK soared last month, rising by 856,500 to 2.097m

Work and pensions secretary tells BBC that Britain 'can cope' with unemployment surge
 
BREAKING: NHS England announces 174 more deaths

NHS England has announced another 174 coronavirus deaths, bringing the total number of confirmed deaths in hospitals in England to 24,913.

In Scotland, a further 29 people have died with the virus. There were another 17 deaths in Wales, while seven more people died in Northern Ireland.

The tallies for individual nations can differ from the UK-wide total - which will be announced later this afternoon - because they are calculated on a different timeframe, and the UK total includes deaths in all settings.
 
Latest UK developments

The number of people claiming unemployment benefit soared during the first full month of the coronavirus lockdown. Official figures show there were 2.1 million people claiming benefits in April - up by 856,500

Claims for universal credit - the benefit for working-age people in the UK - hit a record monthly level in the early weeks of lockdown

Meanwhile, separate research suggests young people are most likely to have lost work or seen their income drop because of the pandemic. More than one in three 18-to-24-year-olds is earning less than before the outbreak, the Resolution Foundation claims
Nearly 10,000 people have died with coronavirus in care homes in England and Wales, figures from the Office for National Statistics suggest

And campaigners say UK towns and cities must be made cycle-friendly if a change to commuting habits is to succeed. People are being encouraged not to use public transport when they return to work
 
Government 'too slow' to tackle virus in care homes

Health Secretary Matt Hancock has been defending the government's response to the crisis in England's care homes during the coronavirus pandemic.

He has told MPs:

- "89% of all deaths have been those aged above 65"

- The government has offered what he called "unprecedented levels of support for the social care system"

- "62% of care homes have had no reported cases of coronavirus"

He was responding to an urgent question in the Commons from shadow social care minister Liz Kendall, who accused ministers of being "too slow" to tackle the spread of coronavirus in care homes.

She asked: "Can (Mr Hancock) explain why guidance saying care homes were very unlikely to be infected wasn't withdrawn until March 12 when the chief medical officer (Chris Whitty) warned about community transmission and the risk to the elderly on March 4?"

Mr Hancock responded: "We have made social care a priority from the start. The first guidance went out to social care in February. She (Ms Kendall) refers to the March 13 guidance, that was only a matter of days immediately after the risk to the public was raised on medical advice.

"And the guidance that was in place until then, as she probably knows, explicitly stated that that guidance was in place whilst community transmission was low and said it would be updated as soon as community transmission went broader and that's exactly what we did."
 
UK testing drops below target again

George Eustice reports 89,784 tests were carried out yesterday - this is below the government’s target of 100,000 daily tests.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has pledged to deliver 200,000 tests by the end of this month.
 
UK minister challenged after 100,000 test claim

Justice Secretary Robert Buckland was challenged on BBC Breakfast about trust in the government after his ministerial colleague Therese Coffey wrongly claimed that more than 100,000 people had been tested for coronavirus on some days.

Presenter Louise Minchin said that in fact there was "not a single day" when more than 100,000 people had received tests, and asked him if claims like these undermined trust.

Mr Buckland said the government needed to be "straightforward", adding that where there had been difficulties "everybody has known about it".

He also acknowledged that the planned contact tracing system and app were "still very much work in progress" and might not be "full-blown" by the time schools are due to open on 1 June.

Mr Buckland said the government needed to "listen very carefully" to schools concerned about readmitting more children and acknowledged that there may not be a "uniform" return to teaching.
 
A "world-beating" track and trace system to stop a second coronavirus peak and help ease lockdown has been promised by the end of May by Boris Johnson.

The prime minister said he had "great confidence" the system abandoned in March given the ballooning number of cases will be up and running in time for English schools to reopen on 1 June.

He was under pressure to make the announcement after the government's deputy chief scientific adviser said yesterday a highly effective version of the programme needed to be off the ground for any changes to social distancing to be safe.

Boris Johnson

Boris Johnson told MPs that 25,000 trackers will be in place to track the contacts of 10,000 new cases a day.
Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer urged him at the last Prime Minister's Questions for two weeks to commit to a date, as more than 35,000 people have now died in the UK.

Mr Johnson announced 24,000 workers have been recruited to staff the track and trace programme, which will see them deployed to find all those who have come into contact with COVID-19 symptoms and tell them to self-isolate.

"We have growing confidence that we will have a test, track and test operation that will be world-beating and yes it will be
in place by June 1," he said.

"There will be 25,000 trackers, they will be able to cope with 10,000 new cases a day."

In a creeping return to the combative nature of PMQs, Sir Keir said the UK has been through a "critical period" of nearly 10 with no "effective tracing" of people spreading the virus.

He said the government's action had left "a huge hole in our defences".

Mr Johnson did not hold back in his criticism of the Labour leader, accusing Sir Keir of being "in ignorance of the facts" on care homes and offering "feigned ignorance" on the lack of tracing since mid-March.

Tempers ran high elsewhere in parliament, as the health secretary was sternly reprimand for interrupting Sir Keir.

The House of Commons Speaker told him: "Do you want to leave the chamber? We're on maximum numbers. If you want to give way to someone else I'm more than happy."

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...dy-for-schools-to-reopen-pm-promises-11991606
 
BREAKING: NHS England reports 166 more hospital deaths

A further 166 people in England who tested positive for Covid-19 have died, NHS England has announced. It brings the confirmed coronavirus deaths in English hospitals to 25,080.

Scotland reported another 50 deaths, bringing its total number of confirmed deaths to 2,184.

Five further deaths were recorded in Northern Ireland, while 14 more people in Wales died after testing positive for the virus.

The UK-wide total, due to be published later, may differ because it is calculated over a different time-frame and includes deaths in all settings.
 
Teachers have their say on English school plans

As well as parents, teachers got in touch with BBC Radio 5 Live this morning to have their say on plans to reopen primary schools in England to some pupils from 1 June.

Gemma is a teaching assistant at a junior school in Hemel Hempstead. She's been going into school anyway, as have her children, and says she’s "probably more anxious for my own children than I am for myself because they’re going to be around more children… As a parent you just instinctively worry regardless of what science is telling us”.

School governor and teacher Matthew (not his real name) says that not knowing how many pupils will come back is proving challenging.

“Informally, from conversations with colleagues and parents, there are a lot of parents who would be reluctant to send their children back in,” he says, “so you’re looking at potential occupancy of between 40 – 70%. That will add to the workload of schools because we’re having to prepare as though we’ll receive 100% of the pupils on the roster”.

