Pandemic has made devolution more apparent than ever before | Annie Lewis

On October 19, the prime minister of the Republic of Ireland, Micheál Martin, announced his country was being placed in a national six-week lockdown.
Devolution has been made clear during the pandemic.Devolution has been made clear during the pandemic.
Devolution has been made clear during the pandemic.

The first country in Europe to go back into national lockdown, the announcement from the Republic of Ireland has echoed across the UK leaving many of us wondering when it will inevitably be imposed in our country too.

Wales is also going back into national lockdown for a two-week ‘firebreak’ in order to give the NHS a breather.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

Whereas a few hundred miles away at 10 Downing Street, Boris Johnson is most likely quaking in his boots while staunchly defending his tiered-lockdown system.

This pandemic has made devolution more apparent than ever before.

The four countries which make up the United Kingdom can’t even agree on what terms to use – with ‘circuit break’ and ‘firebreak’ (what are they going to do, hose down the virus?) floating around – let alone what restrictions to impose.

While we’d like to think we – as in Northern Ireland, Wales, Scotland and England – are in it together, this is clearly not the case when rules change so drastically depending on which side of the border you live.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

For example, if you lived in Berwick Upon Tweed you are just two-and-a-half miles from the Scottish border.

Therefore, it is hardly surprising that so many of us find the rules so incredibly confusing. If there was ever a time for the United Kingdom to come together and agree on one thing, it would be now.

Will this complete segregation and distrust between the countries of the United Kingdom lead to independence referendums?

I would not be surprised.

The chaos caused by differing rules has played into Nicola Sturgeon’s hands, who must be rubbing them together with glee as she will inevitably pitch a Scottish independence referendum again.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The damage coronavirus has done to our political landscape will become apparent.

But for now, all we have is hope and camaraderie to navigate through this pandemic.

It’s impressive airports can turn around tests in an hour

Heathrow is the first airport in the UK to begin coronavirus testing before flights.

For £80, you can get a test before you board a flight and you will supposedly get the result in an hour.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

The aim is to enable people who are travelling to destinations where proof of a negative result is required on arrival.

This is very good news for the travel industry.

But if an airport can turn around a Covid-19 test result in less than 60 minutes, why can’t our testing centres?

I know the answer – money.

But the key to getting on top of the virus and back to our normal lives is mass testing.

It is surely worth the investment.

We need to keep children in school for as long as we can

New figures show almost half of secondary schools in England sent home one or more pupils because of Covid-19 last week.

Hide Ad
Hide Ad

It meant pupils having to isolate in 46 per cent of secondary and 16 per cent of primary schools.

I hope that whatever happens in the coming months, students can stay in school to get a fair education like those who have gone before them.

If, let’s say, students cannot go back full-time this year, there will be a whole generation affected which will only have bad long-term implications.

I, like many others, don’t know what the solution is. But stopping students getting an education isn’t it.