Unions have called for children to be vaccinated – but they may be up against an even noisier group: parents.
Cummings has said he will hand over material to the inquiry. Will the committee ask the Government to do likewise?
Yesterday, he bent the passage of time – by giving the Commons the chance to carry out a Covid reckoning before the inquiry is up and running.
In place of deviations from the Number Ten line have come the squashing of Rayner and even a comparison of the PM to Churchill.
Turn a blind eye, and every one of the other 30 Articles in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights will be breached too.
The Government won the division during yesterday’s consideration of the Trade Bill by 18 votes.
But the former Health Secretary cautions that “critical care beds are full of people between 60 and 75.”
This minimalist manoeuvre, carried out in graveyard news time, suggests that a bigger reshuffle has been postponed until the other side of the year.
The sheer speed of vaccine invention and deployment marks a political win for him as well as a British triumph.
Building on the long tradition of Conservative reform, they will give hundreds of thousands of people a chance to support the Health Service.
In Episode one of this series, Jeremy Hunt discusses the challenges of the Covid-19 pandemic, and what he would have done differently.
Reports suggest the Government is planning to reduce spending from 0.7 per cent of gross national income to 0.5 per cent.
We fear the worst after Cummings’ departure, but Johnson must now make the best of it. That means a Cabinet shuffle.
Work on the Health and Care Bill began in 2019, before the pandemic. It must reflect how conditions have changed.