Daily Express

Britain is a speedboat and the EU is a tanker

Euro boss admits Brexit let UK move fast to secure vaccine

- From Joe Barnes in Brussels

TOP Eurocrat Ursula von der Leyen has admitted Britain is a speedboat and the EU more like a tanker in the vaccine rollout.

The European Commission President made a compelling case for Brexit when she conceded Britain’s independen­ce had allowed it to operate more nimbly to secure supplies sooner.

In recognitio­n of the EU’s sluggish vaccine programme, she said: “Alone, a country can be a speedboat, while the EU is more like a tanker.”

Acting as a bloc of 27 countries made decision-making slower, she said.

“Before concluding a contract with a pharmaceut­ical company, the 27 member states had five full days to say whether they agreed or not.

“This naturally delays the process. Indeed, we must constantly put pressure on ourselves so that each step of the decision-making process is as fast and efficient as possible.”

Her remarks came as the EU slipped five weeks behind its target to vaccinate 70 per cent of all adults by the end of September, according to a study by German finance giants Allianz.

This week Health Secretary Matt Hancock announced that one in five adults in the UK has now had his or her first dose.

Amid growing criticism of her handling of the bloc’s vaccine crisis, Mrs von der Leyen defended the deliberate­ly slow rollout of jabs.

But the German politician conceded she had “underestim­ated” the challenges faced by the EU in securing sufficient supplies for its mass vaccinatio­n programme. She added: “We have certainly underestim­ated the difficulti­es we are experienci­ng.We should have warned countries, explaining that at first the process would not be smooth, that there would be ups and downs.” Downing Street secured a threeweek head-start over Brussels by signing contracts with suppliers much earlier than the bloc.

As a result, Britain has raced ahead of the EU, dishing out almost 11 million jabs so far, at a rate of 15.5 doses per 100 people.

The EU, which has delivered 14.3million jabs, is trundling along at a rate of 3.16 per 100 people.

On a visit to Moscow, EU foreign affairs chief Josep Borrell admitted the bloc would need to turn to the Russian-made vaccine to plug its shortfall in supplies.

The Spaniard hailed the Sputnik V jab as “good news for the whole of mankind” and urged EU regulators to authorise it for use across member states.

Brussels is under increased pressure to fix its supply crisis.

 ??  ?? Under fire…Mrs von der Leyen
Under fire…Mrs von der Leyen

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