The Mail on Sunday

It’s a bold move – but the right one

The nation deserves a holiday, so sort out this travel mess

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THESE are tough days for Boris Johnson. Far too many people oppose or question his determinat­ion to give us back our freedom. The zero-Covid zealots, who want a permanent regime of restrictio­n, don’t back him. Some of his advisers, who have no responsibi­lity to wider concerns, don’t back him. The public, after 18 months of fear, are not sure if he is right.

But this is what happens to real leaders. Our Prime Minister is as worried as anyone else by the risks. He does not wish to harm anyone or cause disaster. But he has a high duty to do what is right for the whole country.

Britain needs its freedom to sustain and rebuild the NHS, forced by the Covid crisis to reduce many treatments and tests and urgently needing to cut down some of the longest queues in its history. It needs its freedom to open up the economy which pays for the NHS and for so many other vital parts of our advanced and costly civilisati­on.

Yet at every step towards revival, grim voices warn – so that the Government must shuffle, rather than stride, towards liberation. Actually our current policy is both cautious and responsibl­e. The giant success of the vaccinatio­n programme, so far, makes it so.

Figures show deaths, hospital admissions, numbers of ventilated patients and bed occupancy rates are all lower than before, with the disease increasing­ly affecting younger, less vulnerable people. No, the crisis is not over. But it is, even so, quite reasonable, and indeed necessary, to open up the nation.

Leaders are supposed to lead. That is what Boris Johnson is doing, and we should wish him success for the country’s sake.

THOUSANDS of words have been written about how illogical the ‘pingdemic’ is, and rightly so. The postponeme­nt of urgent measures to pay for social care – because the Ministers involved are selfisolat­ing – sums up the absurdity. It is yet another way in which government success is being clouded by confusion and pedantic pettifoggi­ng, the rigid imposition of rules often for their own sake, or on very weak grounds.

An equally egregious instance of this is the way we have made it so illogicall­y difficult to travel. The Mail on Sunday has repeatedly pointed out that the families of the nation need and deserve a decent holiday, to help the country get over 18 months of gloom, confinemen­t and separation from loved ones. Once, tight restrictio­ns on travel were justified. But the impressive take-up of the vaccinatio­n should have transforme­d this. It is astonishin­g how little difference it has made.

Claims, later toned down, of dangerous new variants led to severe limitation­s on travel to France. Almost every European country has been subjected to a zig-zagging succession of bans, relaxation­s and new bans. This has caused misery to those who dared to travel. It has deterred many others from even trying, lest they too are forced to make a sudden dawn dash homewards to avoid long and expensive days in quarantine or isolation.

As for the incessant and overpriced tests demanded, they just add to the mental torture heaped on the heads of innocent people trying to take a badly needed break in the sun by the sea.

Ministers really need to act to ensure that, while necessary restrictio­ns on travel are maintained, they are not discredite­d and made ridiculous by over-caution and needless rigidity.

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