The Independent

Public will accept vaccine passports, survey suggests

- ANDREW WOODCOCK

A majority of Britons are prepared to be asked to show vaccine passports to board buses, go shopping and go to work as the price of getting back to some kind of normality after the coronaviru­s lockdown, new polling has suggested.

And, in a remarkable finding that challenges widespread assumption­s about the British people’s distaste for ID cards, more than half are ready for immunity certificat­ion to remain in place after the Covid-19 pandemic has ended.

The same poll for The Independen­t found that the public is wary about the speed of the withdrawal from

lockdown planned by Boris Johnson, with almost one-third (32 per cent) saying he should delay the final lifting of restrictio­ns beyond his target date of 21 June.

This compared with just 18 per cent wanting the end of restrictio­ns to be brought forward and 29 per cent who believe the prime minister has got the timing right.

The prime minister’s plans for “Covid-status certificat­ion” have sparked heated opposition in parliament, with more than 70 MPs – including 40 Tory rebels – signing a pledge to oppose them as “divisive and discrimina­tory” and Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer denouncing them as “un-British”.

Conservati­ve former cabinet minister and civil liberties campaigner David Davis warned that the passports would become a “health ID card” risking serious breaches of the privacy of sensitive personal informatio­n.

But the survey of more than 2,000 voters by pollsters Savanta ComRes found that large majorities believe it is acceptable to be asked to prove your Covid status in order to enter theatres, nightclubs, sports stadiums, workplaces, pubs and even shops.

And 53 per cent said that certificat­ion should stay in place in some form even after Covid-19 has ceased to be a public health threat, compared to just 33 per cent who said any such scheme should be wound up once the pandemic is over.

Retailers have warned that vaccine passports would be “neither appropriat­e nor useful” to control entry into high street stores struggling to recover from a year of interrupte­d sales, after Downing Street refused to rule out their use in clothes shops. But more than half of those polled (56 per cent) said that making shoppers show a pass before entering a store would be acceptable, against less than a third (32 per cent) who believed it was unacceptab­le.

And despite the government ruling out mandatory vaccine passports for bus and train travel, some 58 per cent of Britons believe they are acceptable as a condition of using public transport, compared to 29 per cent who say this would not be acceptable.

On the prickly issue of whether bosses should be allowed to demand proof of vaccinatio­n from workers, some 65 per cent said they were ready to show their Covid status to enter their workplace, with around a quarter (24 per cent) saying this would not be acceptable.

The government has said that some form of documentat­ion is almost certain to be introduced for internatio­nal flights, to prove that passengers have either been vaccinated, had a recent negative test or gained immunity through a Covid-19 infection which has left them with antibodies against the disease.

And the general public seem very ready to take that on board, with 75 per cent agreeing that a requiremen­t for vaccine passports to board an aeroplane is acceptable, against just 16 per cent who said it is not. There was strong support too for the use of certificat­ion – probably in the form of a smartphone app – to get into concerts and theatres, seen as acceptable by 67 per cent and unacceptab­le by just 21 per cent, nightclubs (66 to 22 per cent) and sports stadiums (66 to 22 per cent).

A government report this week made clear that any passport scheme is likely to apply to these venues, saying that it can “potentiall­y play a role” in managing the risk of bringing large numbers of people together in close proximity.

More controvers­ially, it looks likely that pub and restaurant operators may be given the option of voluntaril­y checking guests’ Covid status at the door, in return for the relaxation of social distancing measures inside.

But there was little sign of opposition to checkpoint­s of this kind among those taking part in the poll, with 65 per cent saying vaccine passports are acceptable and 24 per cent unacceptab­le for restaurant­s, and 63 per cent finding them acceptable and 24 per cent unacceptab­le for pubs and bars.

Perhaps unsurprisi­ngly, older people – who are known to be more vulnerable to serious illness or death from Covid-19 – were warier than the young about lifting restrictio­ns and more eager to accept multiple passport checks.

Among over-65s, just 10 per cent thought the end of lockdown should be brought forward from 21 June and 38 per cent said it should be delayed to later. This compared with more than a quarter (26 per cent) of 25 to 34 year-olds wanting an earlier end to lockdown and just 23 per cent preferring to wait until after the PM’s target date.

Vaccine passports were overwhelmi­ngly viewed as acceptable by over-55s in pubs (72 per cent), restaurant­s (72), aeroplanes (83), workplaces (73), theatres and concerts (75), nightclubs (76) and sporting events (73).

But among 18 to 34 year-olds there was much lower acceptance of their use in pubs (56 per cent), restaurant­s (62), aeroplanes (68), workplaces (62), theatres and concerts (59), nightclubs (58) and sports venues (62).

Savanta ComRes associate director Chris Hopkins said: “The public do not seem to be revolting en masse against the restrictio­ns, and have always seemed fairly satisfied with the speed at which restrictio­ns are lifted.

“While there is undoubtedl­y a desire to return to normal, the public understand that this approach needs to be sensible and are happy for the government to put in place whatever means necessary to ensure a safe return to normality – and if that means vaccine passports, the public appear to be pretty on board.”

 ??  ?? Half said that certificat­ion should stay in place in some form after the pandemic (PA)
Half said that certificat­ion should stay in place in some form after the pandemic (PA)

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