David Frost brands Covid lockdowns a âserious mistakeâ and says No 10 failed to âchallengeâ scientists
Ex-Johnson ally also attacks ânet zeroâ plan, saying âWeâre bringing in measures that are unnecessaryâ
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Your support makes all the difference.David Frost has branded Covid lockdowns a âserious mistakeâ, stepping up his criticism of the beleaguered Boris Johnson as he fights to stay in office.
The former Brexit minister â who resigned last month â said there were too few voices âchallenging the epidemiologistsâ, calling mask-wearing and Covid passes âstuff that doesnât workâ.
Lord Frost also criticised the drive to achieve ânet zeroâ carbon emissions, saying: âWe are rushing at some of this stuff. Weâre bringing in measures that are sort of unnecessary, too soon.â
The criticisms confirm the former close Johnson ally is now firmly aligned with backbench MPs determined to end all Covid rules and who believe he is ânot Tory enoughâ.
On lockdowns, Lord Frost said: âI think, honestly, people are going to look back at the last couple of years globally and see lockdown as a pretty serious public policy mistake.
âI would like to see the government ruling out lockdowns for the future, repealing the legislation, ending them. We canât afford it, it doesnât work,â he told a Daily Telegraph podcast.
âStop doing Covid theatre â vaccine passports, masks, stuff that doesnât work â and focus on stuff that does work. Stuff like ventilation, antivirals, proper hospital capacity â thatâs what we need to be focussing on.â
On the climate emergency, Lord Frost criticised âtechnologies that arenât ripe, trying to pick winners, trying to subsidise technologies that may not be the best way forwardâ, saying: âThat is increasing costs on individuals.â
Many suspected Lord Frost resigned because Mr Johnson forced him to soften his hardline stance on the Northern Ireland Protocol, in his deadlocked talks with the EU.
But he insisted it was Covid policy, saying: âThat was the reason I resigned, thatâs what took me out of the government.
âI didnât agree with the plan B measures, masks, vaccine passports â thatâs what forced me out.â
The government is widely expected to lift plan B after a review in two weeksâ time, or possibly earlier, as Omicron cases peak at a level lower than feared before Christmas.
The prime minister stepped back from imposing tougher restrictions after a cabinet revolt and to avoid another damaging Commons clash with his own MPs.
His future hangs in the balance after his dramatic Commons confession that he did attend a No 10 garden party â while claiming he did not realise it was a party.
Tory MPs say his fate is now in the hands of Sue Gray, the Cabinet Office civil servant investigating the controversy, although it is unclear whether she will judge whether rules were broken.
Some senior Conservatives â Scottish leader Douglas Ross, rising star William Wragg and ex-minister Caroline Nokes â have called for him to quit immediately.
Amid the crisis, Tory poll ratings continue to plunge to 28 per cent in one survey â while the chancellor Rishi Sunak has refused to back the prime minister before the inquiry has concluded.
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