London Daily

Focus on the big picture.
Sunday, Jul 12, 2026

Covid-19: English lockdown may last beyond 2 Dec, says Gove

Covid-19: English lockdown may last beyond 2 Dec, says Gove

Michael Gove says it is his "fervent hope" that England's new lockdown will end on 2 December - but that ministers will be "guided by the facts".

"We do need to get the R rate below 1," the Cabinet Office minister told the BBC's Andrew Marr Show.

The strict measures are due to come into force from Thursday.

Pubs, restaurants, gyms, non-essential shops and places of worship will close, but schools, colleges and universities can stay open.

The prime minister is expected to deliver a statement in the Commons on Monday before a vote on the latest restrictions on Wednesday. Labour has said it will back the lockdown.

Boris Johnson said he expects the lockdown to last until 2 December, after which England's regional tiered system will be reintroduced.

But Mr Gove told the BBC decisions would "obviously be guided by the facts".

He said ministers believe "on the basis of the evidence that we have that we will be able to [lift restrictions]" by 2 December.

But he stressed that "we do need to get the R rate [the number of people that one infected person will infect] below 1".

Earlier, he told Sky News the lockdown could be extended beyond the December deadline.

What are the new restrictions?


*  People will be told to stay at home except for specific reasons
*  These include work which cannot be done from home, childcare or education, exercise outdoors, medical reasons, essential shopping, providing care for vulnerable people or for volunteering, and visiting members of your support bubble
*  Meeting indoors or in private gardens will not be allowed, but individuals can meet one other person from another household outside in a public place
*  Non-essential retail will close, but can remain open for click-and-collect delivery
*  Pubs, bars, restaurants will have to close, but can still provide takeaway and delivery, excluding takeaway of alcohol
*  Indoor and outdoor leisure facilities, such as gyms and swimming pools, will also close, along with entertainment venues and personal care facilities such as beauty salons
*  Places of worship will close, unless they are being used for funerals, to broadcast acts of worship, individual prayer, formal childcare, or essential services such as blood donation or food banks
*  Construction sites and manufacturing workplaces can remain open
*  Weddings and civil partnership ceremonies will not be able to take place except in exceptional circumstances, and funerals will be limited to a maximum of 30 people
*  Children will still be able to move between homes if their parents are separated
*  Clinically vulnerable people will be asked to be "especially careful" but people will not be asked to resume shielding
*  Overnight stays, staying in a second home, and holidays will not be allowed - including in the UK and abroad - although there are exceptions, such as work trips
*  People will be told to avoid all non-essential travel by private or public transport

Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer told the BBC there would "be no effective exit on 2 December unless the government uses this time to fix test, trace and isolate".

He has called for the lockdown to stay in place until the R rate is below 1.

Also on the Andrew Marr Show, Sir Jeremy Farrar, chairman of the Wellcome Trust and Sage member, said the proposed end date of the four-week lockdown was "useful" but people should not be "fixed on it" as it is not clear what the situation will be like in the last week of November.

He added it would be "much better to extend lockdown for another couple of weeks prior to Christmas" so people could enjoy that time.

The latest R estimate for the whole of the UK is between 1.1 and 1.3 .



On Sunday, the UK recorded 23,254 new confirmed cases of coronavirus and 162 deaths within 28 days of a positive test.

Mr Gove said ministers were moved to introduce more stringent measures in order to prevent the NHS from being overwhelmed.

If action was not taken now "we would face a situation by 4 December [...] that the NHS would be full", he said, adding: "Every available space and every available corridor taken."

Asked whether the government would rather close schools and end the lockdown on time, or extend the lockdown in order to keep schools open, Mr Gove said ministers "want to keep schools open".

He added: "I don't believe it would be that case, but I do believe that we want to keep schools open and I believe that the measures that we are putting in place will enable us to do so."

Full details of the regulations are expected to be published ahead of a vote by MPs on Wednesday, but ministers have clarified some aspects of the new rules.

