2020-11-01
Sunday Telegraph Front Page 1st of November 2020
The Sunday Telegraph also leads on the month-long lockdown from Thursday, noting the prime minister’s warning about it being necessary to stop the NHS from being overwhelmed.
The Sunday Telegraph also leads on the month-long lockdown from Thursday, noting the prime minister’s warning about it being necessary to stop the NHS from being overwhelmed.
The two-week isolation period for people who have been in contact with a person who has COVID-19 could be halved due to fears of non-compliance with the test and trace system, The Sunday Telegraph reports.
The Sunday Telegraph reports that former prime minister Tony Blair has been accused of breaking quarantine rules after returning from a trip to the US.
Millions in northern England will be asked not to travel outside their area and could be banned from mixing with other households – even outdoors, The Sunday Telegraph reports.
The Sunday Telegraph’s front page focuses on claims the US president was on oxygen on Friday night, as well as the Great British Bake Off’s Mary Berry being made a dame in the Queen’s birthday honours.
One million young people could need “urgent help” to protect their futures from the coronavirus pandemic, the Prince of Wales has warned in The Sunday Telegraph.
The government’s top scientific advisers have told Boris Johnson that public compliance with lockdown rules is among the worst in Europe, The Sunday Telegraph reports.
The Sunday Telegraph reports that Britain is preparing to opt out of major parts of European human rights laws, including the Human Rights Act, risking a further row with the European Union. The PM’s aides and ministers are drawing up proposals, the paper adds. It comes as Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer accuses Mr Johnson of “reigniting old rows” over Brexit instead of focusing on the coronavirus response. Writing in The Sunday Telegraph, Sir Keir says: “Get on with Brexit and defeat the virus. That should be the Government’s mantra.”
Extinction Rebellion could soon be classified as an organised crime group as part of new plans for increased protections for the press after its protest stopped 1.5 million newspapers being printed, according to The Sunday Telegraph.
The BBC needs to move the majority of its staff outside London, outgoing director-general Lord Hall has told The Daily Telegraph.