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  • well in the last few minutes, the health secretary, Matt Hancock, has been telling MPs the government will do whatever it takes to battle the spread of the virus.

  • I could tell the house that I've invited the official opposition to meet with me first thing tomorrow to discuss the proposed emergency bill that will set out before the house next week.

  • In addition to the measures my right on friend the chancellor set out in the budget earlier.

  • The bill will include measures to help in the national effort to keep vital public service is running to support businesses and to help everyone to play their part.

  • Adult social care will be at the front line of our response.

  • With social care providers looking after many of the most vulnerable in society, we're working closely with the sector to make sure it is ready.

  • Tomorrow, the prime minister will chair a further meeting of Cobra to decide what further measures may be necessary.

  • We will do the right thing at the right time.

  • Were issues soon acts first budget was totally dominated by the fight against Corona virus is the new chancellor announced a string of measures to help individuals and businesses get through the difficult next few months.

  • He pledged that sick pay would be available for all employees from the first day of self isolation.

  • Thousands of retailers, pubs, clubs and cinemas will have their business rates cut.

  • Emergency measures overshadowed the announcement of an extra £175 billion of capital spending over the next five years that will be spent on road, rail and broadband improvements across the country.

  • A political editor, Gary Gibbon, is in Westminster.

  • Gary.

  • Well, these were some very big guns.

  • The government was firing the Corona virus crisis today.

  • Not only what amounted Thio 12 billion in focused spending called a stimulus by the government on the crisis itself, but also, of course, the Bank of England statement bringing down interest rates and trying to loosen up lending thio companies who could easily be in difficulty in the weeks a months ahead.

  • One of things that strikes you in the documents that came out with the budget is that the growth forecast even before Corona virus ramped up on.

  • That's when these forecasts come from they They seem to be forecasting pretty anemic growth even then, so you have to wonder what we're in for as this virus grips the country.

  • All of that slightly overshadowed the what was originally planned as a sort of post election delivery budget, telling the voters We got the message.

  • We're spending the money where you want us to spend it on.

  • Boy, was there a lot of money being splashed around out there today.

  • But you keep scratching your head to look for.

  • How is it that over the long term, this government intends to pay for all that spending?

  • Borrowing is taking a huge amount of the burden here.

  • There are some taxis going up, but it doesn't look like there's a across the board approach to tax raising in in the bag.

  • Right now.

  • This doesn't look like Thatcherism or anything like it.

  • When the minister said to me, I'm a factory, I didn't like that at all.

  • It got big applause in the room.

  • Boris Johnson once said, My philosophy is boosterism.

  • Putting booster rockets under the economy Well, we saw those booster rockets today, but we really still don't properly no how they're gonna be paid for.

  • Cove in 19 rewrote.

  • This budget is meant to be a ll about fulfilling manifesto pledge is spending on the general election commitments.

  • Morning headlines proclaimed The strange times Health minister had the virus.

  • The governor of the Bank of England announce an emergency interest rate cut in £200 billion.

  • Extra bank borrowing.

  • This is a big package.

  • This is a big package.

  • This is a big package.

  • We will help the country through.

  • This was his message on the chancellor's message to delivering his first budget barely four weeks into the job.

  • Mr.

  • Chancellor of the Exchequer, Madam Deputy Speaker.

  • I want to get straight to the issue most on everyone's mind.

  • Corona virus Covert 19.

  • I know how worried people are worried about their health, the health of their loved ones, their jobs, their income that businesses, their financial security.

  • And I know they get even more worried when they turn on their TVs on here.

  • Talk of market's collapsing and difficult times coming collapsing markets happened so recently they weren't included in the economic forecasts unveiled today.

  • The chancellor suggested the impact could be grave.

  • For a period our productive capacity will shrink.

  • There will also be an impact on the demand side of the economy through a reduction in consumer spending.

  • The combination of those effects will have a significant impact on the U.

  • K economy.

  • That sounded like a thinly coded warning of recession was help for businesses and individuals weathering the covert 19 crisis, including easier access to sick pay for workers who obey instructions to stay at home.

  • On this pledge on the N hs.

  • What ever extra resources our N hs needs to cope with Corona virus it will get taken together.

  • The extraordinary measures I have set out today represent £7 billion to support the self employed businesses and vulnerable people to support the N HS and other public service is I am also setting aside today a £5 billion emergency response fund and I will go further if necessary.

