Brief. Me - December 22, 2024 4:48 pm
In today’s briefing update, we look at Sundays top stories. The main story being the prime minister’s map to the end of lockdown, and the paper’s predictions on the lifting of restrictions.
In our special feature, we’re looking at the acquittal of former US President Donald Trump.
Also featured: The latest Covid-19 figures, Sports, business and entertainment news.
……………………………..
Several of the papers claim to know how and when the lockdown in England will be eased.
According to the Sun on Sunday, Boris Johnson will announce today that the government has reached its target of offering a jab to the top four priority groups, a day ahead of schedule.
The Sunday People describes it as a turning point in the battle against coronavirus. It’s a striking achievement, in the words of the Observer.
What the government must now show, the Sunday Telegraph believes, is where all this is headed. It says the logical benefit of vaccines is not only saving lives, but to ease the lockdown as soon as the vulnerable are sufficiently protected.
For its lead, the Sun on Sunday says the television presenter, Amanda Holden, has been reported to police after breaking lockdown rules by travelling more than 200 miles to see her parents in Cornwall.
The Sunday Times says that when Boris Johnson revealed his dream of building a bridge between Scotland and Northern Ireland, it was derided for being too fanciful.
But under proposals submitted to a review ordered by Mr Johnson to improve links between the four UK nations, the rail industry is putting forward a proposal to build a tunnel under the Irish Sea.
Donald Trump’s acquittal by the US Senate comes as little surprise to the papers. For the Observer, it was the least surprising moment in American politics since his last acquittal just over a year ago.
The Sunday Times says that in the end it came down to party politics. If a president cannot be found guilty after triggering a riotous invasion of the Capitol building, it’s hard to think what would do it, the paper adds.
Here are our top picks of the Sunday Papers
……………………………..
Back in the pub garden by Easter
The Mail on Sunday reports on the PM’s road map for easing lockdown, due to be unveiled on 22 February. The paper says the hospitality industry is likely to reopen on 30 or 31 March for outdoor drinking or dining, but the 10 pm curfew and “substantial meal” requirement to order drinks will be dropped.
Read the full story on the Daily Mail
……………………………..
Picnics and coffee in the park from March
The Sunday Telegraph says picnics and coffee will be back on the agenda from 8 March, as out-door-meetings or gatherings outside your own household will be the first activities to be allowed. The paper says ministers are planning a “carrot and stick” approach where local areas could be locked down in the event of a major outbreak or a new variant.
Read the full story on the Daily Telegraph
……………………………..
Back to school in three weeks
The Sunday Times says Boris Johnson will announce next week that all school children will return to the classroom on 8 March. The paper says the plan to lift lockdown is “cautious” but “puts pupils first”. The paper quotes the leader of one of the largest academy chains saying bringing all pupils back on the same day would be “impossible.”
Read the full story on the Times
……………………………..
This must be the final lockdown
The Sunday Express reports the demand from 63 Tory MPs who have told the PM that all lockdown restrictions must end by May, The paper says their intervention comes as the government expects to meet its mid-Feb target for vaccinating the most vulnerable by passing 15.2 million doses this weekend.
Read the full story on the Daily Express
……………………………..
Covid vaccine creator: UK failed to heed the virus alerts
The Observer says one of the key figures behind the UK’s vaccine effort – Prof Sarah Gilbert, has criticised the UK’s pandemic plan. She said the UK failed to respond to warnings about potential new viruses, took too long to recognise that covid was spread through the air, and too slow in setting up the vaccine manufacturing centre in Oxfordshire, which will only be completed at the end of the year.
Read the full story on the Guardian
UK Weather Forecast
Sunday 14th February 2021
Sunrise 07:17
Today
Outbreaks of rain will push eastwards across most areas today, with some sleet and snow over high ground in central Scotland this morning. Turning milder, with brisk to strong southerly winds.
Tonight
The rain should gradually ease overnight, although it will linger in the south and east. There will also be showers for north-western Scotland throughout. Mostly cloudy, but the odd clear spell too.
Tweet of the Day
Breaking: New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern announces Level 3 lockdown for Auckland for 3 days from midnight - the rest of NZ goes to Level 2
Comes after 3 members of an Auckland family tested positive for #Covid19 under unknown circumstances
'We are going hard and early' pic.twitter.com/T6LWl2tdIL
BREAKING: Statement from former Pres. Trump after acquittal: "This has been yet another phase of the greatest witch hunt in the history of our Country. No president has ever gone through anything like it." https://t.co/htOXIOD9lQ pic.twitter.com/kSNuSOO5WZ
Treat of the week
https://wtxnews.com/2021/02/11/britney-media-misogyny-were-complicit/
Renaissance
Here’s looking at you, kid
CASABLANCA (1942)
A bit of Nostalgia from our entertainment people
Featured Story
Trump acquitted AGAIN
What are the papers saying?
Trump impeachment trial: What verdict means for Trump, Biden and America
Only five days after it began, Donald Trump’s Senate impeachment trial has concluded. As was widely predicted, the final verdict was that the former president was not guilty of inciting an insurrection at the US Capitol last month.
There have now been four presidential impeachment trials in US history, and this one was by far the shortest.
What it lacked in duration, however, it will make up in consequence. A precedent – a former president standing trial – was set. Reputations were burnished and tarnished. And a tumultuous stage was set for political battles to come. – BBC News
Trump acquitted
Trump acquittal: Biden urges vigilance to defend ‘fragile’ democracy after impeachment trial – The Guardian
Trump defiant after impeachment acquittal as Biden reflects on ‘sad chapter’ in US history – Sky News
Mitch McConnell savages Trump – minutes after voting to acquit – The Guardian
Impeachment trial: Donald Trump says his movement has ‘only just begun’ after acquittal – The Telegraph
Donald Trump’s Impeachment Legacy: Violent Extremism – NY Times
‘SNL’ takes on Trump’s impeachment acquittal – CNN
A banner reading ‘Convict Trump and lock him up’ flew over the former president’s Mar-a-Lago residence – Insider
Global Covid-19 updates
GLOBAL COVID-19 TODAY
CORONAVIRUS CASES: 109,133,530
DEATHS: 2,406,124
RECOVERED: 81,173,519
Business news
Brexit lorry chaos avoided as freight flows ‘back to normal’ – BBC Business
What will happen to all Britain’s empty shops? – FT News
COVID-19: Rishi Sunak outlines his priority as economy suffers deepest annual slump since 1709 Great Frost – Sky Business
UK’s Johnson to host virtual G7 meeting to push for global vaccine roll-out – Reuters
Sports News
England collapse in reply to India’s 329 – LIVE – Read on
Jurgen Klopp says Liverpool’s Premier League title defence is over – Read on
Australian Open: Grigor Dimitrov beats Dominic Thiem, qualifier Aslan Karatsev into quarters – Read on
Josh Warrington stunned by Mauricio Lara in knockout defeat at Wembley Arena – Read on