Originally Posted by
Ram59
One way to look at our situation is that, where we were still part of the EU, we would still have the high number of cases and this particularly virulent strain, but we would be part of the centralised EU strategy of ordering and administering the vaccine. In this instance we would have just started to administer the Pfizer vaccine but as they haven't ordered enough, then maybe we would be running out of supplies anytime soon. There wouldn't be any roll out of the Oxford vaccine until it had been approved by the EU, which is not going to happen anytime soon. We would be fustrated that although everyone should have started together, the Germans and the Hungarians jumped the gun and then we hear the Germans have decided to order their own extra supplies, totally against the spirit of all the EU together principal.
Basically, we're relying on the government to get millions of Brits vaccinated, but if we'd stayed in the EU, they'd have been powerless to do anything about it. I also seem to remember that the UK government were given the chance to be part of the centralised EU vaccination procurement and were widely criticised for going it alone.