Jo is a teacher at a private school but also has two children at primary school, one with underlying health conditions.

She says she understands people’s concerns but: “We have to go with the science, and the science suggests it is low risk.

“Being in school is more than just learning, it’s their mental wellbeing, it’s their social and emotional development. It’s how they're going to be independent.

“It’s very important for vulnerable children, but it’s important for all children."

She says she feels “very cross” about some of the language being used around the debate. "I feel that is feeding into parents' fear. We have over a week still to get ready and we can do that."
 
UK contact tracing will be in place by 1 June, PM says

At Prime Minister's Questions today, Boris Johnson promised the UK would have in place a "world-beating" system to test and trace people who may have been exposed to coronavirus.

He said 24,000 out of 25,000 contact tracers had already been recruited, referring to teams of people who identify who has been in contact with a person who contracted coronavirus, to notify them so they don't infect others.

But Mr Johnson did not mention the contact-tracing mobile phone app trialled on the Isle of Wight, which uses Bluetooth to detect and record other app users and notifies you if you've been near someone who later develops symptoms.

BBC health correspondent Nick Triggle says that what launches on 1 June will effectively be a prototype track-and-trace system, not a fully functioning one. While contact tracers will be available, the app may not be ready on day one, he adds.
 
What we learned from today’s UK briefing

Here's a recap of the main points from the Downing Street briefing, led for the first time by Culture Secretary Oliver Dowden:

The Queen's Birthday Honours List has been delayed until the autumn, so that people who have made a contribution to the coronavirus crisis can be recognised with a mark of "national gratitude"

Mr Dowden pledged £150m from dormant bank accounts to support social enterprises

A task force has been set up to examine how to resume sports and arts activities without crowds, featuring figures from football, TV, the arts and technology

The number of people in hospital with Covid-19 has fallen below 10,000 for the first time since March

Mr Dowden denied that issues with infections in care homes have been "glossed over", saying that testing was available "right from the very beginning” and the number of infections was coming down

Mr Dowden said talks about the Premier League playing behind closed doors could create a "win-win" by allowing additional matches to be broadcast free-to-air. He said existing TV rights could be respected, but concerns about competing with matchday attendances would be removed
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More than 300 emergency workers have been assaulted across England and Wales in cases linked to the coronavirus.

Max Hill QC, director of public prosecutions, said they were among 660 Covid-related offences dealt with by the Crown Prosecution Service in April, during the lockdown.

Mr Hill described the attacks on police, paramedics and nurses as "particularly appalling".

He said that of all the Covid-linked crimes, which related to 424 defendants, there was a "very high conviction rate" of 97%, with most pleading guilty early.

There were 313 alleged assaults on emergency workers, 142 cases of criminal damage, 99 public order offences, 62 common assaults and 44 shoplifting cases.

The National Police Chiefs' Council is expected to give further details of crimes recorded by police during the lockdown period later.
 
UK government procures antibody test

The UK government has reached a deal to acquire antibody tests, a spokesman says.

The tests, which show if someone has previously had coronavirus, will first go to health and care workers. The tests will be free.

The spokesman said the health secretary, Matt Hancock, would set out details at today's evening briefing.

The government had previously been known to be in negotiations with the drugs manufacturer Roche.
 
BREAKING: Another 338 people die in UK

In the UK, 338 people with coronavirus died on Wednesday, according to the Department for Health.

That takes the UK's total to 36,042 deaths.

The true figure for total deaths is likely to be higher as not everyone is tested.

Meanwhile, 128,340 tests were carried out on Wednesday, taking the total number of tests up to 3,090,566.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">As of 9am 21 May, there have been 3,090,566 tests, with 128,340 tests on 20 May. <br><br>2,064,329 people have been tested of which 250,908 tested positive. <br><br>As of 5pm on 20 May, of those tested positive for coronavirus, across all settings, 36,042 have sadly died. <a href="https://t.co/ddepkiQSxU">pic.twitter.com/ddepkiQSxU</a></p>— Department of Health and Social Care (@DHSCgovuk) <a href="https://twitter.com/DHSCgovuk/status/1263460601843548163?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 21, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Northern Ireland schools could reopen to some pupils in August

As parents hold their breath for news of when UK children might be returning to school, a Northern Ireland minister says some pupils may be back in their classrooms by late August.

Education minister Peter Weir said: "Subject to medical guidance and safety, it would be my aim to see a phased reopening of schools."

He said it would begin with "limited provision for key cohort years in August, followed by a phased provision for all pupils at the beginning of September".

He added pupils could expect a "new normal reflective of social distancing and a medically safe regime", with a mix of scheduled school attendance and home learning.

Schools in the UK have been closed since March. In England, some younger children could be back at school on 1 June, while in Scotland there will be no return until the new school year on 11 August. No date has been given for the reopening of schools in Wales.
 
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Fast test being trialled

Matt Hancock says a faster form of swab testing - telling people if they currently have coronavirus - is being trialled from today.

It could give a result in just 20 minutes.
 
Coronavirus: Acting earlier would have saved lives, says Sage member

One of the government's scientific advisers has said he would have liked ministers to have acted "a week or two weeks earlier" in the virus pandemic.

Sir Ian Boyd, who sits on the Sage scientific advisory group, said "it would have made quite a big difference" to the death rate.

Ministers have always insisted they have been guided by the scientific advice during the pandemic.

Government figures show 36,042 people with the virus have died in the UK.

Sir Ian is a professor of biology at St Andrews University and is a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), which advises ministers on Covid-19.

He started attending Sage meetings a month ago.

'Slower off the mark'
He told The Coronavirus Newscast: "Acting very early was really important and I would have loved to have seen us acting a week or two weeks earlier and it would have made quite a big difference to the steepness of the curve of infection and therefore the death rate.

"And I think that's really the number one issue - could we have acted earlier? Were the signs there earlier on?"

Sir Ian suggested that the government based its initial assessment on the transmissibility of the Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome (Sars) virus, which is less infectious than this coronavirus.

Sars was a previously unknown disease that started to spread around the world in 2003. It went on to infect more than 8,000 people and kill almost 800.

He described the UK and other European countries as "a bit slower off the mark" and less prepared than countries that had experienced Sars in the early 2000s.

"One could point the finger at ministers and politicians for not being willing to listen to scientific advice.

"You could point the finger at scientists for not actually being explicit enough.

