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Coronavirus UK live: Oliver Dowden leads daily briefing; No 10 unable to say when contact-tracing app will be ready | |
(32 minutes later) | |
Labour leader accuses PM of failing to tackle child poverty; UK’s official death toll rises by 184 to 42,153; excess deaths in Scotland at lowest level since April | |
Q: When will you let relatives visit people in care homes? | |
Dowden says he knows how difficult this has been for people. The health secretary is looking at this, he says. | |
Laura in Eastbourne asks how theatres can continue to employ staff. | |
Dowden says the job retention scheme has meant people in theatres have been able to keep their jobs so far. He says other Treasury help has been available. | |
It will be “exceptionally difficult” for theatres to open from July with social distancing. That is why he is still looking at what can be done. | |
Dowden says he has been looking hard at how live arts venues can start operating again. | |
He says the taskforce he set up has made a lot of progress. | |
But now the taskforce is going to take evidence from experts on what might be done, he says. | |
Dowden says he wants to get community sport back up and running. It will begin from the start of July at earliest. | |
Dowden says Premier League matches are resuming tonight. | |
He says this is an important moment. | |
But he urges fans to do their part - by watching from home. | |
Extended highlights of the matches will be available free to air, he says. | |
Dowden starts with the daily slides. | |
Here are the figures for testing and new cases. | |
Here are the death figures. | |
Oliver Dowden, the culture secretary, is taking the UK government’s daily press conference. | |
And here is more on what the health minister Lord Bethell told the Commons science committee. | |
Lord Bethell, the health minister responsible for the coronavirus testing programme, told the Commons science committee today that the contact-tracing app being trialled in the Isle of Wight might not be rolled out nationwide until the winter, Sky’s Rowland Manthorpe reports. | |
From the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health | |
Road traffic levels have surged to more than two-thirds of pre-lockdown levels as people avoid non-essential public transport journeys, PA Media reports. | |
The amount of traffic on Britain’s roads on Monday was 70% of the equivalent day in early February, according to new figures from the Department for Transport (DfT). | |
That is an increase of seven percentage points from the previous Monday and coincides with non-essential shops in England being allowed to open. | |
The use of trains and London Underground services on Monday was only at 8% and 14% respectively of levels on the same date in 2019, while bus use outside London was at 21% of the equivalent day in the third week of January. | |
Meanwhile, cycling in England had rocketed to 171% of what it was in early March. | |
Steve Gooding, director of motoring research charity the RAC Foundation, said the data showed people were starting to heed official advice to use cars and bikes rather than public transport. He added: | |
Boris Johnson’s £900,000 repainting of the RAF plane used by the prime minister on official business (see 2.57pm and 3.52pm) could end up costing more if it means it can no longer be used by the military as frequently as before. | |
The Voyager is used for military refuelling in combat zones such as Iraq and Syria as well to fly the prime minister, other senior ministers and members of the royal family - and like Johnson himself the RAF can’t get enough of it. | |
But if Johnson wants to increase the government’s access to the plane by buying more flying hours worth from the Ministry of Defence, it could increase the knock-on costs to the taxpayer because the military will be forced to charter aircraft for its own needs. | |
Andy Netherwood, a defence analyst, said: “The paint scheme gives away the fact that No 10 is re-purposing an aircraft acquired to provide defence. If Johnson wants a VIP jet fine, but make the argument and pay for it.” | |
The Voyager is one of a fleet of transport planes leased to the Ministry of Defence by a consortium of aerospace firms called Air Tanker, and was refitted with a VIP section when David Cameron was prime minister at a cost of £10m. | |
Another concern is that by repainting from grey it is that it will lose its military camouflage. | |
However, in an attempt at compromise, one source said that the body of the plane would be painted white with a blue stripe - while the tailfin would be painted in a union flag design. | |
This would make it look similar to a British Airways plane, but will present something of a headache for air force commanders who know that the Voyager would be more visible to enemy air forces as well as being identifiable as the UK’s principal VIP plane. | |
