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Coronavirus: Boris Johnson resists calls to apologise for claim care workers 'didn't follow procedures'

Downing Street and senior ministers are all holding a united front - but campaigners still want the comments withdrawn.

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Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer called on Boris Johnson to apologise for saying 'too many care homes didn't follow procedures'.
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Downing Street has resisted calls for Boris Johnson to apologise for claiming some care workers "didn't really follow the procedures" during the coronavirus outbreak.

The comments were branded "a real slap in the face" and "clumsy and cowardly" by medics and campaigners - and the prime minister is facing calls to retract them.

Number 10 has stuck by the statement, made in response to a call from the head of NHS England to adequately fund the adult social care sector within a year.

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'Too many care homes didn't follow procedures'

"We discovered too many care homes didn't really follow the procedures in the way that they could have," Mr Johnson said on a visit to Goole, Yorkshire, on Monday.

A government spokesperson clarified later that day he had been pointing out "nobody knew what the correct procedures were" because the amount of people with no COVID-19 symptoms transmitting the virus was unknown.

Mr Johnson's spokesman, asked during a Westminster briefing on Tuesday if he would apologise, said: "The PM thinks that throughout the pandemic care homes have done a brilliant job under very difficult circumstances."

Labour's shadow health secretary Jon Ashworth claimed care workers had been left "insulted" and "hurt", called for an apology and challenged the government to explain which care homes didn't follow which procedures.

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Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, said: "At least 20,000 people have died from COVID-19 in care homes. Residents went without tests. Staff were left without PPE. And all after a decade of cuts to social care.

"Shameful of Boris Johnson for trying to blame others for his government's failures."

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'You have let them down': Care homes owner blasts PM

Matt Hancock, the health secretary, declined to publicly criticise the original statement.

"Throughout this crisis, care homes have done amazing work," he told the House of Commons on Tuesday.

"The prime minister was explaining, because asymptomatic-type transmission was not known, the correct procedures were therefore not known.

"We've been constantly learning about this virus from the start and improving procedures all the way through."

And the business secretary stuck to the same script when he spoke to Sky News' Kay Burley@Breakfast earlier on.

Alok Sharma said he "noted" the criticism of Mr Johnson but insisted "nobody knew what the correct procedures were at the time".

Health Secretary Matt Hancock MP
Image: Health Secretary Matt Hancock MP

But voices from outside government have been highly critical.

Nadra Ahmed, the chair of the National Care Association, told Sky News: "I'm absolutely stunned the prime minister thought it was appropriate for him to make that comment and I think he should retract that comment and apologise."

Vic Rayner, executive director of the National Care Forum, said: "Care homes across the country were dealing with an extraordinary amount of different guidance that was coming out from government on an almost daily basis.

"So for the suggestion that they were not following procedures as laid out is totally inappropriate and, frankly, hugely insulting."

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Mark Adams, CEO of the Community Integrated Care charity, said it was "upsetting" to hear Mr Johnson's comments and described them as "a real slap in the face for those workers after they have given and sacrificed so much".

"I think this - at best - was clumsy and cowardly," he continued.

"But, to be honest with you, if this is genuinely his view, I think we're almost entering a Kafkaesque alternative reality where the government set the rules; we follow them; they don't like the results; and they then deny setting the rules and blame the people that were trying to do their best.

"It is hugely frustrating."