Coronavirus: No-deal Brexit prep will be 'dusted off to help businesses deal with outbreak'
Former business secretary Andrea Leadsom tells Sky News that elements of no-deal planning will be being "dusted off".
Wednesday 4 March 2020 22:54, UK
The government's previous preparations for a potential no-deal Brexit stand it in "incredibly good stead" to help firms deal with the impacts of the coronavirus outbreak, the former business secretary has told Sky News.
Andrea Leadsom told Sky's political editor Beth Rigby that there was a "huge amount" that ministers could do to "ensure that businesses are protected".
Ms Leadsom continued: "Ironically, I think a lot of the work we did last year preparing for the supposed no-deal Brexit on 31 October has stood the government in incredibly good stead - looking at packages of support and how you might be able to help companies keep going should something dramatic happen.
"I'm quite sure that some of that will be being dusted off with a view to looking at how that could be adapted."
Ms Leadsom, who lost her job in Prime Minister Boris Johnson's cabinet reshuffle last month, also said that sick pay should be given to gig economy workers amid the outbreak of COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus.
She said she was sure the measure would be something the government will be considering as the number of cases of coronavirus continues to rise.
Ms Leadsom said: "I'm sure the government will be looking closely at what further support can be given and whether it is in the form of statutory sick pay which normally isn't available to non-standard employee arrangements.
"I'm sure, as I say, there will be measures put in place to try and lend support."
Prime Minister Boris Johnson earlier announced that workers who need to self-isolate because of coronavirus will be eligible for sick pay from the first day they are off.
The prime minister told MPs that the rules would be changed as part of forthcoming emergency legislation to tackle the outbreak.
At the moment, sick pay is paid from the fourth day someone is absent from work due to illness.
Mr Johnson said those who self-isolate are "helping to protect all of us by slowing the spread of the virus".
"If they stay at home and if we ask people to self-isolate, they may lose out financially," he told the House of Commons.
"So, I can today announce that the health secretary will bring forward, as part of our emergency coronavirus legislation, measures to allow the payment of statutory sick pay from the very first day you are sick instead of four days under the current rules, and I think that's the right way forward.
"Nobody should be penalised for doing the right thing."
Many unions and business groups have welcomed the move, but have called for the government to also help self-employed workers and those who earn less than £118-a-week, both of whom do not get sick pay.
Ms Leadsom sat down with Sky News for a wide-ranging interview, her first since she was sacked by the PM.
She described the day of her dismissal as "not much fun" and admitted that it came as a "personal blow".
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Ms Leadsom said she does not know why she was asked to step aside from her role, but added: "For me, I always try and focus on the fact that it's been an amazing six years in government and it's the greatest privilege to do that.
"You can't knock it."
The two-time Tory leadership candidate also:
- Defended Priti Patel amid the numerous bullying allegations against the home secretary, saying she has "never seen any evidence of Priti bullying anybody"
- Called for an independent complaints procedure for civil servants, similar to the system she helped set up for parliament
- Said former Speaker John Bercow's actions in the chair "speak for themselves and people will form their own views"
- Hailed a "much better mood" in the Commons since his departure
- Said her focus on the backbenches would be on "giving every baby the best start in life"
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Analysis: Leadsom will be a powerful voice on the backbenches
By Beth Rigby, political editor
Not so long ago, Andrea Leadsom hoped she might become prime minister. But after nearly six years in government - and in cabinet for nearly four - the leading Brexiteer was told by the prime minister that her services were no longer required in his victory lap reshuffle.
In her first exclusive interview since leaving office, the former business secretary talks candidly about losing her job. Ms Leadsom said it was a "a personal blow" to be asked to leave cabinet and says the prime minister gave no reason for her departure except that he wanted to make space for others in his top team.
"Being asked to step down, it happens to everyone. One day everybody is asked to step down and it just came too soon for my liking," she said.
An ardent Brexiteer, she stood against Mr Johnson for the Conservative party leadership and was never part of his circle. As a minister, she was known to speak her mind in cabinet. Whether these were reasons for her departure, she "genuinely doesn't know".
Back on the backbenches, Ms Leadsom is set to be a powerful voice over an issue racing up the agenda again: bullying. When she was leader of the House of Commons, Ms Leadsom was tasked with tackling endemic bullying in parliament and was instrumental in setting up an independent complaints procedure to better protect staff.
In our interview, the senior politician is at pains to defend her colleague and friend Priti Patel, saying that she had "never seen any evidence of Priti bullying anybody." But she also said, like parliament, the civil service needed an independent complaints system to help police the relationship between mandarins and ministers.
This is not her only area of expertise. As a former business secretary, Ms Leadsom knows plenty about no-deal planning and says it will stand the government in good stead for handling coronavirus. Support packages are ready to be triggered where necessary. But she also agrees with those on the opposition benches today who called for more support for workers, and said she believes statutory sick pay should be extended to those working in the gig economy.
In her personal statement she was careful not to take aim at either the prime minister or the advisers around him. She has been removed from cabinet, but Mr Johnson is still keeping her close, tasking Ms Leadsom with the job of developing the government's early years strategy. Her time in government over but she is still with purpose: another senior politician for Mr Johnson to watch.