Scotland FM's and UK PM's latest Covid speeches

Source: You Tube (STV News) Key words: Sturgeon Covid speech


The last six months have been unprecedented

They’ve been the hardest many of us have ever lived through 

But through our collective efforts across Scotland, we did beat Covid back. 

As a result – although too much heartbreak has been endured and too many families are grieving – many lives were also saved. 

But as we enter winter, and with many lockdown restrictions now thankfully lifted, the challenge is once again getting harder. 

Albeit from the very low level we achieved in the summer, cases are rising again. 

In the last three weeks, they have almost trebled. 

And as the virus spreads, we see more people being admitted to hospital again and sadly dying. 

So we are once again at a tipping point.

We must act to get Covid back under control. 

And protect the things that matter most to us. 

In a global pandemic of a virus with as yet no vaccine, we simply can’t have 100% normality. No country can. 

So we must choose our priorities. 

Our priorities are saving lives and protecting health. 

Keeping schools open. 

Restarting NHS services. 

Ensuring care homes are safe. 

And protecting jobs and livelihoods

It is to safeguard these priorities that I must ask all of you again to make sacrifices. 

Sacrifices for our national well-being

They are not easy but please believe me when I say they are essential. 

We have decided that from Friday there will be a national curfew for pubs, bars and restaurants. They will have to close by 10pm – to reduce the time people spend there. 

And from tomorrow, we are all being asked not to visit each other’s homes - because we know that is often how the virus spreads most easily from one household to another. 

There are exceptions – for care of the vulnerable, extended households, childcare and tradespeople. 

But generally, by staying out of other people’s houses for now, we give ourselves the best chance of bringing Covid back under control. 

We can still meet outdoors with one other household in groups of up to 6 people 

And because we know this is especially difficult for children and young people we’ve tried to build in more flexibility for you. 

If you are younger than 12, there are no limits on playing with your friends outdoors. 

And if you are between 12 and 17 you can meet your friends outdoors in groups of 6 - but you don’t all have to be from just two households. 

Now, for everyone – adults and children – I know that today must feel like a step backwards

But please know that thanks to all your efforts over the last six months, we are in a much stronger position than in the spring. 

Cases are rising but less rapidly than back then. 

Our Test & Protect system is working well – tracing contacts and breaking chains of transmission. 

We have much more information on how and where the virus spreads. 

And we know what we need to do to protect ourselves and others. 

 And all of us have a part to play. 

So I am asking everyone – please, follow the new rules. They will make a difference. 

If you can and haven’t already, please also go to protect.scot and download the Protect Scotland app – so more people who might be at risk of the virus can be traced quickly and asked to self-isolate. 

And remember FACTS – face coverings, avoid crowded areas; clean your hands and surfaces; keep two metre distancing; and self-isolate and get tested if you have symptoms. 

Finally, I know that all of this has been incredibly tough – and six months on it only gets tougher. 

But never forget that humanity has come through even bigger challenges than this one. 

And though it doesn’t feel like it now, this virus will pass. 

It won’t last forever and one day, hopefully soon, we will be looking back on it, not living through it. 

So though we are all struggling with this – and believe me, we are all struggling – let’s pull together

Let’s keep going, try to keep smiling, keep hoping and keep looking out for each other

Be strong, be kind and let’s continue to act out of love and solidarity. 

I will never find the words to thank all of you enough for the enormous sacrifices you have made so far

And I am sorry to be asking for more. 

But a belief I hold on to – and one I am asking you to keep faith with in those moments when it all feels too hard – is this. 

If we stick with it - and, above all, if we stick together - we will get through it.


 
Source: You Tube (ITV News) Key words: Boris Covid speech


Good evening, the struggle against covid is the single biggest crisis the world has faced in my lifetime. 

In less than a year this disease has killed almost a million people, and caused havoc to economies everywhere.  

Here in the UK we mourn every person we have lost, and we grieve with their families. 

