
Originally Posted by
drillerpie
The UK government actually had the benefit of hindsight, in as much as they had the advantage of seeing what the virus was doing in other countries before it hit the UK.
Leaving aside the whole issue of austerity, which I would've done differently, I would've:
Not ignored the findings of the report in 2016 which warned about the shortage of PPE in the event of a pandemic. The government instead took a conscious decision to rely on international supply chains, which in the event of a pandemic could only ever lead to the outcomes we have seen.
Agreed. Personally I find it astonishing that the NHS doesn’t have PPE supplied by a UK ran factory as and when it’s needed. It is nigh on impossible to stockpile PPE as like all perishable items it has an expiry date and if we were slinging let’s say a million PPE away a year at whatever cost the public would have seen it as a waste.
I wouldn't have disappeared off to Chequers for ten days and put a do-not-disturb sign on the door at the beginning of the crisis.
Agree completely.
I wouldn't have shaken hands with people in a coronavirus hospital, then boasted about it. Then got ill, nearly died, infected my pregnant partner, and left the government without a leader during a crisis.
All political leaders do this. I suppose has he not then this would have been reported negatively. Personally I don’t think he should have been visiting hospitals full stop, but then he needed to be seen as being in the fight with the NHS.
I would have imposed the lockdown quicker, in the hope that it would allow for a shorter lockdown. I wouldn't have waffled on so long about the inalienable right of an Englishman to go to the pub (which got alienated a few days afterwards anyway).
Can’t agree. Not with how Jo Public are dealing with lockdown now despite nearly 30k deaths. In the early throws of this pandemic, many felt they wouldn’t be affected, it’s only the flu etc. The government needed to show the public this was serious. Imagine if we had locked everything down when there were ‘only’ a few hundred deaths. Many more would have ignored the lockdown and the potential long term death rate much higher.
I wouldn't have promised a huge testing scheme, failed to deliver it, abolished testing altogether, restarted it again, failed to meet targets again, often due to the fact that the testing centres were in the middle of nowhere and couldn't be reached by public transport. I then wouldn't have sent tests through the post directly to people who didn't know how to use them, and which will undoubtedly result in a large number of false negatives, but which allow the government to say they are meeting targets.
Yeah, the whole testing thing has been the Governments biggest cock up IMO. This has been there biggest flaw. I personally would have liked to have seen local surgeries used as testing centres. They know how many patients they have and could have ordered the number needed. I think the government got backed in to a corner by the media because of how Germany were handling the testing and threw out 100k tests.
I think you could argue the first one is being wise after the event, although I would disagree. The others are pretty much common sense.