"But at the end of the day all these interact with public opinion as well. And I think some politicians would have loved to have reacted earlier but in their political opinion it probably wasn't feasible because people wouldn't have perhaps responded in the way they eventually did."

Sir Ian also called on ministers to stop saying they are "led" by the science.

"I think the statement 'we are guided by the science' is slightly misleading. I don't think ministers intend it to be misleading. I think they intend it to help to provide trust in what they are saying. And quite rightly so.

"Basically what we in the scientific community do is give the best advice we can based on the evidence that's available to us. We then pass it to government ministers and the policy parts of government who can then take that and do with it what they like within the policy context."

Sir Ian - who was the chief scientific advisor at the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs from 2012-19 - said Sage meetings are currently taking place over Zoom.

He defended the participation of political aides, such as the prime minister's adviser Dominic Cummings, saying: "It brings them back to reality."

More than 50 people sit on Sage. The membership of the group was published in early May.

It was followed by the publication of documents from the group setting out their advice.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-52764645
 
BREAKING: Further 351 coronavirus deaths across the UK

A further 351 people have died from coronavirus across the UK, taking the official total to 36,393.

The latest Department of Health figures show 140,497 tests took place as of 09:00 BST today.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">As of 9am 22 May, there have been 3,231,921 tests, with 140,497 tests on 21 May. <br><br>2,144,626 people have been tested of which 254,195 tested positive. <br><br>As of 5pm on 21 May, of those tested positive for coronavirus, across all settings, 36,393 have sadly died. <a href="https://t.co/tOO6oMwtK7">pic.twitter.com/tOO6oMwtK7</a></p>— Department of Health and Social Care (@DHSCgovuk) <a href="https://twitter.com/DHSCgovuk/status/1263817035601121280?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 22, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
What's happening in the UK today?

It's the end of the working week for many and the start of a long weekend in the UK. So what's the picture looking like across the nation this afternoon?

The R number in the UK - showing the reproductive rate of the virus - has remained steady for the second week in a row

We've had more detail on plans to ask anyone arriving from abroad to self-isolate for 14 days - with the government saying those who fail to do so could risk a £1,000 fine

Government borrowing surged to £62bn in April - the highest monthly figure on record

A review of evidence has shown that children and adolescents are half as likely as adults to catch coronavirus. It also looks like they're less likely to spread it, but there's still uncertainty on this

In the retail sector, sales plummeted by a record amount in April, the Office for National Statistics says. Many stores have closed during the pandemic

A taxi driver has died with the virus - and his friend says he was spat at by a fare-dodger before falling ill
 
Not ‘everything has gone perfectly’, says NHS England chief executive

Britain should have learned more from other countries who were tackling coronavirus outbreaks earlier, the head of NHS England Simon Stevens has said, acknowledging that not everything with the response had gone perfectly.

Asked by lawmakers on a parliamentary committee whether Britain should have learned lessons on things like the provision of protective equipment, Stevens, chief executive of the National Health Service in England, said: "I'm sure the answer to that is definitely yes."

"I don't think everything has gone perfectly, in a way how could it? There are clearly things that we will want to learn from and do differently in future," he told the Public Accounts Committee.
 
Overseas nationals allowed to stay in UK until July

Overseas nationals in the UK who cannot return home due to the pandemic will be granted visa extensions until the end of July, the Home Office has announced.

The measure will apply to people whose leave expired after 24 January and who cannot leave the country because of travel restrictions or self-isolation.

But those currently in the UK on temporary visas, such as visitor visas, should return home as soon as it is safe and possible to do so, the department added.

People affected need to contact a coronavirus immigration team by using an online form.

The Home Office said "no immigration enforcement action will be undertaken during this time" for those who contact the team to notify them their visa has expired - while some requirements, like visa sponsors, will be waived.
 
People arriving in the UK must self-isolate for 14 days from 8 June to help slow the spread of coronavirus, the government has said.

Travellers will need to tell the government where they will quarantine, with enforcement through random spot checks and £1,000 fines in England.

Home Secretary Priti Patel said the measure would "reduce the risk of cases crossing our border".

Lorry drivers, seasonal farm workers, and coronavirus medics will be exempt.

The requirement will also not apply to those travelling from the Republic of Ireland, the Channel Islands and the Isle of Man.

According to the Home Office, the new policy will be in place across the UK, although how it is enforced in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland will be determined by the devolved administrations.

If a person does not have suitable accommodation to go to, they will be required to stay in "facilities arranged by the government".

So-called "air bridges" - agreements with countries that have low infection rates allowing tourists to travel without quarantining - will not be in place initially, the government said.

The new measure, which was previously announced by Prime Minister Boris Johnson but the details of which were revealed on Friday, will be reviewed every three weeks once it is introduced.

But airlines have said a quarantine requirement would "effectively kill air travel" - and one airport boss described the plans as a "blunt tool".

The government currently recommends international travel only when absolutely necessary, and nobody should travel if they display any coronavirus symptoms.

What does the new system involve?
Passengers arriving in the UK will be required to fill out an online locator contact form - providing details of where they will spend their 14 days in self-isolation.

The Home Office said the proposed accommodation will need to meet necessary requirements, such as a hotel or a private address with friends or family.

There will be a fine of £100 for failure to complete the form, and the Border Force will have the power to refuse entry to non-UK citizens who do not comply with the new regulations.

New arrivals will be told they may be contacted at any time during their quarantine and may be visited by public health authorities conducting spot checks.

They will be told to avoid public transport and travel to their accommodation by car "where possible", and not to go out to buy food or other essentials "where they can rely on others".

In England, a breach of self-isolation would be punishable by a £1,000 fixed penalty notice, or prosecution and an unlimited fine for persistent offenders.

A full list of exemptions to the new requirements will be published by the government. They include road haulage and freight workers, medical professionals travelling to fight Covid-19, and seasonal farm workers who will self-isolate where they are working.

Why now?
Analysis by Helen Catt, political correspondent

The big question being asked about quarantine is: why now?

The government argues that it simply wouldn't have made enough of a difference while the virus was spreading widely within the UK.

But it hasn't, so far, fully explained why such a blanket measure was not introduced much earlier in the outbreak, before the virus took hold.

People returning from Wuhan city and Hubei province in China were put into isolation for 14 days from late January.

Later, those returning from Italy were told to self-isolate.

But the measure was not extended to travellers from every country.

There are also questions about how this will work in practice and what it will mean for the travel industry, which is already suffering huge losses.

The home secretary said the new measures aim to "keep the transmission rate down and prevent a devastating second wave".

