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News ID: 95128
Publish Date : 03 October 2021 - 21:28

British PM Sticks to Economic Strategy Despite Supply Crisis

LONDON (AFP) – Prime Minister Boris Johnson on Sunday refused to return Britain to its “broken” pre-Brexit economy even as the country confronts a supply chain crisis made worse by its EU departure.
Speaking on the opening day of his Conservative party’s first in-person annual conference since 2019, Johnson also insisted that the public could “trust” the police despite the shocking murder of a London woman by a serving officer.
In a bullish conference message to the Tory faithful, Johnson vowed to forge ahead with his post-Covid recovery plan to “build back better” in areas from infrastructure to climate change.
The government has sought to blame the global health crisis for an exodus of foreign lorry drivers, adding to departures since Brexit took full effect and free movement of people ended in January.
Deliveries to supermarkets have been hit, making empty shelves an increasingly common sight, while a lack of tanker drivers has triggered panic-buying at petrol stations, forcing Johnson to call in the army to deliver stocks.
The government now faces warnings from the farming industry that tens of thousands of pigs could be incinerated in the coming days without an urgent influx of foreign abattoir workers and butchers.
But interviewed by the BBC at the conference in Manchester, northwest England, Johnson said the economy was “broken” before Brexit and was now undergoing necessary changes.
“What we can’t do in all these sectors is simply go back to the tired, failed, old model and reach for the lever marked uncontrolled immigration, with people at low wages,” he said.
“So yes, there will be a period of adjustment.”
But anger persists in some quarters at his handling of the pandemic and a high death toll of more than 136,000, as well as claims of cronyism for Covid contracts.
He has also risked the wrath of Tory colleagues for breaking an election pledge not to raise taxes, by announcing hefty new funding to fix a crisis in health and social care.