Close to 100 of the UK’s leading creative figures have signed a letter calling for an urgent government intervention to save Britain’s performing arts sector from imminent ruin. | Close to 100 of the UK’s leading creative figures have signed a letter calling for an urgent government intervention to save Britain’s performing arts sector from imminent ruin. |
Our colleagues Mark Brown and Lanre Bakare report that Phoebe Waller-Bridge, James McAvoy, Sharon D Clarke, Tom Stoppard, Wendell Pierce, Emma Rice and Andrew Scott are among the names backing the letter warning of the threat facing theatre, opera and dance amid the coronavirus crisis. | Our colleagues Mark Brown and Lanre Bakare report that Phoebe Waller-Bridge, James McAvoy, Sharon D Clarke, Tom Stoppard, Wendell Pierce, Emma Rice and Andrew Scott are among the names backing the letter warning of the threat facing theatre, opera and dance amid the coronavirus crisis. |
An extract reads: | An extract reads: |
The industry is asking the government to continue the job retention scheme, establish an emergency relief fund and come up with a new package of support for the army of freelancers who help create so much of the sector’s work. | The industry is asking the government to continue the job retention scheme, establish an emergency relief fund and come up with a new package of support for the army of freelancers who help create so much of the sector’s work. |
Most UK theatres have been closed since mid-March as the country began to lock down to curb the spread of coronavirus, with at least four saying they will not reopen. Others are beginning to make redundancies. As they burn through cash reserves, about three-quarters of venues say they will have run out of money by Christmas. | Most UK theatres have been closed since mid-March as the country began to lock down to curb the spread of coronavirus, with at least four saying they will not reopen. Others are beginning to make redundancies. As they burn through cash reserves, about three-quarters of venues say they will have run out of money by Christmas. |
The full story is here. | The full story is here. |
In the latest instalment of the Politics Weekly podcast, Jonathan Freedland and Frances Perraudin look at the latest in a series of government U-turns. Why did Boris Johnson decide to drag his feet on the issue of making sure children in England are fed? And does this signal the end of embarrassing U-turns? Listen to the episode here: | In the latest instalment of the Politics Weekly podcast, Jonathan Freedland and Frances Perraudin look at the latest in a series of government U-turns. Why did Boris Johnson decide to drag his feet on the issue of making sure children in England are fed? And does this signal the end of embarrassing U-turns? Listen to the episode here: |
In a statement about the collision outside parliament involving the prime minister’s car (see 3.11pm), the Metropolitan police say a man was “arrested at the scene for offences under section 5 of the Public Order Act and for obstructing the highway”. | In a statement about the collision outside parliament involving the prime minister’s car (see 3.11pm), the Metropolitan police say a man was “arrested at the scene for offences under section 5 of the Public Order Act and for obstructing the highway”. |
The DHSC said 42,153 people have now died in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for coronavirus in the UK as of 5pm on Tuesday. That is a rise of 184 from 41,969 the day before. | The DHSC said 42,153 people have now died in hospitals, care homes and the wider community after testing positive for coronavirus in the UK as of 5pm on Tuesday. That is a rise of 184 from 41,969 the day before. |
The government figures don’t include all deaths involving Covid-19 across the UK, which is thought to have passed 53,000. | The government figures don’t include all deaths involving Covid-19 across the UK, which is thought to have passed 53,000. |
The DHSC also said in the 24-hour period up to 9am on Wednesday, 140,359 tests were carried out or dispatched, with 1,115 positive results. Overall, a total of 7,121,976 tests have been carried out and 299,251 cases have been confirmed positive. | The DHSC also said in the 24-hour period up to 9am on Wednesday, 140,359 tests were carried out or dispatched, with 1,115 positive results. Overall, a total of 7,121,976 tests have been carried out and 299,251 cases have been confirmed positive. |
The figure for the number of people tested has been “temporarily paused to ensure consistent reporting” across all methods of testing. | The figure for the number of people tested has been “temporarily paused to ensure consistent reporting” across all methods of testing. |