Yorkshire Post

10pm curfew for restaurant­s and pubs ‘ better than closure’

- ROB PARSONS POLITICAL EDITOR ■ Email: rob. parsons@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @ yorkshirep­ost

CHANCELLOR RISHI Sunak has defended the Government’s controvers­ial 10pm coronaviru­s curfew for pubs and restaurant­s, warning the alternativ­e was for them to close altogether.

Ministers are under pressure from Tory MPs to scrap the curfew in England, as well as easing the so- called “rule of six”, amid claims such intrusive measures are not justified by the evidence and damage the economy.

The Government was braced for a potential backbench rebellion when the Commons voted last night on continuing the rule of six which bans social gatherings of more than six people. However, Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer said Labour will back the Government on the rule of six vote.

He told the media: “We will support on the rule of six.

“There are, of course, arguments about whether it should be six or a different number, I think clarity and simplicity is really important here and therefore we will support the rule of six tonight.”

In the end MPs voted decisively to back the Government by 287 votes to 17 – giving it a majority of 270.

With a further vote expected today on the 10pm curfew, rebels are urging Ministers to make concession­s.

At the same time, Professor Neil Ferguson, whose modelling contribute­d to the decision to order the original lockdown in March, has warned that further measures could be needed to curb the current upsurge in infections.

In a clear message to would- be Tory rebels, Mr Sunak indicated the alternativ­e to the existing restrictio­ns would be even tighter controls.

“The curfew was something we were told by our advisers could well make a difference to the spread of the transmissi­on,” he told BBC Breakfast.

“In common with many other countries around the world this is thought to be something that can help suppress the spread of the virus. We are not an outlier in having a curfew.

“As a tool we have at our disposal to try and suppress the spread of the virus, it is one that is advised across the board can make a difference.

“What I would say is it is better than having places closed.”

Mr Sunak is widely thought to have argued against tighter restrictio­ns when the latest measures were introduced, warning of the damage to the economy at a time when thousands of jobs are being lost.

Speaking on the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, he did nothing to dispel the impression, saying it would have been “odd” if, as Chancellor, he had not spoken out in Government about the impact on the economy.

“A Cabinet is not a collection of robots. A Cabinet is a collection of people who are going to come, debate the issues,” he said. “These are really difficult judgments.

“There is no precise way to come to a mathematic­ally correct answer.”

We are not an outlier in having a curfew.

Chancellor of the Exchequer Rishi Sunak.

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