Northern voters ‘worth less’ to PM than those in the South, mayors claim

The Prime Minister has shown he thinks voters in the North are worth less than those in the South, regional mayors have said.
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On Saturday, the Government announced national coronavirus restrictions and an extension of furlough payments of 80%, despite workers in the north of England only being offered 67% of pay when businesses were forced to close as part of Tier 3 restrictions.

At an online press conference on Sunday, Liverpool City Region mayor Steve Rotheram said: “This morning millions of people woke up knowing the Prime Minister of this country believes the North is worth less than the South.”

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He said voters across “red wall” areas would not be “fooled” into electing the Conservatives again.

Liverpool City Region mayor Steve RotheramLiverpool City Region mayor Steve Rotheram
Liverpool City Region mayor Steve Rotheram

The Labour politician said: “Apparently all votes count equally, but all voters demonstrably don’t to this Government and the support you get from the Chancellor of the Exchequer depends on a horizontal line drawn across the country and on which side of it you sit.”

He told the press conference that, during discussions about Liverpool City Region becoming the first area of the country to enter Tier 3 restrictions, the Government was “unequivocal” that it would not consider changes to the furlough scheme.

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Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham said people in the region had “just completed three months of morale-sapping restrictions and now they are waking up to the prospect of a month of even tougher restrictions”.

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He added: “I honestly don’t believe that that is understood in Westminster, that already people have been ground down by the restrictions they have been living under and they need to understand that before we go any further forward.”

He called for work to be done on a “substantial localisation” of the test and trace system, for self-employed people to be financially supported and for schools to close for two weeks for a “true circuit break”.

“If we do those things we can use November as a proper reset of this country’s response to this pandemic”

Mayor of Liverpool Joe Anderson told BBC Breakfast he, as well as members of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage), had called for a lockdown in September as the city’s infection rates started to rise.

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Mr Anderson, whose brother Bill died after contracting coronavirus last month, said: “It’s clear to me that the Government made the choice to put people’s health and the health concerns of the nation second and listen to Tory right-wing MPs and people arguing about the economy.

“I think as a result of that it’s very, very clear that thousands of people have died.”