April 27, 2020
The Prime Minister has returned to Downing Street to lead the country in tackling coronavirus. We’re very thankful for our fantastic frontline NHS, who have helped the Prime Minister and thousands of overs recover from the disease.
The Government is working to a scientifically-led, step-by-step action plan – taking the right measures at the right time. And after working closely with experts, the Prime Minister has reiterated the country’s five tests to know when we have passed the first phase of the coronavirus pandemic: Deaths falling, NHS protected, rate of infection down, really sorting out the challenges of testing and PPE, avoiding a second peak.
And on the steps of Downing Street, the Prime Minister repeated the Government's advice – Stay at home, to Protect the NHS, and Save Lives.
I am sorry I have been away from my desk for much longer than I would have liked. And I want to thank everybody who has stepped up, in particular the First Secretary of State Dominic Raab, who has done a terrific job.
But once again I want to thank you, the people of this country, for the sheer grit and guts you have shown and are continuing to show every day.
I know that this virus brings new sadness and mourning to households across the land. And it is still true that this is the biggest single challenge this country has faced since the war and I in no way minimise the continuing problems we face.
And yet it is also true that we are making progress. With fewer hospital admissions. Fewer covid patients in ICU. And real signs now that we are passing through the peak.
And thanks to your forbearance, your good sense, your altruism, your spirit of community. Thanks to our collective national resolve, we are on the brink of achieving that first clear mission to prevent our National Health Service from being overwhelmed in a way that tragically we have seen elsewhere. And that is how and why we are now beginning to turn the tide.
If this virus were a physical assailant, an unexpected and invisible mugger (which I can tell you from personal experience it is), then this is the moment when we have begun together to wrestle it to the floor.
And so it follows that this is the moment of opportunity. This is the moment when we can press home our advantage.
It is also the moment of maximum risk.
Because I know that there will be many people looking now at our apparent success and beginning to wonder whether now is the time to go easy on those social distancing measures. And I know how hard and how stressful it has been to give up, even temporarily, those ancient and basic freedoms. Not seeing friends, not seeing loved ones, working from home, managing the kids, worrying about your job and your firm.
So let me say directly also to British business – to the shopkeepers, to the entrepreneurs, to the hospitality sector, to everyone on whom our economy depends – I understand your impatience. I share your anxiety.
And I know that without our private sector, without the drive and commitment of the wealth creators of this country, there will be no economy to speak of. There will be no cash to pay for our public services. No way of funding our NHS. And yes, I can see the long term consequences of lock down as clearly as anyone.
And so yes I entirely share your urgency.
It’s the government’s urgency.
And yet we must also recognise the risk of a second spike. The risk of losing control of that virus and letting the reproduction rate go back over one.
Because that would mean not only a new wave of death and disease but also an economic disaster, and we would be forced once again to slam on the brakes across the whole country and the whole economy and reimpose restrictions in such a way as to do more and lasting damage.
And so I know it is tough. And I want to get this economy moving as fast as I can. But I refuse to throw away all the effort and the sacrifice of the British people and to risk a second major outbreak and huge loss of life and the overwhelming of the NHS, and I ask you to contain your impatience because I believe we are coming now to the end of the first phase of this conflict, and in spite of all the suffering we have so nearly succeeded.
We defied so many predictions. We did not run out of ventilators or ICU beds. We did not allow our NHS to collapse. And on the contrary we have so far collectively shielded our NHS so that our incredible doctors and nurses and healthcare staff have been able to shield all of us from an outbreak that would have been far worse.
And we collectively flattened the peak.
And so, when we’re sure that this first phase is over and that we are meeting our five tests: deaths falling, NHS protected, rate of infection down, really sorting out the challenges of testing and PPE, avoiding a second peak. Then that will be the time to move on to the second phase, in which we continue to suppress the disease and keep the reproduction rate, the R rate, down, but begin gradually to refine the economic and social restrictions and one by one to fire up the engines of this vast UK economy.
And in that process, difficult judgments will be made. And we simply cannot spell out now how fast or slow or even when those changes will be made, though clearly the Government will be saying much more about this in the coming days.
And I want to serve notice now that these decisions will be taken with the maximum possible transparency. And I want to share all our working and our thinking, my thinking, with you the British people.
And of course, we will be relying as ever on the science to inform us, as we have from the beginning, but we will also be reaching out to build the biggest possible consensus. Across business, across industry, across all parts of our United Kingdom. Across party lines, bringing in opposition parties as far as we possibly can, because I think actually, that’s no less than what the British people would expect
And I can tell you now that preparations are under way, and have been for weeks, to allow us to win Phase Two of this fight as I believe we are now on track to prevail in Phase One.
And so I say to you finally if you can keep going in the way that you have kept going so far. If you can help protect our NHS, to save lives. And if we as a country can show the same spirit of optimism and energy shown by Captain Tom Moore, who turns 100 this week. If we can show the same spirit of unity and determination as we have all shown in the past six weeks, then I have absolutely no doubt that we will beat it together.
We will come through this all the faster.
And the United Kingdom will emerge stronger than ever before.
Thank you all very much.
Commenting, Therese Coffey, Secretary of State for the Department of Work and Pensions, said:
“Corbyn’s Pension Tax will see ten million savers facing a huge bill forcing them to delay their retirement for almost three and a half years.
“This is just one of the ways a Corbyn government would hammer hardworking people on top of his plans to hike up taxes by £2,400 a year, as well as the cost of his plan for unlimited immigration and the chaos of 2020 being dominated by two more referendums – one on Brexit and another on Scottish independence.
“Only Boris Johnson and the Conservative Party can get Brexit done with a deal, get parliament working again and turbocharge our economy to unleash Britain’s potential.”
Read more about how this Pension Tax will impact millions of savers (PDF)