Category: Coronavirus

  • Justin Madders – 2020 Comments on Contact Tracing System

    Justin Madders – 2020 Comments on Contact Tracing System

    The comments made by Justin Madders, the Shadow Health Minister, on 6 August 2020.

    It’s deeply concerning that the numbers are heading in the wrong direction again this week, with so many of the close contacts of people who have tested positive, and over 40 per cent of people in the same households, not being reached.

    We now need a plan of action from Ministers that sets out what they are doing to address these huge holes in the contact tracing system.

    If this means supporting local areas to establish their own local contact tracing systems and ending the failed contract with Serco – as Labour has been calling for, for some time – then Ministers must get on and implement this without delay. We urgently need to get test and trace back on track.

  • Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2020 Comments on Home Affairs Select Committee Report

    Nick Thomas-Symonds – 2020 Comments on Home Affairs Select Committee Report

    The comments made by Nick Thomas-Symonds, the Shadow Home Secretary, on 5 August 2020.

    The findings of this Home Affairs Select Committee report are a stark warning to the Government that it needs to learn lessons, and fast.

    The Government’s decision to lift self-isolation guidance on 13 March and create a situation where no border protections were in place for three months is described as “inexplicable” and there is harsh criticism for the mixed messaging on recent border measures.

    The Government needs to get a grip of its communication, be open and transparent about the quarantining measures it needs to take, by publishing the evidence it is based on, and develop a properly functioning testing system.

  • Vicky Foxcroft – 2020 Comments on Shielding Population

    Vicky Foxcroft – 2020 Comments on Shielding Population

    The comments made by Vicky Foxcroft, the Shadow Minister for Disabled People, on 5 August 2020.

    Sadly these statistics confirm what Labour has been warning for some time, issuing back to work notices for the clinical vulnerable with no support has left many facing an impossible choice between their health and their livelihood.

    The Government must publish the scientific advice it has received confirming it is safe for disabled and clinically vulnerable people to stop shielding. They must urgently confirm how those who cannot return to their workplace will be supported, how many people this affects and what steps they are taking to communicate this to the shielding community.

  • Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on Furlough Support

    Ed Miliband – 2020 Comments on Furlough Support

    The comments made by Ed Miliband, the Shadow Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, on 31 July 2020.

    Many businesses still have little or no cash coming in, but are trying to do the right thing and save their employees’ jobs. They now face the stark choice of letting go of their staff or facing a hefty financial burden to keep them on.

    Businesses in vastly different sectors and circumstances should not be treated in this uniform way, and it is clearly unfair and illogical for those employers still locked down and unable to trade. Unless Ministers recognise the scale of the jobs crisis and change course they will force employers to make cuts, and be culpable for thousands of workers across the country losing their jobs and livelihoods.

    Labour is calling on the Government to end their damaging blanket approach to ending furlough support before it is too late, and to target support at the hardest hit sectors. This would encourage businesses to stick with workers and not make them redundant now, which is inevitable unless government changes course.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Care Home Testing Pledge

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Care Home Testing Pledge

    The comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 3 August 2020.

    With infections rising, it’s frankly negligent ministers have failed to deliver on their promise to regularly test care home residents and staff. And to brief newspapers that over-50s may need to shield on the day shielding has been paused causes yet more unnecessary confusion and anxiety.

    Ministers have been too slow to act and explain their strategy throughout this pandemic. Test and Trace is costing £10 billion but is nowhere near the ‘world beating’ system we were promised.

    It’s critical measures are now put in place to control the virus including rapidly improving testing and locally-led contact tracing teams. The Government failed to protect care home residents and staff early on in this pandemic. They mustn’t make the same mistake again.

  • Andy McDonald – 2020 Comments on Confidence of Employees Returning to Work

    Andy McDonald – 2020 Comments on Confidence of Employees Returning to Work

    The comments made by Andy McDonald, the Shadow Employment Rights and Protections Secretary, on 3 August 2020.

    The Government’s guidance on working with Covid-19 is vague, and years of cuts to inspectors mean rules on health and safety are difficult to enforce.

    Following confused public messaging and the failure to set up a working track and trace system, it is no surprise that many employers and employees do not feel safe to return to places of work.

    The Government must work closely with workers and trade unions to implement clearer rules and a plan for how they will be enforced in order to give workers and businesses confidence they will be safe.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on the Government’s Track and Trace Scheme

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on the Government’s Track and Trace Scheme

    Comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 4 August 2020.

    For months Labour has warned ministers that, without a vaccine, an effective locally delivered test, trace and isolate regime would be critical to safe easing from lockdown.

    Instead Boris Johnson is handing multi-million pound contacts to firms like Serco and claiming his approach is ‘world beating’ when it is far from that and showing no signs of improvement. He should be honest with the public about his government’s failings.

