Brexit news – live: Government in ‘denial’ over problems facing exporters, trade body warns
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Your support makes all the difference.The UK government is in "denial" at the scale of the problems exporters face, a trade body has warned.
James Withers, chief executive at Scottish Food and Drink, told MPs on Thursday that trade had not been flowing freely following the end of the Brexit transition period.
He added that issues such as "the sheer weight of paperwork" and "IT systems crashing" were insignificant compared to the government's refusal to acknowledge the gravity of the situation.
This comes as Unionist leaders in Northern Ireland increased their calls for the UK government to scrap part of the Brexit deal to “protect the integrity” of the UK.
Writing in the Daily Telegraph, the country’s first minister Arlene Foster said the Northern Ireland Protocol “needs to be replaced” and urged Boris Johnson to take actions to that effect.
Ian Paisley Jr, another DUP politician, told the BBC on Wednesday evening that the 34 days since the end of the Brexit transition period have been an “unmitigated disaster” for Northern Ireland.
Their words follow trade disruptions between Great Britain and Northern Ireland, leading to shortages of some items in supermarkets.
Tensions worsened last week when the EU threatened to introduce vaccine checks on the island of Ireland to prevent doses made in the bloc reaching the UK via Northern Ireland.
EU and UK officials met on Wednesday to discuss concerns over Northern Ireland, with cabinet office minister Michael Gove and his EU counterpart Maros Sefcovic concluding they would “work intensively to find solutions to outstanding issues”.
Mr Johnson has left his position open, insisting he will ensure “there is no barrier down the Irish Sea”.
- Boris Johnson threatens to call time on Northern Ireland Brexit deal
- Brexit fishing deal ‘fell short’ of industry expectations, government admits
- Brexit: Why are loyalists making threats over the Irish Sea border?
- Does Rishi Sunak really think the scientists are moving the lockdown goalposts?
Sturgeon praises public for vaccine uptake
Nicola Sturgeon has praised the public for coming forward en masse to have the coronavirus vaccine, describing the uptake as "beyond anything I could ever have believed would be possible".
Scotland's first minister said on Thursday that 98 per cent of older care home residents had been inoculated, while more than 90 per cent of over-80s had also received their first jab.
Ms Sturgeon said: "The uptake rates we're seeing, and I hope this continues as we get into the younger population groups, are way beyond anything I could ever have believed would be possible - way beyond what we see in the flu vaccine programme.
"That's testament to the willingness and the enthusiasm of people to come forward and be vaccinated for their own safety but also to be part of that collective effort that we need to have to beat this virus."
Government in ‘denial’ at scale of exporting problems, says chief executive
James Withers, chief executive at Scottish Food and Drink, has told MPs that the biggest problem facing exporting businesses after Brexit is "denial...of the scale of the problem".
He told the Scottish Affairs Committee that issues such as "the sheer weight of paperwork" and "IT systems crashing" were not as bad as the government's refusal to acknowledge the gravity of the situation.
Mr Withers said: "I think the biggest single challenge we have just now is denial. I think it is denial, from the UK Government in particular, of the scale of the problem.
"We can't accept that this is short-term issues, that it is teething problems, or even the statement from Defra this week that trade continues to flow smoothly, because it doesn't."
Boris Johnson must commit to ruling out trade deals with genocidal regimes in wake of Uighur report, MPs say
Boris Johnson must climbdown and accept an an amendment seeking to prevent trade deals with countries ruled by British courts to be guilty of genocide, MPs have urged.
In the wake of a new report detailing human rights abuses against the Uighur Muslim minority people in China's Xinjiang province, the former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith called on ministers to stop blocking the measure.
The amendment to the post-Brexit Trade Bill devised by the crossbench peer Lord Alton would allow the High Court to decide if another signatory to a trade agreement had committed genocide, with the findings presented to parliament for debate.
Nadhim Zahawi announces 39 new mass vaccination sites
"Our nation is getting safer every day," the vaccines minister has said in a statement on the rollout, with almost one in five adults having now received a first dose of a coronavirus vaccine.
Almost nine in ten over-80s have been vaccinated, almost nine in ten over 75s and almost half of people in their 70s, Nadhim Zahawi said.
Every eligible care home has been offered vaccines, and the UK is on track to have offered vaccines to the four most vulnerable groups by mid-February.
He thanked everyone involved in the vaccine deployment - "a combination of the best of the UK".
Mr Zahawi said the level of infection is still "alarmingly high" and everyone must remain vigilant.
