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David Davis admits to UK’s ‘very big wrong decision’ made on coronavirus in January

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Speaking to TalkRADIO, the former Brexit Secretary claimed the UK made the wrong decision on coronavirus testing in January by failing to admit community testing was going to be crucial in its fight against the virus. He also argued that Public Health England was too small to cope with the testing demands and necessity and private companies should have been asked to help. 

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He said: “If there was one very, very big wrong decision that we made it was right back in January that we didn’t say okay, we’re going to need testing and we’re going to need it now.

“And say to Public Health England you can’t run it, you’re too small an organisation to do this, we’ve got to put it out to the private sector and anybody who can help.

“Testing is the sort of bottleneck in this. The tracking and tracing? They’re going to need more – I mean they’ve got 20,000 (tracers) now, they’re probably going to need up to 50,000.”

On schools reopening in the UK, Mr Davis urged the Government to look at other European countries’ approaches where the pandemic started about two or three weeks before it reached the UK.

The admission comes as Work and Pensions Secretary Therese Coffey tried to deflect criticism about key decisions, such as ending community testing, on to the scientists advising ministers on the UK response.

Ms Coffey, speaking to Sky News on Tuesday, said: “If the science was wrong, advice at the time was wrong, I’m not surprised if people then think we made a wrong decision.”

Downing Street distanced itself from her comments shortly afterwards and Mr Buckland said there was little point in “blaming people” when the COVID-19 pandemic was an “evolving picture”.

Justice Secretary Robert Buckland has labelled it “unproductive” to blame scientists for decisions taken by the Government during the coronavirus crisis.

Mr Buckland told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I think we should all be… working together. I think pointing fingers and blaming people is extremely unproductive.

“I think it is important we acknowledge this is an evolving picture.”

He said understanding about the virus and its behaviour was changing regularly and cited how the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) had only this week recommended that loss of taste or smell be added to the coronavirus symptoms list.

“What we knew about the virus in February or March is a world away from what we know about it now,” Mr Buckland added.

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“And, of course, in June and July we will know even more about its characteristics and what it does.

“We have revised the symptoms list, for example, this week. We’re continuing to evolve and develop our policy to represent that change.

“It would be very difficult now to judge what happened in March, bearing in mind the change in our knowledge.”

Downing Street, in a briefing with reporters following Ms Coffey’s comments, accepted that ministers bear responsibility for decisions in the coronavirus response.

“The Prime Minister is hugely grateful for the hard work and expertise of the UK’s world-leading scientists, we’ve been guided by their advice throughout and we continue to do so,” the PM’s official spokesman said.

“Scientists provide advice to the Government, ministers ultimately decide.”

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