  • That means I am announcing today, in total a £30 billion fiscal stimulus to support British people.

  • British jobs on British businesses.

  • Theun.

  • He moved into the budget measures the government hoped would dominate the headlines, spending promises made in the election with new roads, railways, broadband and home.

  • This budget gets it done way promise.

  • Record funding for our N HS and public service is this budget gets it done.

  • This government delivers its promises and gets things done on top of a massive boost in infrastructure spending.

  • There was also Maur on every day.

  • Service is much of it paid for, with an extra 108 billion of borrowing rules.

  • Of course the government to bring down debt might just get written, he said.

  • I will review the fiscal framework consulting widely with a range of experts, and we'll report back in the autumn if I conclude that any changes are necessary.

  • Man, it was chancellor until last months and the last prime minister both tried to warn the new chancellor off that course of action.

  • I noted that he said he was going to be reviewing the fiscal framework in which we in which we operated.

  • I would say merely this.

  • As I've said, prudent management of the public finances is one of the U.

  • S.

  • Peace of the Conservative Party and essential that any conservative government maintains that prudent management.

  • We mustn't forget that my right honourable friend is only able to deploy that firepower that he has done so today because of the choices off consecutive conservative Chancellor have made choices to control spending, to control boring and to control death.

  • That's why the fiscal rules that we set out in our manifesto are important.

  • You lived through the last big story crisis on Europe.

  • You know how deep this issue of not being a party of tax and spend runs in the party?

  • Could this be the next great conflagration?

  • Well, it is possible, I think.

  • The question is, is the Conservative Party prepared to support the tax increases that are needed?

  • If you are putting up spending in the way that we are putting up spending and he wants to maintain sustainable public finances and that is the choice, and if the Conservative Party is is willing to put up those taxes, then public finances can be kept him.

  • And what's your guess?

  • We're gonna be pretty uncomfortable with it.

  • And I think I think the Conservative Party would be uncomfortable putting up taxes.

  • A small number of pro you campaigners gathered outside parliament.

  • Brexit was barely mentioned in the first post Brexit budget.

  • The government believes the message from the referendum and last December's election voters want more spending on.

  • They'll get it.

  • It's taking our politics in strange directions.

  • This is a budget of which has an admission of failure on admission that a store it austerity has been a failed experiment.

  • Today's over spun announcements of a £600 billion investment programmer welcomed in the self same story.

  • Tabloids, which denounced Labour's manifesto, plans to invest 500 billion as ruinous Marxist novel.

  • Since we are in a different world, we've got a conservative chancellor proposing a biggest state than we saw under Tony Blair on more boring than we saw under Gordon Brown.

  • That isn't what we have seen under George Osborne, but times do change people's budget from the people's government, and I commend it to this house.

  • Hey, must now wait to see just how Corona Virus hits the economy and tests that pledge to spend whatever it takes Gary get in.

  • Well, the big question is how much of an impact is the Corona virus Kato have on our economy on the public finances?

  • Our economics correspondent hell yeah.

  • Brahimi is with me now.

  • Big speech.

  • What was the big message he was trying to send today?

  • Matt was all about saying we're going to do whatever it takes the Bank of England, acting together with the new chancellor to have this rare economic stimulus package, the likes of which we haven't seen since the financial crisis.

  • First you had the chancellor's £12 billion boost that came after the Bank of England's interest rate cut alongside a £290 billion extra liquidity.

  • That's going to help real businesses now.

  • The scale of this action tells you how serious they think this crisis is.

  • I went along to the Bank of England's emergency meeting today.

  • This is what the governor had to say.

  • The Bank of England's role is to help UK businesses and households managed through an economic shock that could prove large and sharp but should be temporary.

  • These measures will help keep firms in business and people in jobs, and they will prevent a temporary disruption from causing longer lasting economic harm.

  • That's his hope.

  • But the truth is, neither he nor the government could predict the scale of their crisis.

  • What they're trying to do is cushion the impact on jobs and on household incomes growth.

  • Today, Matt was already downgraded.

  • That was before the Corona virus.

  • Now many city economists think that it could tip us into a recession this year.

  • Okay, so lower interest rates, lots of money thrown at the problem.

  • This is a fiscal bazooka.

  • But will it hit the target, which is a recession?

  • Well, look, I think that having an interest rate cut makes it much easier for the chancellor to borrow money.

