The findings of the first report of the public inquiry into Covid are widely reported in today’s newspapers.
“They failed us all,” ran the headline in the Daily Mirror, alongside a photo of former prime minister Boris Johnson wearing a face mask. The Guardian cited the report, which said Britain’s Covid planning was “marred by fatal flaws”. The Sun claimed the UK’s Covid failures caused 235,000 deaths. But it claimed the only real fault of successive health ministers was accepting complacent assurances from the health experts advising them.
The Times said the report highlighted “a culpable failure of imagination on the part of politicians and scientists… who failed to consider the full range of potentially disastrous scenarios while there was still time to do something”. This must never happen again, the newspaper said. The Daily Express agreed, saying that “next time we must be prepared”.
The i newspaper, the Financial Times and the Daily Telegraph all report on the efforts of Democrats to push US President Joe Biden to end his re-election campaign. The Telegraph reports that Mr Biden could step down this weekend. It quotes a friend of the president as saying: “I pray he does the right thing. He’s headed in that direction.”
The i editorial said Biden’s advisers “have hidden their growing concerns about his ability to run the campaign and ultimately win the highest office.” The Financial Times said Democratic officials were lobbying behind the scenes, but Biden’s campaign team was fiercely defending him, insisting he remained in the race.
“The judge who spoke for us all on Eco-Fanatics” is the headline in the Daily Mail, under photos of the five environmental protesters sentenced to up to five years in prison on Thursday for blocking the M25 for four days. But the Times criticises the sentences. The newspaper quotes entrepreneur Dale Vince as saying that the prison sentences – the longest ever handed down for non-violent protests – “cannot be justified”, given prison overcrowding. Guardian columnist George Monbiot said: “These are sentences of the kind you would expect in Russia or Egypt”.
The sketch’s writers focus on Sir Ed Davey’s appearance at the Post Office Horizon inquiry. Writing in the Daily Mail, Quentin Letts said he was glad the appearance had taken place after the general election. If the “Thursday session” had taken place before polling day, he said, the Lib Dems “might have gone down with a fire in their arses”.
For John Crace in The Guardian, “He was, at times, a shifty Ed. At other times, a bewildered Ed. An Ed who couldn’t believe what had happened to him.”
The Times’ Tom Peck reports that Sir Ed narrowed his eyes and clenched his jaw. “I watched those same eyes as their owner straightened up and was propelled 80 feet into the air by a giant pendulum. I saw them swing around a high curve at 68 mph and transform into the only quadruple-barrel roller coaster section in Europe. I only realise now that I’ve never seen the man look nervous,” he says.