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Following fierce opening remarks exchanged by Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Labor Party leader Sir Keir Starmer, the Speaker of the House of Commons issued the warning. Sir Lindsay Hoyle stated that he could not hear what Johnson was saying and asked if PMQ viewers were having the same problem.
The Speaker said: “I’ll just tell the whip that there is a bit of a ruckus coming from here.
“We are also having a bit on this side.
“I want to be able to listen to the Prime Minister.
“When I can’t listen to the Prime Minister, I worry about the people who are watching the proceedings.
READ MORE: Piers Morgan breaks into the ‘irrelevant’ demands of the shadow Labor chancellor
“If you have any further comments, please do so and talk to me later.”
Labor leader Sir Keir Starmer accused the prime minister of being “out of touch” with parents’ experiences with school-age children.
Responding to Boris Johnson, Sir Keir said: “That’s such a poor defense, the point … it’s not if the kids have COVID, it’s that they have COVID symptoms and then they get out of school.
“The government department itself shows that one in eight children is out of school this week. That disrupts their education. Whether it is COVID symptoms or other symptoms, it is beside the point.
“If the prime minister does not see that, he is really disconnected from the families and what is going on at school day after day in recent weeks.
“The reality is that losing control of the tests is one of the main reasons the Prime Minister is losing control of this virus.”
During a confrontation with the opposition leader, the prime minister said: “What I frankly want to hear is more about the spirit of unity we had yesterday.”
Sir Keir asked, “How the hell did we get into this mess?”
Johnson responded, “We are doing our best to get all children with symptoms tested and furthermore, thanks to the efforts of this country’s teachers, parents, students, 99.9 percent hundreds of our schools have returned. “
Sir Keir also questioned why Boris Johnson said that the test and trace system has “very little or nothing” to do with the spread or transmission of COVID-19, having previously hailed it as a game changer.
Sir Keir asked in the Commons: “Both positions cannot be correct, what is the Prime Minister?”
Johnson responded: “It is an obvious fact of biology and epidemiology that, unfortunately, this disease is transmitted by human contact or by contact with aerosols.
“But one of the great advantages of NHS Test and Trace, which we did not have working before in the pandemic, is that we now have the ability to see in granular detail where the epidemic is breaking out, exactly which groups are being infected.” .
“That is why we have been able to make local closures and that is why we can say at this stage that it is necessary to take the decisive action that we are … to reduce the virus, keep children in school and keep our economy in movement “.
The prime minister also said the government will introduce “more creative and imaginative schemes to keep our economy moving.”
Sir Keir Starmer asked why the trade support was not announced at the same time as the increased COVID-19 restrictions on Tuesday.
Boris Johnson responded: “Let us have no doubt that the work that this Government has done to protect the economy of this country, to support the jobs of 12 million people through the licensing plan, has allowed spending of an unprecedented £ 160 billion, more in the world.
“And I think I should pay tribute to the Chancellor and his work and we will go ahead with more creative and imaginative schemes to keep our economy moving.”
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