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More than half of UK public think 21st June lockdown lifting should be postponed

The majority of Brits are now supportive of postponing the June 21st lifting of restrictions, according to the latest Opinium poll.

Over half (54 per cent) think the date should be postponed (up from 43 per cent two weeks ago), with just 37 per cent thinking it should go ahead as planned or even be moved forward (down from 44 per cent two weeks ago).

The majority of those in favour of postponing are among the older age groups with almost two thirds (65 per cent) of over 65s in favour of postponing and only 28 per cent in favour of going ahead as planned or earlier.

Young people are more evenly split as 45 per cent of 18-34 year olds think it should be postponed and 46 per cent think it should go ahead as planned or earlier.

More specifically, people are most in favour of not removing the restrictions on:

Wearing masks (62 per cent vs 31 per cent)
Keeping nightclubs closed (60 per cent vs 28 per cent)
Limiting large outdoor events (60 per cent vs 31 per cent)
Having a maximum of 30 people can gather outdoors (57 per cent vs 31 per cent)
Having a rule of 6 and table service in hospitality venues (50 per cent vs 42 per cent)
Having up to 30 people at weddings (48 per cent vs 41 per cent)
Having up to 6 people in people’s homes (47 per cent vs 43 per cent)

July 19th

Boris Johnson is poised to sign off plans to delay the lifting of coronavirus lockdown restrictions in England amid growing concerns about the surge in case of the highly transmissible Delta variant.

The Prime Minister is expected to agree to put the final easing of controls on hold for up to four weeks when he meets senior ministers and officials on his return on Sunday from the G7 summit in Cornwall.

It could mean that lockdown lifting – which had been slated for June 21 under the Government’s road map – will be put back to July 19.

PA

The move, expected to be confirmed in a formal announcement on Monday, will be a bitter blow for many businesses, particularly in the hospitality sector, which had been pinning their hopes on a full summer reopening.

Mr Johnson is also likely to face opposition from some of his own MPs who have been chafing for months over the restrictions and will be furious at any further delay.

“Serious, serious concern”

Public health officials believe a delay would also give more opportunity to control the spread using surge-testing techniques which proved successful in Bolton, which was the first Delta variant hotspot.

Speaking in Cornwall on Saturday, a downbeat Mr Johnson acknowledged that the rise of the variant was a matter of “serious, serious concern”.

With infections and hospital admissions both rising, he said that it was not yet clear to what extent that would feed through into more deaths.

However, in order to ensure the final lockdown lifting was “irreversible”, he said that it may be necessary to give the vaccines “extra legs” in the race against the virus.

Some ministers however were reported to be even more pessimistic, with one telling The Sunday Telegraph that they had a “very short window” in which to open up, otherwise controls could have to stay in place until spring of next year.

“I am very worried the people who want to keep us shut down now want us to keep us shut down permanently and are aiming for ‘zero Covid’,” the unnamed minister was quoted as saying.

“Once you start delaying to the spring you’re making this type of control of people’s lives semi-permanent.”

Delta variant

Scientists now estimate that 96 per cent of all new cases of coronavirus are attributed to the Delta variant.

The latest figures from Public Health England (PHE) show there have been 42,323 cases of the Delta variant confirmed in the UK, up by 29,892 from the previous week.

It estimates the strain is 60 per cent more transmissible compared with the previously dominant Alpha, or Kent, variant, and that cases are doubling every four-and-a-half days in some parts of England.

Meanwhile, it emerged that G7 leaders discussed the theory that the pandemic was caused by a leak from a Chinese laboratory.

A team of experts from the World Health Organisation (WHO) and China concluded it was “extremely unlikely” the virus entered the human population as a result of a laboratory-related incident at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.

However, US President Joe Biden has since ordered an investigation into the origins of the outbreak, including the leak theory, while the WHO has said it wants to do more work.

The head of the WHO, Dr Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, told reporters at the summit: “We believe that all hypotheses should be open, and we need to proceed to the second phase to really know the origins.”

Related: Elevenses: The Cornwall Conclave

Jack Peat

Jack is a business and economics journalist and the founder of The London Economic (TLE). He has contributed articles to VICE, Huffington Post and Independent and is a published author. Jack read History at the University of Wales, Bangor and has a Masters in Journalism from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne.

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