The Mail on Sunday

BORIS’S DOUBLE VACCINE VICTORY OVER EU

As record 487,756 jabs bring f irst dose total to 8.4million, MPs hail...

- By Glen Owen and Anna Mikhailova

BORIS JOHNSON forced the EU into an extraordin­ary double climbdown during a dramatic late-night interventi­on to protect the UK’s record-breaking vaccine rollout.

During two phone calls just 30 minutes apart, the Prime Minister made European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen ditch plans to stop 3.5 million doses of the Pfizer jab from reaching the UK from a factory in Belgium and abandon the ‘nuclear option’ of imposing a hard border on Northern Ireland to prevent them reaching the UK.

Following his diplomatic victory, Britain yesterday recorded a daily record for first-dose jabs – 487,756 – to bring the total to almost 8.4 million.

In his phone calls, Mr Johnson

warned Ms von der Leyen that her actions risked denying millions of British pensioners their second Pfizer injections. She immediatel­y capitulate­d in a tweet sent out shortly before midnight on Friday.

As part of an implicit ‘peace deal’ with the EU, No 10 yesterday adopted a conciliato­ry tone. Cabinet Office Minister Michael Gove said the EU recognised that it had ‘made a mistake’ and both sides agreed on the need for a ‘reset’.

Northern Ireland’s First Minister Arlene Foster was less diplomatic, branding the EU’s move an ‘incredible act of hostility’. Meanwhile Tory MPs were jubilant, with one describing the EU’s surrender as Mr Johnson’s ‘Falklands moment’.

The Mail on Sunday understand­s that before Brussels was forced to blink twice, the Government had drawn up contingenc­y plans to break any EU blockade. Under a ‘vaccine security exercise’ adapted from plans for a No-Deal Brexit, supplies of the Pfizer jab could have been airlifted out of the continent.

The EU – and Ms von der Leyen in particular – were savaged by the European media for their handling of the row as government­s across the bloc faced a backlash from their voters.

And with the EU having only vaccinated 2.5 per cent of its population – compared to 12 per cent in the UK – Ms Foster suggested that Northern Ireland could help to provide vaccine supplies to Dublin.

The astonishin­g diplomatic drama came as:

Figures showed daily positive Covid tests have fallen by 31 per cent in the past week to 23,275, with hospital admissions down by 16 per cent over the same period, and deaths down six per cent to 1,200;

German claims that the Oxford/AstraZenec­a vaccine was less effective in over-65s were rubbished by senior government adviser Professor Andrew Harnden, who said: ‘We are absolutely confident the vaccine is safe and effective’;

Labour leader SirKeir Starmer writes in today’s Mail on Sunday in support of the Jabs For Teachers campaign for all school staff to be vaccinated during half-term so pupils can return more quickly – although a major teaching union repeated its opposition to classes reopening;

Mr Johnson signalled that he wanted to relax lockdown rules on exercise, but was urged to move quickly by all owing cooped- up children to enjoy half-term sports;

Some of the UK’s biggest firms, including John Lewis and Tata, told this newspaper that rapid workplace tests have prevented thousands of sick days and the closure of sites;

A major US study found proof that Covid-19 originated in China, underminin­g Beijing’s claims it may have come from elsewhere.

The simmering row over vacci nes exploded on Friday evening when Brussels said it would trigger Article 16 of the Northern Ireland Protocol to the Brexit Withdrawal Agreement – thereby creating a hard border on the island of Ireland – and take other measures to stop supplies of the Pfizer vaccine from reaching Britain.

Mr Johnson called an emergency meeting at No 10 to decide the UK’s response, then spoke to the Commission President just before 10pm to set out his demands and warn Ms von der Leyen her actions could threaten the Irish peace process. They spoke again at 10.30pm when Ms von der Leyen agreed to issue a climbdown message that‘ there should not be restrictio­ns on the export of vaccines by companies where they are fulfilling contractua­l responsibi­lities’.

The fiasco has put Ms von der Leyen’s position in doubt, with one senior EU source saying ‘the disquiet is growing’.

Tory MPs on both sides of the Brexit divide heralded Mr Johnson’s efforts. One Remainer said: ‘If this had happened in 2016, I would have voted to Leave without blinking.’

Another Tory backbenche­r said :‘ This could be Boris’ Falklands moment… Ministers have played a blinder.’

But former Brexit Secretary David Davis warned: ‘I fear we are still going to see them trying to do similar things by the backdoor.’

Former Northern Ireland Secretary Julian Smith said: ‘The EU cocked up big time.’

Mr Gove said: ‘I think the EU recognises they made a mistake in triggering Article 16... But now the EU has stepped back.’

The row came just before today’s first anniversar­y of Britain leaving the EU.

Marking the day, Mr Johnson said: ‘The destiny of this great nation now resides firmly in our hands. I take on this duty with a sense of purpose.’

He has asked former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith to set up a taskforce of MPs to ‘think more inventivel­y about how we boost growth, innovation and competitio­n’.

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