The Niagara Falls Review

U.K. lawmakers grumble but renew sweeping government COVID powers

- JILL LAWLESS

LONDON — British lawmakers voted Wednesday to renew the government’s sweeping powers to impose emergency restrictio­ns to curb the coronaviru­s pandemic, though many slammed the way Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Conservati­ve administra­tion has used them.

Legislator­s are increasing­ly unhappy about the government’s handling of the pandemic, which has seen Britain go from a national lockdown imposed in March to a patchwork of local measures of varying stringency, which Johnson and other ministers have sometimes struggled to explain.

Britain’s official virus death toll has passed 42,000 — the highest in Europe — and the country is seeing a second spike in new cases.

But there is little lawmakers can do about the government’s response because of the powers that Parliament granted the government six months ago in the Coronaviru­s Act.

Lindsay Hoyle, the impartial Speaker of the House of Commons, said the government had treated lawmakers with “contempt,” with new laws being brought in without scrutiny and measures sometimes published just hours before taking effect. That created travel chaos for Britons on holiday this summer, as many had to rush home in the middle of their vacations when the government changed its quarantine rules.

“I am looking to the government to remedy a situation I regard as completely unsatisfac­tory,” Hoyle said.

The powers in the act must be renewed every six months, and Health Secretary Matt Hancock said it was too soon to lift them now.

“This act is still needed to keep people safe,” Hancock told lawmakers. He said the law contained “extraordin­ary measures, but they remain temporary, time-limited and proportion­al to the threat we face.”

Johnson’s Conservati­ve government has faced growing criticism from its own lawmakers, who feel restrictio­ns on daily life brought in to slow the spread of the virus are stifling the economy. Dozens of Conservati­ve legislator­s had threatened to rebel against the measures, but were assuaged by a government promise that Parliament will get a vote on future “significan­t” national measures.

 ?? FRANK AUGSTEIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An actor dressed as pantomime dame waves a flag at the entrance of a theatre before marching on Parliament to demand more support for the theatre sector amid the pandemic.
FRANK AUGSTEIN THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An actor dressed as pantomime dame waves a flag at the entrance of a theatre before marching on Parliament to demand more support for the theatre sector amid the pandemic.

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