Most in the government believe Holohan tried to put them in lockdown



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For the first time since the pandemic began, the government has publicly and widely refused to follow the advice of its public health experts, choosing not to impose a return to the lockdown, but to tighten national restrictions as it seeks to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

The events of the last few days mark a change in the relationship between the public health experts of the National Public Health Emergency Team (NPHET), moving away from a collaborative process where the result was largely pre-agreement by both parties to a system more formalized where NPHET advises and the Government decides.

Those two processes are now further apart than they have been since the virus appeared earlier this year.

As the country faces a second wave of the virus this winter, it feels like a significant moment in the history of Ireland’s response to the pandemic.

The return of the medical director, Dr. Tony Holohan, has been central to these developments. Holohan has been on leave since July, taking care of his wife, who has a serious illness.

He was due back to his desk on Monday. Instead, he returned on Sunday, called an NPHET meeting, and oversaw the explosive recommendation to the government that another lockdown should begin immediately.

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