Prime Minister Boris Johnson risks triggering a major backlash among members of the ruling Conservative Party if his UK government opts to use so-called Covid passports to help re-open the economy.
More than 70 members of Parliament from three parties -- including 41 from Johnson’s Tories -- pledged to oppose the use of vaccine certificates, calling them “divisive and discriminatory." They include former Conservative Party leader Iain Duncan Smith, former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn and Liberal Democrat Party leader Ed Davey.
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“We oppose the divisive and discriminatory use of Covid status certification to deny individuals access to general services, businesses or jobs," the pledge reads, according to a statement Friday from civil liberties campaign group Big Brother Watch.
The opposition from across the political spectrum suggests the premier may struggle to get the measure through Parliament if he pursues it. The government is studying Covid certification as a potential means to bolster confidence in returning to restaurants and entertainment venues while also helping to keep coronavirus cases under control.
A report is due for publication by June 21, though Johnson’s office has indicated interim findings are likely on April 5 -- the same day the government is due to give an early indication on how foreign travel will re-open, something ministers have said won’t happen before May 17 at the earliest.
“There’s definitely going to be a world in which international travel will use vaccine passports," Johnson told reporters Thursday during a trip to northeast England. He also said proof of someone’s Covid status -- whether it’s immunity from having had the disease or an inoculation, or a negative test -- could be “useful" in re-opening the domestic economy.
‘Useful’
“Those three things working together will be useful for us as we go forward," he said.
Johnson’s comments contrast with those of Labour leader Keir Starmer, who told the Telegraph newspaper on Wednesday that using Covid passports for everyday social activities goes against the British “instinct."
As the vaccine is rolled out and deaths diminish, “there will be a British sense that we don’t actually want to go down this road," he said.
Starmer said he would examine any proposals before deciding Labour’s stance. But if the 41 Tories signing Friday’s pledge joined with all opposition MPs to vote against any measures on Covid certification, they’d have the numbers to defeat the government.
Labour Member of the House of Lords Shami Chakrabarti called domestic Covid passports “an authoritarian step too far." Influential rank-and-file Conservative Graham Brady said: “We should aim to return to normal life, not to put permanent restrictions in place."
This story has been published from a wire agency feed without modifications to the text.
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