  • It makes it cheaper for him, and that's exactly what he's doing in this budget.

  • If you take a look at the forecast for the deficit last year on Dhe, then add in what they said today.

  • You can see from that chart that boring goes up in every single year.

  • Now add on top of that, the Corona virus measures and you can see the deficit goes up even higher.

  • Okay, so what about the changes in boring?

  • How does that change things?

  • I don't think you can stress enough water.

  • Big departure.

  • This is from the vision of the previous government, the fiscal watchdog today like and Mr Cenex Sugar rush spending spree to the Labour government in the run up to the financial crisis, which is an extraordinary departure for a party there was preaching austerity and eliminating their budget or deficit altogether.

  • You know, remember, this is a budget that does lots of unt Ori things like increasing taxes for Corporates, for entrepreneurs, for builders while simultaneously reversing a ll.

  • The cuts to day today spending now, of course, this is the government's economic plan.

  • What happens in the next few weeks is going to be far more important for the economy.

  • Hey, Leo.

  • Thanks very much, Jacki.

  • Well, it's how you're saying.

  • This looks like the biggest sustained giveaway since the early nineties.

  • That's according to the Office for Budget Responsibility, as well as the emergency Corona virus funds.

  • Hundreds of billions of pounds of earmarked for infrastructure spending, which receives Soon act, described as a chance to level up opportunity and share prosperity are north of England, Correspondent Claire Fallon reports.

  • The focus has shifted, but the destination, we're told, is still the same.

  • The country needs it.

  • We will build it.

  • Building a fairer, brighter future was the promise to read.

  • Towns turned blue.

  • So is this the budgets of leveling up?

  • We're in Children the world's first railway town, 13 miles from Durham.

  • Or, put another way, an hour and 1/2 by bus made a full of reality check and live in the real world.

  • I think he kind of needs it.

  • Would like sort of a swap for nobody to know the wife swap thing if they did a life swap in a cafe on the Double Duck Industrial Estates.

  • K and Bruce have been running this place since they left their jobs in social care last year.

  • Ruth's born and bred here.

  • Kay moved up from Essex to look after her elderly mother to keep this place going.

  • They work seven days a week.

  • I'd love the chance to come and live in my counsel on DDE.

  • I love him, too, and I'd like him to do my work.

  • I'd like him to go home and try and decorate and everything else that I'm expected to do as well as paid for everything.

  • How difficult is life?

  • At times?

  • Very difficult may.

  • Personally, I don't have enough money to support myself.

  • I can't say I can't go on holiday.

  • As the home of the world's first steam powered public railway, that meant job security until the railway works closed.

  • Today's budgets promised new jobs.

  • 750 Treasury posts being shifted out of London billions on public transport as well as more power being devolved.

  • But events have made a difference.

  • Well, I think the leveling off agenda has been tailored back somewhat because of the Corona epidemic that we now face.

  • Ben.

  • How Chin is elected Murph the Tees Valley.

  • He's been described as one of the most powerful Tory politicians outside London.

  • Does the budget go far enough?

  • Well, I think at this stage it absolutely does.

  • For Teesside, Darlington and Hartlepool.

  • We've got £80 million with Mountain Station, which we sit outside the front off that will revolutionize local rail travel across the region that serves 750,000 people.

  • We've got a government commitment to a share of £800 million for what will be.

  • The UK is first on the world's first industrial scale carbon capture and storage facility.

  • No matter who you are or where you were born, you will have every chance to succeed in our modern dynamic economy.

  • Oh, what do you think leveling up means?

  • I'm still looking.

  • Yeah, the, uh the level playing field, so to speak.

  • I think it's about breaking down that north South divide that's being so contentious for quite a long time, I think, where things started to go wrong in towns like this word were built to support the heavy industries.

  • This one in particular, was to support.

  • The railway industry was a major site for wagon manufacturing.

  • For the real work is a lot of potential.

  • There's a lot of lip and workforce here.

  • It's just waiting.

  • While the chancellor delivered his budget, we were with a local councillor and 200 or so people she was throwing a party for.

  • Along with Peter.

  • Shirley has signed up for a community opera being performed in Children later this year.

  • Building Still way It is complicated, isn't it?

  • That's the thing.

  • And of course, there is no bottomless pit as far as the money's concerned way certainly waited long enough in our face with being patient.