And yet I am more certain than ever that this is a struggle that humanity will win, and we in this country will win – and to achieve what we must I want to talk to you directly tonight about the choices that we face – none of them easy – and why we must take action now. 

I know that we can succeed because we have succeeded before. 

When the sickness took hold in this country in March, we pulled together in a spirit of national sacrifice and community. We followed the guidance to the letter. We stayed at home, protected the NHS, and saved thousands of lives. 

And for months with those disciplines of social distancing we have kept that virus at bay

But we have to acknowledge  that this is a great and freedom-loving country; and while the vast majority have complied with the rules there have been too many breaches – too many opportunities for our invisible enemy to slip through undetected. 

The virus has started to spread again in an exponential way. Infections are up, hospital admissions are climbing

We can see what is happening in France and Spain, and we know, alas, that this virus is no less fatal than it was in the spring, and that the vast majority of our people are no less susceptible, and the iron laws of geometrical progression are shouting at us from the graphs that we risk many more deaths, many more families losing loved ones before their time; 

and I know that faced with that risk the British people will want their government to continue to fight to protect them, you, and that is what we are doing, night and day. And yet the single greatest weapon we bring to this fight is the common sense of the people themselves – the joint resolve of this country to work together to suppress covid now. 

So today I set out a package of tougher measures in England – early closing for pubs, bars; table service only; closing businesses that are not covid secure; expanding the use of face coverings, and new fines for those that fail to comply; 

and once again asking office workers to work from home if they can while enforcing the rule of six indoors and outdoors – a tougher package of national measures combined with the potential for tougher local restrictions for areas already in lockdown. I know that this approach – robust but proportionate – already carries the support of all the main parties in parliament. 

After discussion with colleagues in the Devolved Administrations, I believe this broad approach is shared across the whole UK. And to those who say we don’t need this stuff, and we should leave people to take their own risks, I say these risks are not our own. 

The tragic reality of having covid is that your mild cough can be someone else’s death knell

And as for the suggestion that we should simply lock up the elderly and the vulnerable – with all the suffering that would entail – I must tell you that this is just not realistic, because if you let the virus rip through the rest of the population it would inevitably find its way through to the elderly as well, and in much greater numbers. That’s why we need to suppress the virus now, and as for that minority who may continue to flout the rules, we will enforce those rules with tougher penalties and fines of up to £10,000. We will put more police out on the streets and use the army to backfill if necessary. 

And of course I am deeply, spiritually reluctant to make any of these impositions, or infringe anyone’s freedom, but unless we take action the risk is that we will have to go for tougher measures later, when the deaths have already mounted and we have a huge caseload of infection such as we had in the spring.  
If we let this virus get out of control now, it would mean that our NHS had no space – once again – to deal with cancer patients and millions of other non-covid medical needs

And if we were forced into a new national lockdown, that would threaten not just jobs and livelihoods but the loving human contact on which we all depend. 

It would mean renewed loneliness and confinement for the elderly and vulnerable, and ultimately it would threaten once again the education of our children. We must do all we can to avoid going down that road again. 

But if people don’t follow the rules we have set out, then we must reserve the right to go further. We must take action now because a stitch in time saves nine; and this way we can keep people in work, we can keep our shops and our schools open, and we can keep our country moving forward while we work together to suppress the virus. 

That is our strategy, and if we can follow this package together, then I know we can succeed because in so many ways we are better prepared than before. 

We have the PPE (Personal Protective Equipment), we have the beds, we have the Nightingales (temporary hospitals for the pandemic), we have new medicines – pioneered in this country – that can help save lives. 

And though our doctors and our medical advisers are rightly worried about the data now, and the risks over winter, they are unanimous that things will be far better by the spring, when we have not only the hope of a vaccine, but one day soon – and I must stress that we are not there yet - of mass testing so efficient that people will be able to be tested in minutes so they can do more of the things they love. That’s the hope; that’s the dream. It’s hard, but it’s attainable, and we are working as hard as we can to get there. 

