The Guardian Australia

Ministers have struggled to wear a mask. Do they think it makes them look weak?

- Catherine Bennett

Whatever he has done to Wagamama’s previously enviable reputation, Rishi Sunak has demonstrat­ed that, even in one of those countries where the leadership is also a recognised disease vector, some hygiene failures can still shock.

We might be resigned to a clammy-looking Boris Johnson transmitti­ng virus between hand, home and lectern; to a health secretary who, also ignoring his own advice, sneaks up behind colleagues in his deadly pink tie; or to a chief adviser who seems positively inspired by the plague-spreading achievemen­ts of medieval body lice; but still – spraying saliva over meals?

The most striking thing about last week’s waitering stunt was surely that Sunak didn’t wear a mask, nor disposable gloves, to serve food. You wondered, given this departure from restrictio­ns now accepted everywhere from buses to hairdresse­rs, if Sunak even washed his hands for as long as it takes to say “Bolsonaro” before he picked up plates of chicken katsu curry – a dish that is admittedly overdue for retirement.

No doubt many of us have spent too much time studying diagrams of how far a laugh/cough/sneeze sends infected matter leaping over supermarke­t aisles and government benches, but if so, why hasn’t Sunak? Ignorance or idiocy? If he hasn’t missed the compelling evidence on the effectiven­ess of masks in reducing Covid-19 transmissi­on – including a study on the eve of his Wagamama trip – perhaps he fears, like various prominent maniacs, that he might come across as effeminate, cowardly, leftwing. But even proudly brutal Republican­s are now submitting.

If only to recommend to nervous customers his meal-deal route to economic recovery, there was no rational reason for Sunak to lose an opportunit­y to normalise mask wearing in confined public spaces.

Asked about his performanc­e, Sunak said: “I’m keen to try and get our message across to as many people as possible.” And to give him credit, one thing could not be clearer. He has been wildly overpraise­d.

There was a further lesson from the missing face mask: the government’s understand­ing of disease control remains as lethally inferior to the public’s as it was when workplaces were emptying but Johnson’s message remained “shake hands and go to a rugby match”.

In fact, the sight of Sunak bantering over his petri dishes reminded me to check on some face masks I ordered at the end of January, some days before Johnson scorned virus-related “panic”, depicting his own government as “ready to take off its Clark Kent spectacles and leap into the phone booth and emerge with its cloak flowing”, and so, abjectly, forth.

I’d resorted reluctantl­y to the world’s most detested supplier, more far-sighted mask buyers having already exhausted the stocks of tax-paying businesses. Clearly, long before the science was clear, people didn’t need a politician or senior medical officer to tell them that face coverings might represent a harmless potential obstacle to the flying droplets of crap, or whatever you called it, that were spreading a devastatin­g respirator­y disease with no cure.

But this was before sustained official advice discouragi­ng the non-specialist use of masks. Some early and prospectiv­e adopters will therefore have abandoned an effective health measure whose popularity in other parts of the world we were repeatedly urged to dismiss as medically irrelevant cultural difference­s. “It is entirely wired into some cultures that masks are worn quite frequently in open spaces,” explained the admired Professor Jonathan Van-Tam.

Professor Whitty: “Our advice is clear: that wearing a mask if you don’t have an infection reduces the risk almost not at all.” Matt Hancock: “A front door is better than any face mask.” Dr Jenny Harries: “You can actually trap the virus in the mask and start breathing it in.”

Then there were, Harries warned, “behavioura­l issues” – a great concern in the team that held that mere respect for life would not ensure lockdown compliance from a public believed, for some reason, to be as suicidally libertaria­n, or staggering­ly selfish, as Johnson and Dominic Cummings. “What tends to happen,” Harries explained, in a prediction that would shortly be contradict­ed by a surge in fabric mask buying, “is people will have one mask. They won’t wear it all the time, they will take it off when they get home, they will put it down on a surface they haven’t cleaned.” Stupid people.

An official resistance to normalisat­ion, which could almost at one stage have been understood as legitimate anxiety about PPE supplies, or about enforcemen­t, is now, following mounting evidence of both mask efficacy and behavioura­l compliance (including in historical­ly non-mask-wearing countries), ever more inexplicab­le. Survival aside, the government seems indifferen­t, even, to the profits, the more absurd end of this surging market having become, inevitably, a Veblen sector, featuring Samantha Cameron’s “silk cobalt leopard pansy print”, £25 (sold out).

“Cloth face coverings are effective in reducing source virus transmissi­on,” says another study. A majority of the population is amenable. Countries such as Germany, also with no history of mask wearing, mandated face coverings months ago. Earlier, when it exposed the public to lethal risks, the government could attempt, by the repetition of “unpreceden­ted” and its ever diminishin­g claim to be “guided by the science”, to defend its exceptiona­lism. What is the argument now? Masks save lives but, outside public transport, the Westminste­r government won’t impose them. In refusing to do so it adds to the risks of transmissi­on, and to the difficulti­es of workers and customers attempting to keep themselves safe. Mask avoiders, however, are indulged.

As Tom Hanks said last week of mask wearing: “I don’t get it, I simply do not get it, it is literally the least you can do.” Although Hanks probably missed a critical Johnson column. Perhaps the science could tell us how many lives were lost to official mask resistance before the prime minister finally risked being derisively compared with a bank robber.

•Catherine Bennett is an Observer columnist

Masks save lives but, outside public transport, the Westminste­r government won’t impose them

 ?? Photograph: Simon Walker/HM Treasury ?? The chancellor, Rishi Sunak, serving customers at a Wagamama restaurant in London last week.
Photograph: Simon Walker/HM Treasury The chancellor, Rishi Sunak, serving customers at a Wagamama restaurant in London last week.

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