Daily Mirror

He’s making it up as he goes along..

Parents rip into Johnson over confusion

- BY MARTIN FRICKER, BEN GLAZE and LIZZY BUCHAN martin.fricker@mirror.co.uk @martinfric­ker

BORIS Johnson struggles to keep up in a class of 11-year-olds, and had an even tougher time with their parents, who laid into his “shambolic” handling of the reopening of schools.

Many parents had sent their children into Castle Rock School in Coalville, Leics, not knowing if they needed to wear masks following the Prime Minister’s last-minute U-turn the night before.

Sue-Ellen Robinson, 42, whose son Ellis, 11, started his first day in Year 7, accused Mr Johnson, who did not speak with parents when he visited for the day, of “making it up as he goes along” ahead of the reopening of English schools after lockdown.

She said: “It seems to be a complete shambles. I didn’t know whether to send my son in with a mask or not. We heard nothing from the school and there has been no clear guidance. You rely on the Government making the right decisions, but I don’t think Boris knows what those right decisions are.”

Jackie Willis, 32, said her 11-year-old son had asked to bring a mask to school.

She said: “The whole situation is ridiculous. We don’t know what is going on. We’re near Leicester, which was in lockdown, but we’re not in lockdown. So should our son be wearing a mask? “We still don’t know for sure and he’s been in the classroom all day. There’s been no communicat­ion from the school.

“Our son actually asked to take one into school because he didn’t know the rules and didn’t want to be the only one without one. It shouldn’t be left to a young boy to be making the decision.”

Michelle Ash, 44, whose son Leman, 11, is in Year 7, said: “I know it’s a pandemic and not something they have dealt with before, but Boris seems do a worse job than others. What’s he doing making U-turns the night before our kids go back to school?”

Other parents defended the PM. Amy Burton, 37, said: “What are they supposed to do? It’s uncharted waters.”

On Tuesday night, the Government announced face masks would be compulsory in communal areas of secondarie­s in locked down parts of England. A decision on whether to wear masks in non-lockdown area schools would be left to head teachers.

The change in policy came days after ministers had said there were no plans

to change the guidance in England. During his school visit, Mr Johnson, in a Castle Rock School tie, said local measures to tackle Covid-19 outbreaks were the way to keep infections down.

He said: “If you’re in a hotspot area you should use face coverings in places outside classrooms where it’s a confined space. Here in Leicesters­hire, you’ve seen the people of Leicester come together, make a huge effort in the whole area, to bear down on the virus. The numbers are down and the incidence in this area is well, well down so it’s the way to do it.

“On the issue of face coverings, what you’ve got is the WHO saying face coverings should be used by over-12s.

“What we’re saying is if you’re in a school where there is a ‘hot spot’ it probably does make sense in confined areas outside classes to use a face covering.

“But not in the classrooms. That is clearly nonsensica­l. You can’t teach with face coverings, you can’t expect people to learn with face coverings.” In a rambling speech, Mr Johnson also told bemused pupils it was fine to sing Rule Britannia and said Harry Potter was not sexist, referencin­g the Last Night of the Proms finale row, and author JK Rowling’s transgende­r views.

He also blamed a “mutant algorithm” for the exam results fiasco, and said: “I know how stressful that must have been”.

But the PM faced a backlash for effectivel­y sacking the senior civil servant at the Department for Education, Jonathan Slater, after demanding “fresh official leadership”.

National Education Union general secretary Kevin Courtney accused the PM of “idly shrugging away” a disaster created by his own Government.

Shadow Education Secretary Kate Green said the PM was “shamelessl­y trying to avoid responsibi­lity for the exams fiasco”.

The FDA senior civil servants’ union general secretary Dave Penman said: “This administra­tion will throw Civil Service leaders under the bus without a moment’s hesitation to shield ministers from any kind of accountabi­lity.”

■ Only one in 10 people want to return to the way they lived before the pandemic, a UCL study has found.

BORIS Johnson’s latest TV stunt saw him make a whistle-stop trip to a school in Leicesters­hire yesterday.

It is a shame the Prime Minister did not find the time to talk to the parents of the pupils during his visit.

He then would have heard first-hand their frustratio­n and dismay over the confused guidance on reopening schools next week.

Parents, teachers and unions are crying out for clarity. Instead they have been given conflictin­g advice, not least on face masks.

Earlier this week ministers were adamant there was no need for secondary school pupils in England to wear face coverings. Now they are being told they have to wear them in certain circumstan­ces.

This farce comes just days after the exam gradings fiasco.

Little wonder that many parents have concluded the Government is making up policy as it goes along.

The Prime Minister should spend less time posing for the cameras and more time addressing their concerns.

 ??  ?? VISIT Mr Johnson in class yesterday
VISIT Mr Johnson in class yesterday
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? CONCERNED Jackie Willis
CONCERNED Jackie Willis
 ?? Pictures: ROLAND LEON ?? WORK HARDER Mr Johnson with pupil Olivia Stokes
Pictures: ROLAND LEON WORK HARDER Mr Johnson with pupil Olivia Stokes
 ??  ?? OUT Jon Slater
OUT Jon Slater

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