Did Boris Johnson Use The 'VIP Lane' To Skip Quarantine?

Published July 18th, 2021 - 11:54 GMT
Sajid Javid tested positive for Covid
In this file photo taken on July 14, 2021 Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson leaves number 10 Downing Street in central London on July 14, 2021, to take part in Prime Minister's Questions (PMQ) session in the House of Commons. Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak have both been designated a close contact of a person infected with Covid, Downing Street said July 18, 2021. JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP
Highlights
PM is to use public sector scheme that replaces quarantine with daily testing

UK prime minister Boris Johnson slammed today for attempting to use a 'VIP lane' to skip quarantine after health secretary Sajid Javid tested positive for Covid, amid fury at his plan to join a new pilot testing scheme.

Downing Street today revealed that the Prime Minister and Chancellor Rishi Sunak would be using a public sector programme that allows them to leave isolation if they pass a daily lateral flow test.

Jut they were forced into a swift U-turn and had backed out of the programme in less than three hours. 

Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick insisted today that the scheme was 'well-known' and was being used by 20 public organisations including Border Force and Transport for London.

But opposition politicians and the public vented their fury at the step, which comes amid spiralling Covid rates and hundreds of thousands of people having to self-isolate after being pinged by the Covid app.

Shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth said many people across the UK would be dismayed by the 'special, exclusive rule'. 

'There will be parents across the country who have struggled this year when their children have been sent home because they were in a bubble and had to self-isolate,' he told Sky News.

'There will be workers across the country that have to isolate because they've been pinged, including in public services, including the NHS. 

'For many of them, waking up this morning to hear that there is a special rule, an exclusive rule, for Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak, they will be saying that this looks like one rule for them and something else for the rest of us.

The two most senior politicians in the Government proposed to use a little-known pilot scheme which allows people out of self-isolation every day of they pass a lateral flow test to continue working.

The Health Secretary triggered fears of a disruptive 'pingdemic' striking at the heart of Government after reveling yesterday he has tested positive. 

Mr Javid had visited the Commons and Downing Street in previous days – and is understood to have held a lengthy face-to-face meeting with Boris Johnson just before his symptoms developed – sparking concerns that senior figures across Whitehall would have to be confined to home.

One insider warned that 'half the Cabinet' could be in isolation by the end of the week.

Richard Walker, the boss of frozen food chain Iceland was among those who blasted the PM today. He tweeted: 'Shame the hundreds of Iceland staff who've been pinged can't avoid self-isolation. We can all do a daily lateral flow test.'

Dr Ellie Cannon, an NHS GP and Mail on Sunday columnist, has criticised the Government after it was announced that Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak do not have to isolate after coming into contact with Sajid Javid, after he tested positive for Covid-19.

She wrote on Twitter: 'There have been low points in this pandemic. And then there have been lower points.

 

'Perhaps the lowest point for me was watching the funeral prayers of an acquaintance who died in particularly difficult circumstances...

'Their own child, mourning their parent's sudden death, was not allowed in the place of worship with family because they were contact isolating from school.

'No-one found special pilot schemes for them.'

However, Damian Green, the Conservative MP for Ashford and former first secretary of state, supported the Prime Minister's decision.

Speaking to Trevor Phillips on Sky News, Mr Green said: 'It's not clear who has got access to it but I think in practical terms allowing the Prime Minister and Chancellor of the Exchequer to work as normally as possible is actually quite sensible.

'I hope one of the effects of this is to accelerate the pilot scheme, and indeed the analysis of the pilot scheme, because this might be a way out of the current problems of people not being able to go to work.'

But Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey said: 'The Prime Minister is making a mockery of the sacrifices millions of people have made. His decision to duck self isolation is callous and irresponsible.

'With Covid cases going through the roof and hospitalisations growing, the Prime Minister's 'Freedom Day' gamble is looking more and more reckless.

'Through refusing to self isolate the Prime Minister is effectively destroying the whole test and trace system.

'This is Barnard Castle on steroids. Johnson mustn't do a Cummings.'

This article has been adapted from its original source.

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