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Government U-Turns On 'Return To Office' Guidance Amid Fresh Covid Measures

Michael Gove has revealed a “shift in emphasis” on the government’s push for people to return to offices – with the emphasis now on not actually doing it.

Speaking to Sky News on Tuesday morning, the cabinet office minister said if people can work from home “then we would encourage them to do so.”

In a separate interview with BBC Radio 4′s Today programme he said: “We are stressing that if it is safe to work in your workplace, if you are in a Covid secure workplace, then you should be there if your job requires it.”

Asked if that was a change in government guidance, Gove said “yes”.

Boris Johnson has spent weeks trying to encourage workers to return to offices in a bid to breathe life into town and city centres battered by lockdown restrictions.

Earlier this month, Johnson declared: “People are going back to the office in huge numbers across our country – and quite right, too.”

But Downing Street could not supply any evidence for numbers mentioned in his statement, and it emerged later that in greater London bus use rose by just 6% and Tube rose by 8% week-on-week.

The new “emphasis” comes as the government announces a number of new restrictions in light of an increase in coronavirus cases.

Pubs, bars and restaurants in England will be ordered to close by 10pm each night from Thursday and Boris Johnson will address the nation on Tuesday evening.

Yet in another notable clarification of the coronavirus guidance, Gove admitted a group of six people could leave a pub at 10pm and then carry on drinking at someone’s house, without breaking the “Rule of Six”.

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