    Given infection rates are rising and some areas have had restrictions tightened, it is no wonder local authorities are abandoning Johnson’s failed approach and setting up their own systems. Local Directors of Public Health, primary care and NHS labs were always better placed to do this vital work effectively and should be given the resources and data to get on with it.

  • Boris Johnson – 2020 Statement on the Coronavirus

    Boris Johnson – 2020 Statement on the Coronavirus

    The statement made by Boris Johnson, the Prime Minister, on 31 July 2020.

    Good afternoon,

    Two weeks ago, I updated you from this podium on the progress we had made as a country against coronavirus. And in many ways that progress continues.

    The number of patients admitted to hospitals is still falling, and now stands at just over 100 each day. In April there were more than 3,000 coronavirus patients in mechanical ventilation beds, but now the latest figure is 87.

    The number of deaths continues to fall. That is obviously encouraging

    But I have also consistently warned that this virus could come back and that we would not hesitate to take swift and decisive action as required.

    I am afraid that in parts of Asia and Latin America the virus is now gathering pace. And our European friends are also struggling to keep the virus under control.

    As we see these rises around the world, we cannot fool ourselves that we are exempt. We must be willing to react to the first signs of trouble.

    Today, the weekly survey by the Office for National Statistics reports that the prevalence of the virus in the community in England is likely to be rising for the first time since May.

    Around 1 in 1,500 now have the virus, compared to 1 in 1,800 on 15 July and 1 in 2,000 on 2 July. The ONS also estimate there are now 4,900 new infections every day, up from around 3,000 per day on 14 July and 2,000 per day at the end of June

    We can’t afford to ignore this evidence.

    It’s vital to stress that we are in a far better position to keep the virus under control now than we were at the start of the pandemic – because we know so much more about the virus and have so many more tools at our disposal to deal with it.

    Our testing capacity has increased 100-fold.

    We have a contact tracing system up and running which has led to over 184,000 people isolating who may otherwise have spread the virus and is capable of tracing thousands of contacts every day.

    We have secured supplies of billions of items of PPE to withstand new demands on hospitals and care homes.

    And of course we have new treatments, like dexamethasone and remdesivir, to shorten recovery times and reduce mortality rates.

    But as I say, we cannot be complacent. I cannot – I won’t stand by and allow the virus to cause more pain and heartache in this country.

    Last night the Health Secretary announced new restrictions on household contact in the North West – specifically Greater Manchester, and parts of East Lancashire and West Yorkshire.

    These are targeted measures on social contact between households, which the data tells us is driving the current increase in cases. Businesses and workplaces should continue as before in those areas.I know how it is hard to have restrictions like this imposed on seeing your family and your friends. But we have to act rapidly in order to protect those we love.

    And we know this sort of intervention works – measures taken in Leicester and Luton have suppressed the virus, allowing us to relax measures.

    Even as we act locally, it is also my responsibility to look again at the measures we have in place nationally in light of the data we are seeing about incidence.

    At every point I have said our plan to reopen society and the economy is conditional – that it relies on continued progress against the virus, and that we would not hesitate to put on the brakes if required.

    With those numbers creeping up, our assessment is that we should now squeeze that brake pedal in order to keep the virus under control.

    On Saturday 1 August, you’ll remember, we had hoped to reopen in England a number of higher risk settings that had remained closed. Today, I am afraid we are postponing these changes for at least a fortnight.

    That means that, until 15 August at the earliest:

    Casinos, bowling alleys, skating rinks and remaining close contact services must remain closed. Indoor performances will not resume.

    Pilots of larger crowds in sports venues and conference centres will not take place.

    Wedding receptions of up to 30 people will not be permitted, but ceremonies can continue to take place, in line with COVID-Secure guidelines.

    I know that the steps we are taking will be a heavy blow to many people – to everyone whose wedding plans have been disrupted, or who now cannot celebrate Eid in the way they would wish, I am really, really sorry about that. But we simply cannot take the risk.

    We will of course study the data carefully and move forward with our intention to open up as soon as we possibly can.

    Two weeks ago, I also said that from tomorrow the government would give employers more discretion over how employees can work safely – whether by continuing to work from home or attending a Covid Secure workplace. We know that employers have gone to huge lengths to make workplaces safe, so that guidance remains unchanged. We also said we would pause shielding nationally from 1 August – based on clinical advice, that national pause will proceed as planned, and our medical experts will be explaining more about that decision later and about shielding later today.

    Most people in this country are following the rules and doing their bit to control the virus. But we must keep our discipline, we must be focused and we cannot be complacent.

    I have asked the Home Secretary to work with the police and others to ensure the rules which are already in place are properly enforced.

    That means local authorities acting to close down premises and cancel events which are not following Covid Secure guidance.