The minister announced that 39 new vaccination sites have opened this week, along with 62 more pharmacy-led sites.
There are now 89 large centres and 194 run by high street pharmacies along with 1,000 GP-led services and 250 hospital hubs.
He said he was "pleased" to see the results showing sustained protection offered by the AstraZeneca vaccine published in the Lancet medical journal this week.
Mr Zahawi also announced a new trial to look at whether different vaccines can be safely used for "a two-dose regime in the future to support a more flexible programme" while adding that it is a year-long study, and there are "no current plans" to change the existing vaccine programme.
PM under pressure to accept genocide amendment to trade bill
Boris Johnson is facing mounting pressure to make "meaningful" changes to ban trade deals with countries that are committing genocide.
Conservative former leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith urged the government to "stop this nonsense" and accept Trade Bill amendments that would force ministers to pull out of free trade agreements with any country the High Court rules is committing genocide.
The House of Lords reinserted the amendment into the legislation after the prime minister was able to narrowly defeat it in the Commons, meaning it will return to be voted on again on Tuesday.
Many Conservative MPs are calling for the government to take action, particularly in light of fresh reports of abuses being carried out against the Uighur Muslims in China's Xinjiang province.
The shadow foreign office minister, Stephen Kinnock, has also said the time for "tangible action" against China "has now come" and urged the government to amend the bill.
Shadow leader of the House of Commons calls for select committee on Brexit and the EU
The shadow leader of the House of Commons has called for a select committee on Brexit and the European Union to be reinstated, following disruption at the border despite Boris Johnson's promises to the contrary.
Valerie Vaz told the Commons: "Remember the prime minister's promise to businesses in Northern Ireland - no forms, no checks, no barriers of any kind, you will have unfettered access?
"Can (Mr Rees-Mogg) look at restoring the select committee along the same lines that they have in the other place, unless the Leader thinks that they are more accountable than we are in this place?"
Jacob Rees-Mogg replied that "anything relating to Northern Ireland can be looked at by the Northern Ireland Committee", adding that there "are plenty of opportunities for scrutiny".
Government should help companies ensure they are ‘not complicit with any genocidal regime’, says Tory MP
Conservative MP Tom Tugendhat has asked the government to help British institutions ensure they are "not complicit with any genocidal regime".
His comments in the Commons on Thursday come after Manchester University broke ties with CETC, once it realised that the company was linked to the surveillance of Uighurs in China's Xinjiang province.
Mr Tugendhat, who chairs the foreign affrairs committee, urged the Foreign Office to assist companies because "they can't always know" the connections themselves.
Government to introduce new bill allowing ministers to take paid maternity leave
A bill will be presented in the Commons on Thursday to allow the attorney general Suella Braverman to take paid maternity leave.
Current laws for ministers require her to resign if she wants to take time off after the birth.
The Minsterial and other Maternity Allowances Bill makes "provision for payments to or in respect of ministers and holders of Opposition offices on maternity leave".
The new legislation would allow Mrs Braverman to receive full pay for six months' maternity leave, according to Politico.
Major hotel chain criticises government over delayed plan for hotel quarantine
Rob Paterson, the chief executive of Best Western, has critised the government for being slow to release details of its new quarantine scheme for international arrivals from "high-risk" countries.
Under the system, travellers arriving from these nations will have to spend 10 days self-isolating in hotel accommodation to prevent the spread of coronavirus variants.
However, the government has not given any further information on the scheme, leading Labour leader Keir Starmer to say it was still "weeks away" from being launched.
Mr Paterson told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that his firm has been "kept in the dark" about the initiative.
He said that announcing a national programme without offering a plan was not acceptable.
"We've got all these contacts in other countries that have already rolled this out for some time. They could offer some really valuable support and we're just simply kept in the dark," the Best Western boss added.
Culture secretary launches working group on music touring
Culture secretary Oliver Dowden has launched a working group to discuss the obstacles facing performers who can no longer tour Europe visa-free.
Referring to the importance of touring, the culture secretary said: “It is a vital part of them building their careers. That is why we have set up this working group with musicians so that we can find ways of supporting them to continue to tour, not just I should say in Europe, but across the whole of the world.”
However, the government has yet to lay out a strategy to help performers with the new red tape they must grapple with.
Liberal Democrat MP Daisy Cooper said the “absurd, bureaucratic, self-defeating situation” must be rectified, while the SNP MP Owen Thompson also said ministers need to fix this "abject failure in statecraft”.
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