  • But now we want something we want to have.

  • I didn't in a short time ago, I spoke to the economic secretary to the Treasury, John Glenn.

  • I asked him where all that money handed out in the budget was actually gonna come from.

  • Well, we are.

  • We have made some tough decisions in the past.

  • Over the last 10 years to leave us in a situation where we've been able to make those decisions that the chances are next in the budget.

  • Today way had a deficit off 10% when we came into office.

  • It's now below 2% and that's the context.

  • The big highlight of today's decisions is around the Corona virus.

  • Actually doing what is necessary to deal with what is very unexpected and very serious challenge to our public service is delivery in difficult times, but also to individuals and small businesses in particular, who will have a very sharp interruption to their business activities.

  • The officer budget responsibility now They said today that in a debt levels, public service net debt could reach 2000 and £31 billion by 2024 then we're happy with that number.

  • There basically think there's a real danger off a debt bomb down the line, Yeah, but they've also said that it's within the framework of 3% of GDP that we've said and of course this is a very difficult time to make binding judgments about the future because we're in a unprecedented crisis and at future fiscal events at the budget that is planned at the end of the year, we will have to come to terms with whatever situation we're in, right?

  • So what you're acknowledging is that depending on what environment we find ourselves in, some of the promises made today may know just may not become a reality.

  • No, I'm not saying that at all.

  • What I'm saying is that we've had to combine two drivers and two contextual realities for this budget, so the government will continue to borrow for as long as it takes.

  • Basically, the government will continue to operate within the rules that it set out on dhe.

  • We will.

  • We will be working in that framework as we work through the future fiscal event.

  • What's bedeviling all of us at the moment is Corona virus.

  • The World Health Organization.

  • Today's raised the level to a pandemic.

  • It's officially now pandemic, and the reason why they did that and use that very chilling words is in order to deliver a wake up call that they basically said they spelt it out.

  • We haven't done enough, and that includes our country as well.

  • I think, by inference.

  • What do you say to that?

  • Well, I haven't seen the detail of the announcement.

  • But what I do know is the detail of what the government's been working on over the last two weeks that we've announced in the budget today on what we've also said.

  • And what the prime minister on the chancellor said at the dispatch box is that we will keep taking advice and we will do whatever it takes to deal appropriately with the extent of the challenges that as they as they arrive.

  • If we have to do whatever it takes to deal with this crisis, why not locked down schools and universities or indeed, cities?

  • Right now, I think that the prime minister, the secretary state for health on other senior ministers are working very closely with the chief scientific scientific officer and the chief health officer to actually do what is right for our country in the context of the threats as they see them.

  • So when the World Health Organization says there have been alarming levels of in activity, given the seriousness of this infection, you don't think that refers to us.

  • What I'm saying is that we need to work within the global framework, take advice from our friends and those that we work with across the globe.

  • But at the end of the day, we have to rely on those that mediate the advice to government.

  • That's our chief medical officer, chief science officer.

  • I think that that's the right approach.

  • And I think that's one that the country we should feel confident in.

  • John Glenn, Thank you very much indeed.

  • Thank you.

  • Public health.

  • England is now tracing everyone who had close contact with the health minister, Nadine Dorries, after she revealed she had been diagnosed with Corona virus.

  • One of her aides has also tested positive, although there are currently no plans to shut down Parliament or to close it to visitors are political correspondent Liz Bates reports at the forefront of the government's response to the Corona virus, Health Minister Nadine Dorries is now the first MP to be diagnosed with it.

  • She is now at home and has closed down her parliamentary office.

  • At her weekend constituency surgery, she met up to 12 people hear any of those now feeling unwell are being told to seek medical advice, But her main concern.

  • Her 84 year old mom, Miss Doris, said her mom has a cough and is being tested for the virus.

  • In Westminster tonight, the health secretary said Miss Doris's case had brought the issue home, But following talks with the speaker this afternoon, he insisted that parliament would keep its doors open.

  • Of course, in some ways this happened house may have to function differently, but the ability to hold the government to account and to legislate our is vital in a time of emergency.

  • As in normal times, our democracy is the foundation of our way of life.

  • I was very fortunate.

  • I had won a teacher, appear teacher, recognized my skills, and this is why some have called for the shutdown events like this that take place in Westminster every week.

  • Miss Doris attended one last Thursday, celebrating International Women's Day.

