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UK coronavirus LIVE: Death toll rises by 10 as Boris Johnson calls getting all schools back ‘a moral duty’

Boris Johnson would close pubs, restaurants and shops ahead of schools in the event of severe coronavirus outbreaks, according to a Number 10 source.

It comes as the PM said getting all children back in school was a “moral duty”. Writing in the Mail on Sunday, Mr Johnson added: “Keeping our schools closed a moment longer than absolutely necessary is socially intolerable, economically unsustainable and morally indefensible.”

Meanwhile new figures suggest that nearly 1,800 UK companies told the Government of plans to cut 20 or more jobs in June as the coronavirus damaged the economy. Labour is calling on the Government to halt a “jobs bonfire” by helping out industries and businesses still shut down by the pandemic.


It comes as coronavirus death toll in UK hospitals rose by 10 on Sunday, all of which were in England.

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2020-08-09T09:26:18.866Z

‘Get it fixed or go’, former first minister of Scotland tells Sturgeon and Swinney over exam results furore

A former first minister of Scotland has issued a stark warning to Nicola Sturgeon and John Swinney over the exam results chaos, saying “get it fixed or go”.

Lord McConnell said the fiasco which saw 124,564 pupils’ results downgraded is “not good enough for Scotland”.

The system, produced by the Scottish Qualifications Authority (SQA) and approved by the Scottish Government when this year’s exams were cancelled, saw 26.2% of grades changed during the moderation process based on criteria including schools’ historic performances.

Education Secretary Mr Swinney is now facing calls to resign, with Scottish Labour planning to table a motion of no confidence in him at Holyrood.

Writing in The Sunday Times, Lord McConnell reflected on the lessons learned from the year 2000 when the wrong – or no – results were received by 20,000 school and college students across Scotland.

He was appointed education minister later that year, and said he “knew that I would have to resign if we did not succeed” in “fixing this mess” for the 2001 results.

In the article, Lord McConnell, who became first minister in November 2001, wrote: “Lessons learnt, honesty, good judgment and hard work had turned it around… Yet, 20 years on, thousands of young dreams have been shattered again.

“In 2000, the chaos was indiscriminate. It affected students no matter their postcode – but in 2020 it is targeted. In 2000, it was incompetence and overload – but in 2020 it seems to have been deliberate and ignored.”


2020-08-09T08:32:40.486Z

Labour calls for support for shuttered firms to halt ‘jobs bonfire’

Labour is calling on the Government to halt a “jobs bonfire” by giving targeted assistance to industries and businesses still shut down by the coronavirus pandemic.

Shadow business minister Lucy Powell urged the Government to “urgently rethink their rigid approach”, which will see the furlough scheme end entirely in October.

“The unpredictable nature of this virus means that public health measures must be flexible and responsive, but it surely follows that economic measures must be the same,” the Labour MP said.

“It’s clearly illogical and unfair to prevent businesses from opening their doors, cutting them off from any income, and to cut their furlough lifeline at the same time.

“They’ve said they can’t save every job, but we’re seeing a jobs bonfire. They need to target their support at the hardest-hit sectors or be responsible for another wave of mass redundancies.”

Chancellor Rishi Sunak has so far resisted calls to keep the measure open for still-shuttered firms, including those hit by local lockdowns.

“It’s one of the most difficult decisions I’ve had to make in this job,” he told Sky News on Friday. “I don’t think it’s fair to extend this indefinitely, it’s not fair to the people on it. We shouldn’t pretend there is in every case a job to go back to.”

He has set out a “plan for jobs” which includes measures to boost apprenticeships, stimulate eating out and a job retention bonus of £1,000 for every furloughed employee retained in January.


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