Coronavirus: 'Stay alert' slogan rejected by Wales' health minister
Coronavirus: Wales' stay home advice 'has not changed'
(about 1 hour later)
Politicians in Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland have not agreed to the UK government's new coronavirus message, Wales' health minister has said.
Coronavirus lockdown advice has not changed in Wales, the First Minister Mark Drakeford has said.
On Sunday, Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled a new slogan, telling the public to "stay alert, control the virus, save lives".
Prime Minister Boris Johnson has announced a change to the UK government's message for England - calling on people to "stay alert, control the virus" and "save lives".
But Vaughan Gething said there had not been a "four-nations agreement" on it.
But the slogan has been rejected by Welsh ministers who control the lockdown rules in Wales.
The UK government is responsible for the lockdown in England.
Mr Drakeford said people should stay home "wherever you can".
First Minister of Scotland Nicola Sturgeon tweeted that the Sunday papers were the "first" she had seen of the new slogan.
In a video statement, the first minister said he had set out "modest" changes to the stay home rules on Friday.
In an interview on BBC One's Politics Wales, First Minister Mark Drakeford stressed people should stay home except for the "limited" reasons given.
They included opening garden centres and allowing people to exercise more than once a day.
On Friday he announced "modest" changes to the lockdown in Wales, including allowing people to exercise more and to go to garden centres.
"Our advice has not changed in Wales," he said.
The prime minister, Mr Drakeford, Ms Sturgeon and Arlene Foster, First Minister of Northern Ireland, discussed lockdown in a Cobra meeting on Sunday.
Outside of England, the stay-at-home regulations are controlled by the devolved governments of Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland.
So far the regulations and the "Stay Home" message have been broadly similar across all four nations, with differences in Wales requiring two-metre social distancing in workplaces, and different fines.
But reports in newspapers suggesting lockdown could be significantly eased caused tensions with politicians in Wales and Scotland, who want a cautious UK-wide approach to any easing.
Later Downing Street conceded the different UK nations may move at different speeds.
On Sunday morning the UK government's Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick said it was the right time to "update and broaden" the message to the public from "stay at home" to "stay alert".
"Stay alert will mean stay alert by staying home as much as possible, but stay alert when you do go out by maintaining social distancing, washing your hands, respecting others in the workplace and the other settings that you'll go to," he said.
Mr Gething, Wales' health minister, emphasised it was an England-only message.
"I've seen the media briefings and changed message for England," he said on Twitter. "There has not been a four-nations agreement or discussion on this."
The Welsh Government's message had not changed, he said.
'We don't agree'
Other members of the Welsh Government expressed dismay at the message. Deputy Transport Minister Lee Waters said: "We don't agree with the change of message. It risks sending the wrong signal."
"In Wales, the very clear message is to STAY HOME AND SAVE LIVES," counsel general Jeremy Miles tweeted.
Asked about the new message on Politics Wales on Sunday, Mr Drakeford said: "Well I think it's very important for people to be alert.
"People are going to be outside of the home more than they have been in Wales because we are reopening garden centres, allowing people to exercise more than once a day.
"But people need to be alert, to stick with social distancing, do all the right things.
"If you're not doing one of the limited things on the list that takes you outside the home in Wales you should stay at home.
"That is still the way to keep yourself and others safe."
'Best answer to move in same direction'
Asked about whether he would set a roadmap, as expected in England, for exiting lockdown, he said he still believed "that the best answer is that we move in the same direction across the whole United Kingdom".
But he said "it may be that the timings of exact measures will be different".
Plaid Cymru and other Westminster opposition parties took part in a phone call with the prime minister on Sunday afternoon. Several of those present raised concerns with Boris Johnson directly over the Stay Alert message.
Liz Saville Roberts, Westminster Plaid leader, said: "I am very concerned over the potential for further confusion over messaging as to what's coming out of No.10, compared to what's coming out of the other three nations.
"I'm very concerned that that term 'Stay Alert' is just not as clear in anyone's mind as the message of stay home."
In the same Politics Wales interview, Mr Drakeford said the Welsh Government will use the latest three-week lockdown extension to look at the possibility of opening more public services.
Mark Drakeford said potential options for discussion, include resuming some postponed NHS procedures and use of public transport.
He also said talks about when and how to reopen schools would also continue but repeated that there will be no change at the start of June.
But he said changes would made in a "careful and cautious way".
"Certainly, in the Welsh Government, we would not be prepared to do anything that is signalled up to us as being a risk to the health of people in Wales," he said.
On Tuesday, the Health Minister Vaughan Gething said keeping the rate of transmission of the coronavirus - the so-called "R number" - will be the biggest factor in determining when the lockdown will be eased, with ministers wanting to keep R below one.
It was announced on Friday the R number stands at around 0.8 in Wales.
Asked where 'R' needed to be before further lockdown restrictions would be eased, Mr Drakeford said: "If we can hold that headroom [between R being 0.8 and 1] and increase it a bit further then there may be more things we can do.
"But it's a matter of doing things, testing their impact in the community and then making decisions based on the best evidence you have at the time.
"Lockdown can't go on forever both because it has other health impacts of its own... and, of course, lockdown does have an effect on the economy."