She added: "I fully expect the majority of people will do the right thing and abide by these measures. But we will take enforcement action against the minority of people who endanger the safety of others."

The number of people who have died with coronavirus in the UK has reached 36,393 - a rise of 351 on Thursday's figure.

https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-52774854
 
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Quarantine move will 'hold back UK economic recovery'

Business and aerospace groups have been reacting to the new plans to quarantine people arriving into the UK.

British Chambers of Commerce director general Adam Marshall said businesses in the UK - and around the world - would be "deeply concerned".

"This approach will damage international business and investor confidence at a time when it is vital to demonstrate that the UK can open for business safely."

He called for stronger safety measures are airports instead of a 14-day self-isolation period.

And ADS - which represents aerospace, defence, security and space sectors in the UK - said the move would "hold back the UK's economic recovery".

Its chief executive Paul Everitt said: "Key workers across our sectors must be provided with a route to secure exemptions and allow travel essential to our economic recovery."
 
Quarantine move will 'hold back UK economic recovery'

Business and aerospace groups have been reacting to the new plans to quarantine people arriving into the UK.

British Chambers of Commerce director general Adam Marshall said businesses in the UK - and around the world - would be "deeply concerned".

"This approach will damage international business and investor confidence at a time when it is vital to demonstrate that the UK can open for business safely."

He called for stronger safety measures are airports instead of a 14-day self-isolation period.

And ADS - which represents aerospace, defence, security and space sectors in the UK - said the move would "hold back the UK's economic recovery".

Its chief executive Paul Everitt said: "Key workers across our sectors must be provided with a route to secure exemptions and allow travel essential to our economic recovery."

The government will now make everyone suffer because they failed to act when it was needed. This is an impractical solution that will negatively impact the economy.
 
The government will now make everyone suffer because they failed to act when it was needed. This is an impractical solution that will negatively impact the economy.

I thought this is what everyone wanted? Complete shut down
 
Dominic Cummings travelled hundreds of miles from London to County Durham during the lockdown when he had virus symptoms, the BBC has been told.

A source close to the PM's chief aide confirmed reports he and his wife went to his parent's home to self-isolate.

But the BBC's Laura Kuenssberg said she had been told Mr Cummings did not break government guidance because he and his wife stayed in a separate building.

The story was first reported by the Mirror and Guardian newspapers.

Labour said No 10 needed to provide a "very swift explanation" for Mr Cummings' actions.

"If accurate, the prime minister's chief adviser appears to have breached the lockdown rules. The government's guidance was very clear: stay at home and no non-essential travel," a spokesman said.

"The British people do not expect there to be one rule for them and another rule for Dominic Cummings."

The Mirror and the Guardian reported Mr Cummings, the former Vote Leave supremo who was the architect of the PM's Brexit strategy, had been approached by the police.

Durham Constabulary said: "On Tuesday, March 31, our officers were made aware of reports that an individual had travelled from London to Durham and was present at an address in the city.

"Officers made contact with the owners of that address who confirmed that the individual in question was present and was self-isolating in part of the house.

"In line with national policing guidance, officers explained to the family the guidelines around self-isolation and reiterated the appropriate advice around essential travel."

A source close to Mr Cummings defended his actions, saying he made the trip because his parents could help with child care while he and his wife were both ill with symptoms of coronavirus.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-52779356
 
I thought this is what everyone wanted? Complete shut down

Not really, I endorse a middle ground. As in, setting stupid rules for travel will only strongly deter people from flying and causing nuisance. What about making travellers pay for a COVID test when entering the UK? I rather do that then sit indoors for 2 weeks when I have no corona. What about my job? What if they want me in the office after my holidays? BOJO has lost his marbles.
 
Not really, I endorse a middle ground. As in, setting stupid rules for travel will only strongly deter people from flying and causing nuisance. What about making travellers pay for a COVID test when entering the UK? I rather do that then sit indoors for 2 weeks when I have no corona. What about my job? What if they want me in the office after my holidays? BOJO has lost his marbles.

There is and never was a middle ground. UK botched it’s response to Covid the moment it became hostage to the overwhelming public and allowed to media to run rampant. This is the bed we have allowed to be made, now we must sleep in it.

And still the people who have destroyed our economy now want to destroy the education of our children. We don’t deserve a democracy in afraid.
 
The United Kingdom has drawn up plans to require employers to cover 20% to 30% of furloughed employees’ wages from August to reduce the burden of the coronavirus crisis on government finances, the Times newspaper has reported.

The UK on 12 May extended its job retention scheme – the centrepiece of its attempts to cushion the coronavirus hit to the economy – by four months but told employers they would have to help to meet its huge cost from August.

“The Treasury has drawn up plans that would require employers to cover between 20 and 30 per cent of people’s wages,” the Times said.

“They would also be required to cover the cost of employer’s national insurance contributions, on average 5 per cent of wages.”

Source Guardian
 
The United Kingdom has drawn up plans to require employers to cover 20% to 30% of furloughed employees’ wages from August to reduce the burden of the coronavirus crisis on government finances, the Times newspaper has reported.

The UK on 12 May extended its job retention scheme – the centrepiece of its attempts to cushion the coronavirus hit to the economy – by four months but told employers they would have to help to meet its huge cost from August.

“The Treasury has drawn up plans that would require employers to cover between 20 and 30 per cent of people’s wages,” the Times said.

“They would also be required to cover the cost of employer’s national insurance contributions, on average 5 per cent of wages.”

Source Guardian

I foresee millions of people becoming unemployed once the furlough scheme comes to an end or employers have to contribute significantly. I am employed but seeking a new role, I really need to get a move on or else I am competing with all these people.
 
The UK prime minister must explain reports his chief aide Dominic Cummings broke lockdown rules, says the head of the union representing senior civil servants.

Speaking to the BBC, Dave Penman, general secretary of the FDA said: “When he [Dominic Cummings] says or does something he is doing it in the prime minister’s name.

“I don’t know whether he has flouted the rules or not but it certainly doesn’t look good.

“It is clearly a matter of public interest. If it looks like there is one rule for those at the centre of government and one rule for rest of the country, then the prime minister has a responsibility, as well as a constitutional responsibility, to explain his actions.”

Dorset's police and crime commissioner Martyn Underhill called the timing of the story “unfortunate”, given it will be "inevitably" be thrown back at police officers trying to enforce rules over the weekend.
 