Health minister Nadine Dorries said children under school age will not count towards the limit of two people meeting outside, following concerns from new parents that they would be socially isolated.

She said children and adults who are dependent on round-the-clock care because of disabilities would also be an exception.

'Less than one in ten beds' taken by Covid patients


Ministers have issued stark warnings about the risk of the NHS becoming overwhelmed.

Hospitals are under huge pressure in a number of areas, particularly in the north west.

But what we are not being told is exactly just how full they are.

The figures presented by the government detail how many patients are in hospital with Covid - currently they take up less than one in 10 beds.

However, so far both NHS England and the Department for Health and Social Care have refused to reveal the number of available beds once you take into account patients being treated in hospital for other conditions.

We know the amount of non-Covid treatment for things such as cancer care and routine surgery is still not back to normal levels - and the requirement for social distancing and other infection control measures means capacity is reduced overall.

But it's still likely there are a significant number of available beds in many places.

Clearly it's a fast-moving picture and there will be a need to act before things spiral out of control.

But the public deserves to be given the complete picture if it's being asked to make such huge sacrifices.

Meanwhile, there has been criticism after the government's decision to extend the UK furlough scheme, covering 80% of employee wages, until December - hours before it was due to end.

Welsh First Minister Mark Drakeford said extending the scheme mid-way through Wales' "firebreak" lockdown was "not fair at all" after Chancellor Rishi Sunak rejected his requests to boost subsidies for wages.

Mayor of Liverpool Joe Anderson said the government "dismissed" the north of England's call for the furlough scheme to be introduced in tier three regions last month.

Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon is also seeking clarity over whether the support will be available to Scottish firms in the future if the nation enters a lockdown later in the year.

Mr Gove said the latest restrictions "go further than anything that has been put in place in Greater Manchester and elsewhere", adding that economic support was kept under review.

Dame Carolyn Fairbairn, Confederation of British Industry director general, has described the furlough extension as a "vital step".

Earlier, former Conservative leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith accused the prime minister of "giving in to the scientific advisers".

Writing in the Telegraph, Sir Iain said the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) had "pressurised" the government into taking this decision, with its members "publicly lecturing" the government.

And England's Catholic Church strongly criticised the government for banning communal worship in the new lockdown.


One key document shows several UK daily death projections by different modellers, compared with the first wave and the government's "reasonable worst-case scenario" - which was seen in a report in August


The prime minister told a Downing Street news conference on Saturday that the measures were to prevent a "medical and moral disaster" for the NHS.

He warned that Christmas may be "very different" but said he hoped taking action now would mean families can gather.

The UK recorded another 21,915 confirmed coronavirus cases on Saturday, bringing the total since the pandemic began to 1,011,660.

Another 326 people were reported to have died within 28 days of a positive test.

Elsewhere in the UK, Wales' 17-day firebreak lockdown is due to end as planned on 9 November and Scotland is advising that people should not travel to or from England, except for essential purposes, ahead of the nation's five-level system of restrictions coming into force on Monday.

In Northern Ireland, pubs and restaurants were closed for four weeks starting on October 16 with the exception of takeaways and deliveries. Schools were closed for two weeks.


Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
Government Creates Emergency Support Scheme for Financially Struggling Universities
United Kingdom Replaces Traditional Farm Subsidies With Payments Linked to Environmental Performance
National Grid Reports First Week of Electricity Generation Without Fossil Fuels
United Kingdom Financial Regulator Introduces Tougher Capital Rules for Cryptocurrency Exchanges
Belfast Harbour Expands Operations to Attract Investment Through United Kingdom and European Union Market Access
Scottish Government Threatens Legal Challenge Over Westminster Cuts to North Sea Transition Funding
United Kingdom Accelerates Trans-Pennine High-Speed Rail Project Linking Northern Cities
United Kingdom Secures Ten Billion Pound Investment for Cambridge Quantum Computing Campus
Port Talbot Steelworks Wins Support for Green Hydrogen Transition and Protection of Industrial Jobs
United Kingdom Sends Royal Navy Carrier Strike Group to Indo-Pacific as Regional Security Focus Expands
National Health Service Expands Artificial Intelligence Diagnostics Across England to Reduce Screening Backlogs
United Kingdom Launches Fifty Billion Pound Infrastructure Fund to Accelerate Housing and Construction
UK Medical Chiefs Update Health Guidance to Promote Everyday Physical Activity
Office of Communications Keeps Wikipedia Under Review Under UK Online Safety Rules
UK Defence Ministry Expands Deep-Strike Capability Through Precision Missile Programme
Russell Group Universities Warn Funding Cuts Could Damage NHS Workforce Training
UK Parliament Calls for National Emergency Broadcast as Heatwave Conditions Intensify
UK and Netherlands Strengthen Naval Cooperation With New Amphibious Defence Partnership
UK Defence Ministry Joins International Missile Programme With One Hundred and Ninety Million Pound Investment
Bank of England Warns Middle East Conflict and AI Risks Could Pressure UK Economy
UK Government Introduces New Rules to Limit Foreign Influence in Political Donations
UK and France Prepare Naval Mission to Protect Shipping Through Strait of Hormuz
United States Pressures UK to Increase Defence Spending at NATO Summit
Bank of England Warns Artificial Intelligence Investment Boom Could Create Financial Stability Risks
Bank of England Begins Direct Oversight of Critical Technology Providers Supporting UK Finance
Andy Burnham Set to Become UK Prime Minister After Labour Leadership Race Clears Path to Downing Street
Scottish Fishing Industry Calls for Emergency Support Amid Rising Costs
UK Supports Stronger European Response to Russian Actions in Ukraine
Devon and Cornwall Police Release Suspect in Ann Widdecombe Murder Investigation
Scottish MPs Demand More Government Support for Fishing Industry
UK Aviation Sector Faces New Rules as Parliament Reviews Passenger Protection Reforms
King’s College London Disciplines Students Over Pro-Palestine Campus Protests
Ministry of Defence Expands Military Capabilities Through New Precision Strike Investment
United Kingdom Condemns Russian Treatment of Ukrainian Children at International Security Forum
House of Lords Reviews Civil Aviation Bill to Strengthen Passenger Rights and UK Aviation Competitiveness
UK Aerospace and Defence Industries Contribute Nearly Forty-Seven Billion Pounds to Economy
UK Government Advances Consultation on Possible Social Media Ban for Children Under Sixteen
United Kingdom Ratifies Global High Seas Treaty to Protect Marine Biodiversity
United Kingdom Joins United States Precision Strike Missile Programme With One Hundred Ninety Million Pound Investment
UK Senior NHS Doctors Vote for Further Strike Action Over Pay and Contract Disputes
BBC Leadership Resigns After Donald Trump Launches Ten Billion Dollar Defamation Lawsuit
UK Fiscal Watchdog Warns Andy Burnham Government Faces One Hundred Billion Pound Budget Challenge
The AI Invoice Shock: Layoffs Didn't Save Managers Money — They Cost Them More
Concern: Sexually Transmitted Bacterium Among Men Develops Antibiotic Resistance
Following Massive Investor Demand: SK Hynix Raises 26.5 Billion Dollars on Nasdaq
Passenger Partially Pulled Out of Ryanair Jet After Cabin Window Fails Mid-Flight
After Four Years, and Under a Heavy Veil of Secrecy: King Charles Meets His Grandchildren, Harry and Meghan's Children
Cross-Party MPs Call for National Climate Emergency Broadcast
Bayeux Tapestry Arrives in the United Kingdom for Landmark Exhibition
United Kingdom Launches Modern Slavery Prevention Programme in Vietnam
×