    And it means a greater police presence to ensure face coverings are being worn where this is required by law. We will also extend the requirement to wear a face covering to other indoor settings where you are likely to come into contact with people you do not normally meet, such as museums, galleries, cinemas and places of worship. We now recommend face coverings are worn in these settings, and this will become enforceable in law from 8 August.

    At this stage, we are not changing the rules on social contact nationally. I don’t want to tell people to spend less time with their friends. But unless people follow the rules and behave safely, we may need to go further. Two weeks ago, I said we would hope for the best but plan for the worst.

    And of course we continue to hope for the best. The way to get there and to achieve that optimum outcome is if we all follow the rules, wash our hands, cover our faces, keep our distance – and get a test if we have symptoms, so that NHS Test and Trace can keep the virus under control.

    This is how we will avoid a return to full national lockdown.

    We’ve made huge progress together.

    I know we are going succeed and I know we are going to beat this – if each and every one of us plays our part.

  • Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Boris Johnson’s Press Conference

    Jonathan Ashworth – 2020 Comments on Boris Johnson’s Press Conference

    Comments made by Jonathan Ashworth, the Shadow Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 31 July 2020.

    Given the infection levels in parts of the country, and international warnings of a resurgence in the virus, Labour understands why measures have had to be taken to bring infection rates down.

    The virus remains widely distributed across the UK and yesterday’s official statistics confirming we have had the highest excess death rate in Europe is a clear reminder that being slow to act has devastating consequences.

    But the way in which the Government has made the announcement has called widespread confusion, anxiety and upset. Clarity is everything when dealing with a pandemic and ministers need to offer clear guidance and answers at today’s press conference.

    —– The full text of the press release is below:—-

    The Labour Party is today calling on the Government to answer twelve questions at today’s press conference.

    Overnight millions of people across northern England have been affected by new lockdown restrictions, which ban separate households from meeting each other at home after a spike in Covid-19 cases.

    The Party is calling on Boris Johnson to urgently answer the following questions today:

    What is the guidance for clinically extremely vulnerable people in these areas? What is the evidence behind pausing shielding for these groups given the local peaks?

    How are changes being communicated to these vulnerable groups like those shielding and people in care homes?

    Will there be increased testing of all NHS and care home staff and care home residents, to ensure that staff are not transmitting the virus to people who receive care in these areas?

    Will the Government publish the guidance behind the decision to not extend regular testing to care homes for under 65s and to domiciliary care staff?

    In Greater Manchester, East Lancashire, West Yorkshire and Leicester what is the rationale for banning households mixing in gardens but people are allowed to go to pubs?

    Evidence from Europe suggests the virus is spreading among younger people with some speculation pubs and bars are to blame. What assessments has the government made of the impact of pubs on the virus?

    An effective testing and tracing regime could have avoided these measures. When will we move to a mass testing regime with regular routine testing of symptomatic and asymptomatic people?

    Tracing is not ‘world beating’ as promised. Boris Johnson promised all non-home tests would be done in 24 hours by 30 June. Yet again in yesterday’s figures that promise has been broken a with a third of non-home tests still taking over 24 hours. We also saw that while 55 per cent of all tests were returned in 24 hours 3 weeks ago – now it’s just 50.6 per cent. Test and trace isn’t getting faster, it’s getting slower. What is government going to do about this considering the urgency of this situation?

    If a visitor to an area tests positive for cv19 while on holiday, then it would be recorded as an incident in their home location, not where they currently are. Will government change this to help assess true local spikes?

    People have been asked to isolate are not followed up to check they are isolating. This is a huge hole in our defences.

    Why not give this data to local public health officials so they can follow up to check people are isolating?

    Does the Prime Minister still think it is safe to for workers to return to offices on the 1 August? Has the Chief Scientific Advisor endorsed this recommendation and will he publish the evidence for it?

    Why was announcement made so late in the day, and will they implement a better, more uniform way of putting out this info on any future potential local lockdowns? What is the trigger the government is using to go into local lockdowns or impose restrictions? Is it a certain number of infections per 100,000 population? What is the trigger to come out of local lockdown?

  • Vicky Foxcroft – 2020 Comments on the End of the National Shielding Scheme

    Vicky Foxcroft – 2020 Comments on the End of the National Shielding Scheme

    Comments made by Vicky Foxcroft, the Shadow Minister for Disabled People, on 31 July 2020.

    While the Government claims it is optional, it has removed the support for 2.2 million people who have been shielding, including the national food parcel programme.

    Issuing back to work notices without assurances on safety, and removing help will force many back into situations they do not feel safe in, placing them at risk.

    Throughout this crisis, mixed messages and poor communication from Ministers have undermined the trust and confidence of shielding people and their families.

    We urge the Government to publish the scientific advice it has received confirming it is safe for disabled and clinically vulnerable people to stop shielding, and to confirm how it will support those who cannot return to their workplace and how many people this affects.