Daily Mail

WE’LL SCRAP 1M RULE ON JULY 19

PM vows to end distancing to save the arts and hospitalit­y

- By Jason Groves Political Editor j.groves@dailymail.co.uk

BORIS Johnson is determined to scrap the one-metre rule on July 19 even if other Covid measures have to stay in place, Cabinet sources said yesterday.

Multiple sources have told the Daily Mail that the Prime Minister has prioritise­d the removal of the key social distancing rule above all other measures because of its importance to sectors such as hospitalit­y and the arts.

A surge in Covid cases has raised fresh doubts about the Government’s ambition to end all restrictio­ns on July 19.

It has also all but ended hopes that Freedom Day could come a fortnight early on July 5.

Ministers will formally assess the latest data this weekend before announcing a decision on ‘the mid-point review’.

But a Cabinet source told the Mail: ‘It’s not happening.’

The Government’s roadmap out of

‘The economic case is unarguable’

lockdown had originally envisaged lifting all remaining restrictio­ns by June 21.

But the final stage of the plan – known as Step Four – was postponed earlier this month because of the rapid spread of the Indian or Delta variant across England.

Mr Johnson remains hopeful that all restrictio­ns will finally go on July 19. But officials are now drawing up contingenc­y plans in case only a partial lifting is possible on that date.

Ministers have been alarmed by the continuing surge in cases driven by the virulent new variant.

The latest official figures yesterday showed 16,703 new cases were recorded in 24 hours – the highest number since early February. Cases are now rising at almost 45 per cent a week.

Hospitalis­ations and deaths, which are now seen as the key figures, both remain low.

And figures show that the virus is ‘running out of steam’ in hotspots of the Delta variant – with the R rate now at its lowest since the ‘third wave’ began.

In the North West of England and parts of Scotland virus rates are ‘continuing to plateau’.

Neverthele­ss, some ministers are getting jittery about the prospect of sanctionin­g a full reopening against the backdrop of rising cases, which officials fear could hit 30,000 a day within a fortnight.

Chancellor Rishi Sunak has urged the Prime Minister to prioritise the removal of the one-metre rule, which continues to cripple the hospitalit­y and arts sector by reducing the capacity in venues to unsustaina­ble levels.

Scrapping the rule is also seen as essential in any drive to persuade office workers to go back to their desks.

A Cabinet source said the PM had accepted the argument that the one-metre rule should be made the top priority for July 19.

‘The economic case is unarguable,’ the source said. ‘The onemetre rule is the key remaining social distancing measure left.

‘If we can’t remove it then we might as well not bother on July 19 at all. The PM is determined to get rid of it, even if things like masks have to stay for a bit longer.’

Sources said contingenc­y plans could see people advised to continue wearing face masks in certain settings, such as public transport and crowded shops.

Guidance on working from home could also remain in place until the autumn, despite both the PM and Chancellor wanting it lifted.

Mr Sunak yesterday struck an upbeat tone about the future, saying: ‘ Things are looking good for July 19, as the Prime Minister has said. My strong expectatio­n is we can lift these major restrictio­ns then and get back to normal.’

But No 10 said it was too early to say whether measures like face masks would remain in place after July 19.

Downing Street said ‘ no final decisions’ had been made on whether all coronaviru­s restrictio­ns would be legally lifted on July 19, despite Environmen­t Secretary George Eustice declaring all measures would be scrapped.

The Prime Minister’s official spokesman told reporters: ‘It is right that obviously we want to get back to as close to normal as is possible post-Step Four.

‘However, no final decisions have been taken about what measures are required.’

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