But until we do, we must rely on our willingness to look out for each other, to protect each other. Never in our history has our collective destiny and our collective health depended so completely on our individual behaviour. 

If we follow these simple rules together, we will get through this winter together. There are unquestionably difficult months to come

And the fight against covid is by no means over. I have no doubt, however, that there are great days ahead

But now is the time for us all to summon the discipline, and the resolve, and the spirit of togetherness that will carry us through.


Comments

Sir Joseph said…
Hi Graham,

I have just seen the speech of your First Minister of Scotland, Mrs Nicola Sturgeon, which is, in my opinion, very prudent and necessary. It´s the same thing as in others countries, but I have stood out that she asks that Scottish people clean their surface and as well as the virus spreads most easily from one household to another. It seems a little different about the speech in my country by these two things.

She recognises that we are in an unprecedented moment, at a tipping point, we can´t do a backward step, must come through, don´t keep going, pull together and stick together to get through. How beautiful. Albeit it´s true. We need to think in self one to think in another one and look out for each other.

I think she is normal people, I like her. Her speech isn´t a nationalist speech like in other countries that their speeches are aggressive, offensive and tiring.

See you.

Graham said…
Welcome back, Sir!

The blog has stalled without you.

Don't be deceived by Nicola - her and her party's only goal is to achieve inedependence. I say independence, but if they got their way, they'd head straight back into the arms of Brussels. I say arms, I really mean stranglehold. There I go again, banging on about Brexit. It beats Covid you must admit.

I'll give you this - she is a confident performer.




... It´s the same thing as in other countries, but what stood out for me is that she asks Scottish people to clean surfaces as well as reminding them that the virus spreads most easily from one household to another. It seems a little different from speeches in my country for these two things.

She recognises that we are in an unprecedented moment, at a tipping point, we can´t take a backward step, we must come through, keep going, pull together and stick together to get through. How beautiful. Albeit it´s true. We need to think about others as well as ourselves and look out for each other.

I think she is a normal person. ...
Sir Joseph said…
Hi Graham,

Last day I read the speech of Mrs. Sturgeon, today I have read the speech of Mr. Johnson and I´m going to make a comment about it.

You know that Mr. Johnson is not my favourite Englishman but, in this occasion, I recognise that he said what he has to say, such as to mourn dead people, to pull together, to stay at home, to close pubs, to fine who flouts the rules, to put more police out on the streets, to avoid total confinement, to protect each other and the discipline. All that is what we are going to succeed and togetherness carry us through. It´s okay. I think the speech of Mrs Sturgeon is closer and more specific than the Mr. Johnson´s speech.

It seems that in UK the lockdown implies local restrictions for areas. There had been many breaches and if English people don´t suffer these measures that this confinement entails, a mild cough can become death knell. Then, they will force into a another wider lockdown. He said that UK has new medicines and it is pioneer, then I hope that they apply for the most of the world.

See you.
Graham said…
Good afternoon Joseph,

Boris has come in for a great deal of criticism - in my opinion, much of it unfairly. Nicola has implimented similar measures but so far has not faced the same barrage that has been fired at Boris.


The other day I read the speech of Mrs. Sturgeon, today I have read the speech of Mr. Johnson and I´m going to make a comment about it.

You know that Mr. Johnson is not my favourite Englishman but, on this occasion, I recognise that he said what he had to say, such as mourning the dead, pulling together, staying at home, closing pubs, fining those who flout the rules, putting more police out on the streets, avoiding total confinement, protecting each other and maintaining discipline - all that we need to succeed and the togetherness to carry us through. It´s okay. I think the speech of Mrs Sturgeon is friendlier and more specific than Mr. Johnson´s speech.

It seems that in the UK the lockdown implies local restrictions for areas. There have been many breaches and if English people don´t put up with these measures that this confinement entails - a mild cough can become death knell - then they will be forced into another wider lockdown. He said that the UK has new medicines and it is a pioneer, then I hope that they share their discoveries with the rest of the world.