Downing St says Dominic Cummings' actions "were in line with coronavirus guidelines" after an apparent breach of lockdown measures
 
Downing St says Dominic Cummings' actions "were in line with coronavirus guidelines" after an apparent breach of lockdown measures

We've just heard from No 10 saying the PM's chief adviser, Dominic Cummings, did not break any rules by travelling 260 miles from London to Durham during lockdown.

But this - more critical - statement has just come from the Durham police and crime commissioner, Steve White:

"Given the whole ethos of the guidance and regulations was designed to reduce the spread, regardless of reason, by travelling to County Durham when known to be infected was most unwise.

"To beat this crisis we need to be selfless as millions have been. The response by the people of Durham has been exemplary which makes this most frustrating and concerning."
 
Cummings needs to go. He’s been a shady character throughout this his pandemic
 
Outcome improving for critically ill patients in UK

A breakdown of the latest weekly statistics of Covid-19 patients admitted to critical care units in England, Wales and Northern Ireland shows doctors have become more skilled at keeping seriously ill patients alive during the course of the pandemic.

Recent statistics, from the Intensive Care National Audit & Research Centre, show that of the 5,330 patients who needed advanced respiratory support, more than half (54.4%) are still alive.

This marks a significant improvement from the early days of the crisis: figures produced up to Thursday 9 April showed that only a third of patients who needed advanced respiratory support survived.

Overall, 3,302 patients admitted to critical care have died, and 4,145 patients have been discharged. The rest are still receiving critical care.

Men make up more than 70% of patients in critical care - a characteristic constant throughout the pandemic.

A third of patients are from ethnic minority backgrounds, despite only making up around one fifth of the population.The reasons remain unclear, but health issues, living conditions and occupation have all been touted as possible factors, alongside the possibility of unknown genetic differences.

Being overweight also appears to be a significant risk factor.

Nearly three-quarters of the patients had a body mass index higher than the recommended healthy level of 18.5 to 25. Some 35.1% had a BMI of 25 to 30 - the overweight range. Some 38.8% had a BMI over more than 30 - putting them in the obese range.

The average age of the patients admitted to critical care is 58.6 years.

In terms of outcome, the older patients are, the higher the risk of death. Of the 585 patients aged 16-39, 17.6% died. In contrast of the 1,404 patients aged 70-79, 64.1% died.
 
Cummings: 'I behaved reasonably and legally'

In the past hour, we've heard from the PM's chief aide Dominic Cummings for the first time since it was revealed he travelled from London to County Durham during the coronavirus lockdown.

Speaking to reporters outside his home, he says he did "the right thing" in making the trip.

"Who cares about good looks," he added. "It's a question of doing the right thing. It's not about what you guys think."
 
12-year-old among latest coronavirus deaths

NHS England has announced 157 more deaths of people who tested positive for coronavirus.

Among the latest deaths announced was a 12-year-old with underlying health conditions.The youngest death to be announced by NHS England was a six-week-old baby.

It brings the total number of confirmed reported deaths in hospitals in England to 25,545. The deaths occurred between 1 and 22 May, except three were in April.*

A further six deaths have been announced by Public Health Wales on Saturday. A total of 1,260 people have died with coronavirus in Wales.

A further 16 people have died as a result of Covid-19 in Scotland taking the total to 2,261.

We should be hearing a UK-wide figure later.

*NHS England releases updated figures each day showing the dates of every coronavirus-related death in hospitals, often including previously uncounted deaths that took place several days or even weeks ago.
 
Dominic Cummings defends 260-mile lockdown trip

The PM's top aide Dominic Cummings says he did the "right thing" by travelling 260 miles to be near relatives during the coranavirus lockdown - adding that he did not care what it looked like.

Mr Cummings is facing calls to resign over the journey, which he made with his wife who had Covid-19 symptoms.

Downing Street said he wanted to ensure he had childcare if he got symptoms.

But Labour said that was not a satisfactory explanation and many people would be angry at his actions.

Mr Cummings told reporters he "behaved reasonably and legally" when asked about the trip from London to Durham.

Asked whether it looked good, he said: "Who cares about good looks? It's a question of doing the right thing. It's not about what you guys think."

Police said they attended a property in County Durham, after the Guardian and the Daily Mirror newspapers first reported Mr Cummings had been seen near his parents' home in early April.

Durham Police and Crime Commissioner Steve White said it had been "most unwise" for Mr Cummings to make the journey, "given the whole ethos" of the government's guidance.

In a statement, Downing Street said: "Owing to his wife being infected with suspected coronavirus and the high likelihood that he would himself become unwell, it was essential for Dominic Cummings to ensure his young child could be properly cared for.

"His sister and nieces had volunteered to help so he went to a house near to, but separate from, his extended family in case their help was needed. His sister shopped for the family and left everything outside.

"At no stage was he or his family spoken to by the police about this matter, as is being reported.

"His actions were in line with coronavirus guidelines."

Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-politics-52782913
 
Transport Secretary Grant Shapps announces a further 282 covid-19 related deaths have been recorded across all UK settings taking the total number of deaths to 36,675
 
The Labour Party has called for an inquiry into Dominic Cummings' trip from London to County Durham during the UK's coronavirus lockdown.

In a letter to Cabinet Secretary Mark Sedwill, Labour's Rachel Reeves says: “The British people have made important and painful sacrifices to support the national effort, including being away from family in times of need.

"It is therefore vital that the government can reassure the public that its most senior figures have been adhering to the same rules as everyone else.”

The letter dissects an earlier statement from Downing Street - contrasting its words with those of government spokespeople, Boris Johnson and medical and scientific guidance.

And it asks Sir Mark 10 questions, including when Johnson was made aware of his aide's trip to Durham.
 
UK daily briefing

The UK’s (rather tense) daily coronavirus briefing, hosted by deputy chief medical officer Dr Jenny Harries and and Transport Secretary Graham Shapps, has just ended.

It included questions from the press and public. Unsurprisingly, many of these revolved around allegations that the PM’s advisor Dominic Cummings broke the lockdown rules back in March. Here’s a summary of the key points:

The government has announced it will put £283m into moving public transport back to a full timetable. However, those who can should still work from home, and those who can should still avoid all forms of public transport. Even a fully restored service will only be capable of carrying, at best, one fifth of normal capacity, to allow for social distancing.

There have been a further 282 recorded deaths, bringing the UK’s total death toll to 36,675. Important to note - the government publishes the death toll based on those who definitely had Covid-19; broader figures based on suspected coronavirus deaths is larger.

