Wales heads for ‘circuit breaker’ lockdown: First Minister is set to announce squeeze TODAY with ‘bars, restaurants and non-essential shops SHUT’ heaping pressure on Boris Johnson
- Wales could announce ‘circuit breaker’ lockdown to combat coronavirus today
- Bars, restaurants, non-essential shops could be shut for two weeks under plan
- The move will heap pressure on Boris Johnson to follow suit with national curbs
Wales is preparing to announce a ‘circuit breaker’ lockdown today – with bars, restaurants and non-essential shops facing being closed down for weeks.
First Minister Mark Drakeford is expected to unveil the draconian move to combat a coronavirus surge after a weekend thrashing out the details.
The step will heap pressure on Boris Johnson, who has been desperately resisting the option in England despite backing from his own SAGE experts.
Northern Ireland and Scotland have already introduce their own national crackdowns amid spiking cases, but the PM has been sticking to his plan for local ‘Tiers’.
A leaked letter from the transport industry in Wales suggests a two-week circuit-break lockdown is to be introduced from 6pm on October 23 and will last until November 9, with all but essential retail outlets closed.
First Minister Mark Drakeford (pictured) is expected to unveil the draconian move to combat a coronavirus surge after a weekend thrashing out the details
The step will heap pressure on Boris Johnson, who has been desperately resisting the option in England
Deaths in Wales have begun rising since the summer months saw infections plateau
Wales risked the wrath of Westminster on Friday by pushing ahead with an ‘unenforceable’ ban on travellers from English coronavirus hotspots.
Mr Drakeford said the border restrictions were needed as Mr Johnson had ignored his plea to impose UK-wide legal limits on travelling from Tier Two and Three areas.
However, the border restrictions have been derided as impractical and anti-English by critics.
The Welsh Government is also demanding more support from Westminster to protect jobs and businesses.
Health minister Vaughan Gething said the furlough scheme ends on October 31 and will be replaced by the UK Government with a ‘less generous’ Job Support Scheme.
He told the BBC’s Politics Wales show yesterday that the Welsh Government was ‘arguing’ with ministers in London that a ‘more certain and more generous package’ is needed.
From November 1 the UK Government will pay 67 per cent of wages – up to a maximum of £2,100 a month – for each employee in businesses forced to close.
Staff must be off work for a minimum of seven days to be eligible, and their employer does not have to pay towards their salary.
Under the current furlough scheme workers get up to 80 per cent of their pay – 20 per cent from their employer and 60 per cent from the Government.
Mr Gething said the decision on a ‘circuit breaker’ lockdown was is yet to be taken but the Welsh Government is having a ‘range of conversations with stakeholders’ to understand what the lockdown might look like.
‘Part of the challenge is that support for jobs and businesses is going to change on November 1 and it will be a less generous scheme and it will only be available if businesses are legally required to close,’ he said.
‘It is a matter of fact that the new support scheme available from November 1 is less generous than the furlough scheme.
‘That’s the reality we are having to deal with, while trying to argue with the UK Government that a more certain and more generous package is needed if we are going to have the desired effect of any national intervention of any kind to reduce transmission rates while protecting people’s livelihoods as far as possible.’
Mr Drakeford said last week that local lockdowns in force across 17 areas of Wales – affecting more than 2.3 million people – have not succeeded in slowing the spread of the virus enough.
Meanwhile, there have been a further 950 cases of Covid-19 diagnosed in Wales, bringing the total number of confirmed cases in the country to 35,628.
Public Health Wales said three further deaths had been reported, with the total number of deaths since the beginning of the pandemic rising to 1,711.
A Welsh Government spokesman said: ‘There is a growing consensus we now need to introduce a different set of measures and actions to respond to the virus as it continues to spread across Wales more quickly during the autumn and winter months ahead.’
The Welsh Government has banned people from Covid hotspots in the rest of the UK from entering the country