  • Among the guests was Boris Johnson, but number 10 sources insist that the prime minister has no symptoms and won't be tested.

  • A spokesperson for Parliament said there are no plans to suspend the house, whilst the Department of Health said anyone who has been in close contact with Miss Doris will be traced.

  • Those who haven't been contacted are unlikely to be at risk.

  • The health minister's office will be cleaned.

  • But before any further action is taken, they will wait for advice from the experts.

  • And many MPs agree with the approach.

  • I do believe that Parliament needs to keep on meeting because if the government wants to introduce emergency legislation, it needs Parliament to sit.

  • If it wants to renew that, it's got to have Parliament sitting.

  • And if it wants to change it to meet the changing needs of Corona virus, it still needs Parliament to be sitting.

  • But others are calling for more robust measures to protect parliamentary staff.

  • So one of things that were questioning is whether it's actually would be a sensible thing to do a precautionary approach to protect.

  • Will Staff walking within the House on all sorts insure that government can continue in parliament can continue a temporary ban on visitors to the host of comments today is the Treasury was preparing for the budget.

  • It was also responding to its own Corona virus scare after the partner of an official tested positive and as a precaution.

  • The department was deep cleaned overnight.

  • But with the world failing to keep Corona virus in check, it looks like Westminster could be its latest victim.

  • But the Labour MP Rachel Maskell has been advised to self isolate after she had a meeting with the dean or its stories last week.

  • Earlier, I asked her if there were enough safeguards for people going into Parliament.

  • The opposition and the government played a pivotal role in looking at how we can protect people from coronavirus today.

  • Budget being part off that I know the procedures Committee has been looking at how we can continue to ensure that our parliament functions in a way that addresses these really serious issues we're facing at the most.

  • And in terms of the advice you've been given, how long do you think you will be in self isolation for?

  • But I was told 14 days from the point of contacts, and I've already had six of those days, so until the 19th of March, I will be free again.

  • T out in the community Well, in a trice, England says it is ramping up its testing capacity to around 10,000 Corona virus tests per day.

  • This comes after some people kind of experience frustrating delays, trying to get themselves tested even though they have displayed key symptoms is at the top in the sheikh surroundings of a Wolverhampton carpark opposite the local KFC, there's a new drive thru in town, a Corona virus testing station.

  • In the 1st 2 days it's been open.

  • 16 cars have passed through, sent here only after they've called N hs 111 Over 27,000 people have been tested in the UK as of today, but there's been criticism from those who want tests that's still waiting.

  • We've come here to me, Olivier and Antonio.

  • Now they're self isolating, so we're gonna speak to them through a door quite a distance away and over the phone.

  • After initially calling 111 several times they wanted to speak to a medical professional, on went to a Corona virus assessment part.

  • That's why we decided to go to the hospital, because we thought that they would be probably the medical experts to to to to give us a little bit of comfort and more instructions.

  • We don't have the virus we got catch it here.

  • There was no answer is that there was nothing to disinfect surfaces.

  • I think that what he is very shocking is the sense of off abandonment of people like letting you do whatever you think.

  • He's fit, but no direction, No instructions, no guys.

  • Mike Timothy is also self isolating.

  • After a trip via Singapore, two days after he returned, he started feeling unwell and had a temperature of 40.5.

  • He's now called 1114 times after his third call, he was told there was an error and his case hadn't been escalated for testing, as it should.

  • He's also concerned about his partner.

  • He's a teacher, so he works in school.

  • And that was one of the more boring things and that we flagged this on day one with N.

  • H s.

  • One more one on Dhe continue to flag it, but again, there is just been a lack of any personalized response.

  • It feels like the system is is sort of buckling.

  • And even when I was talking Thio two people at N hs one more one last Wednesday for the first time, there was definitely a sense that they did not know necessarily what was going on.

  • How best to handle it.

  • N hs, England said the 111 phone line is understandably busy, but all enquiries air being responded to public health.

  • England has defended it's decision not to test everyone reporting symptoms, saying they must focus on those at highest risk vomiting.

  • Hospital says the average way at their Corona virus part on the day in question was 30 minutes.

  • But for everyone we spoke to, all they want is a test, so they know where they stand.

well in the last few minutes, the health secretary, Matt Hancock, has been telling MPs the government will do whatever it takes to battle the spread of the virus.

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