On average, the number of deaths is starting to come down, Harries said.

The “steady, slow” downward trend in hospital admissions in England is continuing. Across all four nations, the percentage of mechanical ventilator beds occupied by patients with Covid-19 is also falling.

Testing for under 5s will be “progressed” going forward, said Harries, after a question on whether they’ll be able to get tested once early years facilities are reopened. Harries said it is known that children rarely become ill with Covid-19 and there are signals that the transmission from children is reduced.

Shapps was grilled on Cummings

Shapps dodged a question on whether or not the PM knew of Dominic Cummings’ 400km journey, simply saying: “the important thing is that everyone remains in the same place whilst they are in lockdown”. He also said the welfare of Cummings’ 4 year old child was “the important thing” - this is a reference to the explanation given by Downing Street for Cummings’ journey.

The PM gives Cummings his full support.

Asked if, like Cummings, those who become ill with the virus can go closer to relatives, Shapps says if you’re symptomatic, you have to get yourself locked down in the most practical way, and that this will be different depending on different family circumstances.
 
Devastating new claims have emerged that Dominic Cummings further breached the lockdown rules, as Downing Street came under sustained pressure to fire the prime minister’s most senior adviser.

The new testimony suggests Cummings left the home where he was staying in Durham to visit a town 30 miles away. He was allegedly spotted back in Durham on 19 April, days after he was photographed in London having recovered from the virus.

At the time, with the country at the peak of the pandemic, the government was insisting that people should be staying at home.

As Cummings faced calls to resign from across the political spectrum, the government was forced to defend his actions.

Ministers insisted he had stayed put once arriving at a property in Durham, where he had travelled after contracting the symptoms of coronavirus to seek the support from his extended family.

But the new claims would appear to demolish this defence and intensify questions over his claim that going there was permitted because he needed childcare while he was sick.


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The new accounts also raise fresh questions about his insistence that the initial 264-mile trip to Durham was justified.

The two new witnesses were revealed in a joint investigation by the Guardian/Observer and the Sunday Mirror.

One saw him in Durham on 19 April, days after Cummings was photographed in London having recovered from the virus.

A week earlier Cummings was seen by another witness in Barnard Castle on Easter Day, 30 miles away from Durham, the investigation found. The town, which takes its name from the English Heritage site at its centre, is a popular destination for days out.

Robin Lees, 70, a retired chemistry teacher from the town, says he saw Cummings and his family walking by the Tees before getting into a car around lunch time on 12 April.

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Lees said: “I was a bit gobsmacked to see him, because I know what he looks like. And the rest of the family seemed to match - a wife and child. I was pretty convinced it was him and it didn’t seem right because I assumed he would be in London.”

He added: “I went home and told my wife, we thought he must be in London. I searched up the number plate later that day and my computer search history shows that.”

Asked if thought Cummings should resign, Lees, said: “Of course he should. [Catherine] Calderwood [Scotland’s former chief medical officer] resigned after being stupid by visiting her second home. [Government scientific adviser Prof Neil] Ferguson didn’t even go anywhere, it was his mistress, and he had to resign too.

“They didn’t do anything nearly as irresponsible as Cummings. You don’t take the virus from one part of the country to another. It just beggars belief to think you could actually drive when the advice was stay home, save lives. It couldn’t have been clearer.”

When Cummings was apparently recognised a second time on 19 April he was wearing his trademark beanie hat, and was heard commenting on how “lovely” the bluebells were during an early morning Sunday stroll with his wife Mary Wakefield.

The second eyewitness, who declined to be named, said: “We were shocked and surprised to see him because the last time we did was earlier in the week in Downing Street.”

Cummings had been photographed on the 14 April in Downing Street, the first time he had been seen back at work since recovering from the virus.

“We thought ‘he’s not supposed to be here during the lockdown’,” the source said.

“We thought: ‘What double standards, one rule for him as a senior adviser to the prime minister and another for the rest of us.’”

At Saturday’s daily Downing Street press conference, the transport secretary, Grant Shapps, said Cummings’s actions, first revealed by the Guardian and Daily Mirror, were acceptable because he and his family had remained in isolation after arriving at the property in Durham, rather than travelling away from the property. “The decision here was to go to that location and stay in that location,” he said. “They didn’t then move around from there.”

The deputy chief medical officer, Jenny Harries, said the aim of the advice on self-isolation was to remain “out of circulation”.

Shapps said that the prime minister gave Cummings his full support. He added that he did not know when Boris Johnson became aware of the circumstances of Cummings’s decision to go to Durham.

Asked whether Cummings’s claim that the police had not spoken to his family despite an official statement to the contrary meant that Durham constabulary were lying, he said that he was “not sure where the confusion in that comes in”.

Durham police are standing by their statement on Friday that the Cummings family was reminded of the lockdown rules on 31 March, after he was seen in the city.

No 10 insisted that the family were not spoken to, and Johnson’s chief adviser claimed he did nothing wrong.

It came as figures from the police, church, the health service and the government’s own science advisory group condemned Cummings’s actions and warned that it risked undermining public adherence to the lockdown. Downing Street has also been accused of a cover-up after initial reports that some in No 10 knew he had made the journey.

Last night, Labour demanded a Whitehall inquiry into the trip. In a letter to cabinet secretary Sir Mark Sedwill, shadow cabinet office minister Rachel Reeves writes: “The British people do not expect there to be one rule for them and another rule for the Prime Minister’s most senior adviser.”

Meanwhile, the cabinet’s most senior ministers were accused of placing political loyalty over public health, after they launched an orchestrated battle to defend Cummings. Michael Gove, Dominic Raab, Rishi Sunak and Matt Hancock, were among those to defend the spin doctor.

Ed Davey, acting leader of the Liberal Democrats, said Cummings should be sacked, adding: “It’s rather insulting to the millions who’ve made sacrifices to keep to the government’s own rules for cabinet ministers now to be prioritising the career of Johnson’s spin doctor-in-chief above the public’s health and well-being.”

Nick Baines, the bishop of Leeds, told the Observer: “People have missed being with family members who have died. But, now we learn that there is one rule for the people and another for No 10 and the elite. Ministers have clearly been told to tweet support for Cummings. What price conscience? Or integrity? Or credibility? Or competence at a time when leadership can only be rooted in trust?”

Police warned that the allegations came at a crucial moment in the lockdown, with officers attempting to enforce the rules during a sunny bank holiday. George Peretz QC, a public law barrister, also suggested Cummings could have breached laws put in place to enforce the lockdown.

