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“This is not the time to lift the shutdown,” Johnson said in a televised address to the nation Sunday night, presenting plans for the country’s reopening.
The reopening will be gradual over the next two months. Initially, you are allowed to exercise outdoors as much as you like. Also, people who cannot work from home, such as construction workers, are now encouraged to go to work, but
Avoid public transportation.
Under the plan, schools and accommodation, bars and restaurants will also reopen in the next two months if the arrows continue to point in the right direction.
Receive criticism
Johnson’s plans to reopen are now being criticized by various teams, and especially the fact that people are being asked to return to work sparks anger. Critics include Labor leader Keir Starmer.
– Johnson appears to be asking millions of people to return to work without providing proper guidance.
“We don’t have the guidelines, and we don’t know how it will work with public transportation, so many questions arise after that,” Starmer said, according to The Guardian.
Although Johnson emphasized that they did not want workers to take public transportation, it is a wish that is difficult to fulfill for many.
Split uk
Johnson’s decision to ease the restrictions also led to a change in the management of the virus in the United Kingdom. So far, the four countries have handled the situation together, but leaders in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland refuse to continue.
Johnson’s example and change of slogan “Stay home” with “Stay Alert”.
Scottish Prime Minister Nicola Sturgeon said after Johnson’s remarks that leaving “stay home” could have “catastrophic consequences” and called on Scots not to follow new advice on outdoor activities. Sturgeon believes in Johnson’s message
it was too “vague and imprecise”.
Wales Prime Minister Mark Drakeford also stressed that the country has not changed its message that people should stay home. He also said that the country will not reopen schools from June 1 as Johnson plans. Boris Johnson should
present a more detailed plan to Parliament on Monday.
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