ENGLAND’S new lockdown could last beyond Christmas and will also include a crippling ban on pub takeaway pints, it emerged yesterday.
PM Boris Johnson faced a furious backlash from his own MPs as Michael Gove revealed the fresh curbs may be extended.
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The Cabinet Minister warned the R rate needs to fall below 1 before measures are lifted - and even then they would only be slightly eased.
His admission on the Sophy Ridge on Sunday show will raise fears of a ruined Christmas for millions of British families.
An extension of the lockdown would come as a blow for Brits making festive plans and banking on the restrictions being removed in a month.
The Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster said: "We are going to review it on December 2 but we are driven by the data.
"On the basis of what we have been told it should drive the R rate below 1.
"It’s our hope that we have significantly reduced the reinfection (R) rate."
Meanwhile, a former Cabinet Minister under David Cameron and Theresa May said the decision to go back into lockdown could be Boris Johnson's "Suez" - referring to the crisis that led to Anthony Eden's resignation as Prime Minister in 1957.
One serving minister said: "[Mr Johnson has] been overrun by the virus and his 'advisers'.
"They are nasty, they misunderstand the parliamentary party, and above all are totally, totally s**t.
"Over the last week - with the row over free school meals and this - I think we've lost the election."
Another said: "I think Rishi is going to have to take over. Boris's brand is being trashed every day."
BEER FEAR
The ban on takeaway beers has sparked fears it will deliver a fatal blow to thousands of the nation’s pubs.
Unlike the lockdown in the spring, pubs will only be allowed to serve food to take away — dashing hopes of nipping out for a pint or mulled wine on the street or back home.
Thousands of boozers, already stricken from months of restrictions on trading, could go to the wall because of the new measures.
Insiders in Downing Street told The Sun the rule had been introduced to avoid congregations of more than two people in the street.
But landlords say ministers need to make a U-turn on the ban, especially as supermarkets will still be able to freely sell alcohol.
Greg Mulholland, of the Campaign for Pubs, called it “disgraceful and nonsensical”.
Emma McClarkin, chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, added: “We cannot see the logic of letting supermarkets and shops sell alcohol, but not pubs that have off-licences.
“Government should reverse this decision immediately to help pubs and brewers survive and avoid pints being needlessly wasted.”
It comes as:
- Boris Johnson told the nation to "stay at home"
- The rules on what you can and can't do in Lockdown 2.0 are outlined
- The PM was warned ice rinks could be used as mortuaries
- Furlough is set to be extended with workers on 80% pay
Former chief scientific adviser Sir Mark Walport described the latest lockdown in England as "definitely" better late than never.
When asked if the new lockdown could be longer than the one in the spring, Sir Mark said: "It's obviously a possibility, yes and the only way to know is going to be to really count cases as accurately as possible."
On whether people should expect to be able to gather at Christmas, he said: "I think the virus is sublimely indifferent as to what day of the week it is and indeed whether it's Christmas or any other festivals, so it does seem a bit unlikely that it's going to be a completely normal Christmas, that's for sure."
Last night Boris Johnson ordered England into a second lockdown, after being told thousands of deaths could be occurring a day from the virus by Christmas if left unchecked.
Sage member Sir Jeremy Farrar told BBC's Andrew Marr restrictions could be extended beyond the Government's December 2 projected end date.
He said: "I think we need to watch what happens with the data at the end of November, beginning of December, before we decide whether to lift these restrictions on December 2, or whether it will be better continuing them."
"What mustn't happen is whenever that date comes - December 2 or a little bit later - that suddenly the world goes back to normal. It's not going to go back to normal immediately."
The PM was presented with horrifying plans in the event of hospitals becoming overwhelmed - including storing dead bodies in skating centres, amid warnings of 4,000 deaths a day.
Sir Simon Stevens, head of the NHS, pulled together the plans amid fears thousands would died each die at the peak of the second wave - expected to come by Christmas if nothing is done.
It was said to be this which convinced the PM to make the U-turn and order a national lockdown.
One official present at the Covid Quad committee meeting : “I could have wept – it was so awful.
“The PM was given hard facts about real people in hospital beds, and the debate was effectively over. He was told how many hospitalisations were already baked-in to the projections due to the steep rise in infections.”
The PM announced last night:
- People will have to stay at home for four weeks from Thursday - if MPs vote in favour
- They will only be able to leave home for school, work, medical reasons, exercise, shopping or providing care to the vulnerable
- People can only meet one other person outside their household outdoors
- The furlough scheme will be extended with 80 per cent of pay
- Pubs and restaurants will shut but will be allowed to do takeaways and deliveries
- Nurseries and schools are to remain open - but unions are already demanding they be shut
- International travel will be banned - except for work
- No overnight stays and internal UK-wide travel is set to be discouraged
- All non-essential retail will close, but supermarkets will be able to sell any and all goods they like
- There will be a nationwide ban on people mixing indoors - except for childcare
- People will be allowed to exercise as much as they like
- Manufacturing and construction will be encouraged to keep going - and Parliament and courts will stay open
- Shielding will not return but people who are vulnerable should take extra care
At yesterday's Downing Street press conference, Boris Johnson confirmed a four-week lockdown in England from Thursday to curb the spread of Covid-19, with the shutdown to last until December 2.
The Prime Minister warned without action to tackle the virus "we could see deaths running at several thousand a day".
Hospitals would run out of capacity within weeks and doctors forced to choose between "who would live and who would die", the PM said.
And this morning Mr Gove added: "The situation has been worse than any of expected and that's why action is required.
"If we weren't to take any further action, we would see hospital action diminish, we would see hospitals filling up. If we didn't act, by the first week in December the NHS would be full.
"The projections that we've seen... all say that without acting we would see the number of people exceed that that we saw in the first wave during this month, around the 20th or so of November."
The PM said it was now clear that hospitals in the South West will run out of capacity in just a few weeks "unless we act" and the nation would face a "medical and moral disaster".
Doctors would be forced to choose whose lives to save, and deprive millions of people across the nation the care they need.
However, he will face a huge Tory rebellion from his backbenchers - who are determined to fight another national shutdown.
It came as Britain officially passed one million cases of the virus.
The Sun Says
IT is damaging enough that Prime Minister Boris Johnson has decided to shut down the country once more in a desperate bid to slow the spread of Covid-19.
To describe the new measures as “a body blow to business”, as CBI chief Dame Carolyn Fairbairn does, is an understatement.
But Michael Gove today added salt to the wound when he warned that the month-long second lockdown could be extended beyond December 2 and even through Christmas and New Year if the reproduction of the virus – the R rate - does not fall sufficiently.
As one of the Cabinet “doves” who convinced Mr Johnston to do a U-turn, Mr Gove may regard dire Sage predictions as too alarming to ignore, and Lockdown 2 as a necessary evil to get the R rate in check.
But whose figures are we to trust?
There are plenty of scientists, like Oxford University’s Professor Carl Heneghan, who despair of such draconian restrictions being imposed based on “shoddy data” and contradictory and confusing statistics.
R, in their view, stands for Rubbish.
Whichever figures Mr Gove chooses to rely on, he should remember that R also stands for Recession, Redundancy and Ruin, rates of which will undoubtedly rise. And all of them are killers too.
It is vital that the lockdown ends as soon as possible.
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21,915 more people tested positive and 326 people died of the virus.
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The lockdown is set to last until December 2 in an attempt to save the nation's Christmas.
But it will apply to England only - Scotland and Wales have said they will assess the situation and apply their own rules.