Downing Street declined to comment on the new claims.


https://www.theguardian.com/politic...st-doubt-on-dominic-cummingss-lockdown-claims
 
PM Johnson to update the public on coronavirus

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson will next week update the public on the coronavirus crisis as his government launches its test-and-trace system in an attempt to prevent a second deadly spike of the outbreak when people return to work.

The United Kingdom’s $3 trillion economy is facing the steepest recession in three centuries and Johnson is facing criticism for the worst death toll in Europe after opposition parties said he acted too slowly to counter the outbreak.

Johnson will hold a cabinet meeting of his senior ministers on Monday to update on ways the United Kingdom can slowly begin to ease the lockdown restrictions, including an update on schools and possibly non-essential retail.

As the government begins its test and trace system, Johnson is due to advise the public on what the data and research is indicating about the outbreak.

“A test and trace system allows us to isolate new infections so that we can control the spread of this virus, which will be vital while coronavirus remains present in the UK,” a Downing Street spokesman said.

https://uk.reuters.com/article/uk-h...-the-public-on-coronavirus-idUKKBN22Z0WF?il=0
 
UK nations announce more coronavirus deaths

NHS England has announced 147 more people have died in hospitals in England after testing positive for coronavirus, bringing the total number of deaths in the nation to 25,691.

Of the new deaths announced:

28 occurred on 23 May
40 occurred on 22 May
12 occurred on 21 May

The figures also show 49 of the new deaths took place between 1 and 20 May, 16 were in April, and the remaining two occurred in March with the earliest new death on 13 March.

It comes as nine more people have died in Scotland after testing positive with coronavirus, bringing the total there to 2,270, according to the Scottish Government.

A further seven people have died in Wales, bringing the total there to 1,267, Public Health Wales said.

And one more person has died in Northern Ireland after testing positive for coronavirus, according to the Department of Health.

Separate UK-wide death figures will be released by the Department of Health and Social Care later.
 
Decision on Scotland's lockdown 'due Thursday'

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon has said that a decision about whether some lockdown restrictions are to be eased will be made on Thursday.

This would see Scotland moving into phase one of a four-phase path out of lockdown.

Ms Sturgeon said any changes announced - which would initially be to allow outdoor activities - would start on Friday.

She also said a plan outlining how public transport could operate safely would be published tomorrow. But she emphasised that, for now, the message is to stay at home as much as possible.
 
Dom Cummings stumbling his way through one of the worst pres conferences I have ever seen! The British government hits a new low lol
 
A further 121 people have died in the UK after contracting Covid-19.

The Department for Health said 36,914 people had died in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for coronavirus as of 5pm on Sunday, up by 121 from 36,793 the day before.

In the 24-hour period up to 9am on Monday, 73,726 tests were carried out or dispatched, with 1,625 positive results.

Overall a total of 3,532,634 tests have been carried out and 261,184 cases have been confirmed positive.
 
The number of people who have died in the UK after testing positive for coronavirus has now reached 36,914.

The figures from the Department of Health and Social Care show a further 121 people have died in the past 24 hours.
 
PM: Markets and car showrooms to open from 1 June

PM Boris Johnson says: "Today I want to give the retail sector notice of our intention to reopen shops so they too can get ready."

He says the government intends for outdoor markets and car show rooms to open from 1 June.

He adds: "From 15 June, we intend to allow all other non-essential retail... to reopen."

He says this will only be permitted for premises that are "Covid-secure".
 
Professor Yvonne Doyle, Medical Director of Public Health England:

Prof Doyle says 0.25% is the average proportion of the population who had virus between 4-7 May. In any week recently, 61,000 might have been infected.

The R value - rate of infection - is between 0.7 and 1.

Some 3.5 million tests have been done in total. Around 73,000 completed on average daily.

The number admissions on 23 May was 595 - a considerable decline. We now have 12% on mechanical ventilation, Prof Doyle says. She calls the figures "good news".
 
Dom Cummings stumbling his way through one of the worst pres conferences I have ever seen! The British government hits a new low lol

This is meant to be the biggest brain in Downing Street. The man can’t string a proper sentence without being unclear
 
Lockdown open? Has UK managed to control the cases or they have just given up and left it to god?

It has left it to ‘instinct’ and ‘Judgement’.

I guess that’s what we anti lockdown people wanted to do before being victimised and ostracised for our views, hence reluctantly following the government’s advice on stay home and save lives. Clearly, we were too dumb to not realise that the laws are very much flexible
 
The number of deaths linked to coronavirus in England and Wales has fallen to its lowest level in six weeks, according to the latest figures from the Office for National Statistics.

It said 3,810 deaths involving COVID-19 were registered in England and Wales in the seven days to Friday 15 May.

That was equivalent to 26.1% of all deaths, and 120 fewer than the week before.

The ONS said there were 41,220 deaths with coronavirus registered in the two countries between 28 December and 15 May.

https://news.sky.com/story/coronavi...o-six-week-low-official-figures-show-11994770
 
A judge has ordered the government to respond to a legal challenge against the lockdown by 12 June.

The High Court made a ruling after the government asked for more time to respond to an attempted judicial review of the policy, led by the businessman Simon Dolan.

Mr Dolan’s challenging the government on three issues:

Whether the lockdown is unlawful because the government implemented regulations under the Public Health Act 1984 instead of the Civil Contingencies Act 2004 or the Coronavirus Act 2020

The legality of the continuation of lockdown and whether the tests for lifting it are too narrow and failing to take account of the economic and social impacts

Whether the restrictions brought in by the government contravene the European Convention of Human Rights, which covers the right to liberty, family life, education and property
 
A judge has ordered the government to respond to a legal challenge against the lockdown by 12 June.

The High Court made a ruling after the government asked for more time to respond to an attempted judicial review of the policy, led by the businessman Simon Dolan.

Mr Dolan’s challenging the government on three issues:

Whether the lockdown is unlawful because the government implemented regulations under the Public Health Act 1984 instead of the Civil Contingencies Act 2004 or the Coronavirus Act 2020

The legality of the continuation of lockdown and whether the tests for lifting it are too narrow and failing to take account of the economic and social impacts

Whether the restrictions brought in by the government contravene the European Convention of Human Rights, which covers the right to liberty, family life, education and property

About time!
 
Lowest UK weekly death toll for six weeks

The Office for National Statistics says there were 3,810 deaths involving coronavirus in England and Wales during the week ending 15 May - the lowest weekly number recorded in the last six weeks.

Coronavirus accounted for just over 25% of all deaths in the UK that week.

The latest figures from the National Records of Scotland, published last week, showed 3,546 deaths had been registered in Scotland up to 17 May.

The latest figures from the Northern Ireland Statistics and Research Agency, also published last week, showed 664 deaths in Northern Ireland up to 20 May.

The ONS's publication also looked at "excess deaths" in England and Wales - in other words how many more deaths were registered in the first 20 weeks of 2020 compared with the five-year average for the same time of year.

An analysis of that data found there was no additional risk of dying during that period for people under the age of 45.

51da9873-5c4a-4221-8de0-2a9fdf8ceaed.png
 
BREAKING: 134 further UK coronavirus deaths

A further 134 coronavirus deaths have been recorded across all settings in the UK, taking the country's total to 37,048.

The Department of Health and Social Care said 2,004 more people had tested positive for coronavirus as of 09:00 BST on Tuesday.

A technical problem meant statistics reporting the number of people tested could not be published, the department said.

<blockquote class="twitter-tweet"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">As of 9am 26 May, there have been 3,681,295 tests, with 109,979 tests on 25 May. <br><br>265,227 people have tested positive.<br><br>As of 5pm on 25 May, of those tested positive for coronavirus, across all settings, 37,048 have sadly died. <a href="https://t.co/qNNPHGUDvQ">pic.twitter.com/qNNPHGUDvQ</a></p>— Department of Health and Social Care (@DHSCgovuk) <a href="https://twitter.com/DHSCgovuk/status/1265280074053382148?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 26, 2020</a></blockquote> <script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-lang="en"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Liverpool's Champions League home match against Atletico Madrid and the Cheltenham Festival contributed to an increase in coronavirus deaths in the UK, a scientist has said.</p>— Sky Sports (@SkySports) <a href="https://twitter.com/SkySports/status/1265575219407831040?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">May 27, 2020</a></blockquote>
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What's the latest in the UK?

Plans for "local lockdowns" to tackle future outbreaks of coronavirus could involve shutting individual schools and workplaces, a minister said. The health secretary is expected to outline the contact tracing system later

The government's furlough scheme is now paying the wages of 8.4 million employees, while a further 2.3 million self-employed workers are claiming support due to the pandemic

Paramedics in Wales report that they are increasingly facing aggression from suspected Covid-19 patients when asking them to wear face masks, and some ambulance staff have been assaulted

Premier League clubs have voted to resume contact training as the league moves towards restarting the season "when conditions allow"

And theatregoers are being asked to pay between £10 and £65 to watch online as Clare Foy and Matt Smith perform a play in an empty theatre, as the Old Vic in London seeks to alleviate a "perilous" financial situation
 
UK nations report latest hospital death tolls

A further 183 people have died in hospital after testing positive for Covid-19, NHS England has reported.

It brings the total number of hospital deaths in England to 26,049.

Deaths of confirmed coronavirus patients in Scotland's hospitals rose by 13, First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said, making a total of 2,304.

And Public Health Wales said a further 11 people had died after positive tests, bringing the total in Wales to 1,293.

Two more people also died in Northern Ireland, where the death toll now stands at 516.

Reported death tolls in the four nations may differ from the total announced by the UK government later, as they are calculated in a slightly different time-frame, and the UK total includes deaths in care homes and other settings.
 
UK furlough scheme now covers 8.4 million workers

Some 8.4 million workers are now covered by the government's furlough scheme, up from eight million a week earlier, the Treasury has said.

Claims for subsidies filed by employers rose to £15bn from £11.1bn, it added.

The scheme, brought in to mitigate the effects of coronavirus, allows employees to receive 80% of their monthly salary up to £2,500.

A similar scheme for self-employed workers saw 2.3 million claims made worth £6.8bn.

The Self-Employed Income Support Scheme, as it is known, differs from the furlough scheme because it is a grant paid out in a single instalment covering three months and amounting to 80% of average profit.

The furlough scheme, officially called the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme, was originally intended to last until the end of July, but has now been extended until the end of October.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak has confirmed that it will continue to provide the same level of earnings, but has said the government will ask companies to "start sharing" the cost of the scheme from August.

Sources have told the BBC the Treasury still expects to be paying more than half the costs between August and October.

Recent figures from the government's independent economic forecaster, the Office for Budget Responsibility, indicate that the cost of the government's efforts to combat the coronavirus pandemic is expected to hit £123.2bn.

The OBR expects annual borrowing to equal 15.2% of the UK economy, which would be the highest since the 22.1% seen at the end of World War Two.

It said it had increased its estimate because of the rising cost of the furlough scheme.

https://www.bbc.com/news/business-52819591
 
UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock is leading the UK daily coronavirus briefing

A track and trace system is to begin in England on Thursday as the lockdown eases

UK PM Boris Johnson is questioned by MPs amid continued calls for his top adviser to resign
 
Easy Jet to release 30% staff

Where is the bloke who was grinning at the prospect of the furlough scheme being extended??
 
UK has highest death rate: FT analysis

The UK has suffered the highest death rate from the coronavirus among the most-affected countries with comparable tracking data, according to Financial Times research.

Official numbers from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) released earlier this week show the UK has registered almost 60,000 more deaths than usual since the week ending March 20.

Subsequent analysis by the FT, which looked at data from 19 countries, show the virus has directly or indirectly killed 891 people per million in the UK, the highest comparable figure.
 
Easy Jet to release 30% staff

Where is the bloke who was grinning at the prospect of the furlough scheme being extended??

I can only assume you're talking about me. I claimed when the furlough scheme ends there would be a wave of mass redundancies. The furlough scheme ends in its current form in just over a months time and EasyJet have just started consultation to make up to 30% of their staff redundant, make of that what you will.
 
So Scotland do tomorrow what England did 3 weeks ago, with a bit more flexibility as 2 households of up to 8 can meet in gardens.
 
PM to give more details of easing UK's lockdown

Later today the prime minister will set out what lockdown restrictions will be eased from 1 June.

Boris Johnson's spokesman said the government's scientific advisory group, known as Sage, was meeting later today and the prime minister would set out what will be allowed, subject to their advice.

The spokesman said there was no special Cobra meeting today to approve the easing of lockdown measures. He said cabinet discussed the roadmap when they met on Monday. The prime minister will discuss the issue on a call with the nations' first ministers later this afternoon and with opposition parties in Westminster.
 
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