用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Monday morning UK news briefing: Today's top headlines from The Telegraph
2021-12-13 00:00:00.0     每日电讯报-英国新闻     原网页

       

       Welcome to your early morning news briefing from The Telegraph - a round-up of the top stories we are covering on Monday. To receive twice-daily briefings by email, sign up to our Front Page newsletter for free.

       1. One million booster vaccines a day in race to avoid new year lockdown

       One million Covid booster jabs a day will be offered in an emergency programme to head off the risk of a new year lockdown, Boris Johnson announced on Sunday night.

       In the face of a “tidal wave” of omicron cases, the Prime Minister unveiled a plan called “Get Boosted Now” to offer a third jab to every eligible adult in England by the end of the year, four weeks earlier than planned. Read the full story.

       2. Boris Johnson in talks to hire ‘hard man’ ally of Sir Lynton Crosby as No 10 enforcer

       Boris Johnson is in talks to appoint a senior ally of election guru Sir Lynton Crosby to be his new 10 Downing Street enforcer, as he attempts to see off a series of threats to his leadership.

       The Prime Minister wants to hire David Canzini, a director at Sir Lynton’s firm CTF Partners who has known Mr Johnson for more than two decades, to be his new chief adviser, The Telegraph can disclose. Read the full story.

       3. Jordan Peterson: ‘If you can’t say what you think, soon you won’t be able to think’

       Cancel culture is personal for Jordan Peterson. His voice rises in emotion as he recalls the indignity of finding out on Twitter about his Cambridge lecture series, subsequently reinstated, being cancelled.

       Peterson, invoking his professional experience in clinical psychology, believes that “if you can’t say what you think, soon you won’t be able to think, because mostly we think in words”. Read the full story.

       4. Ministers must add scam advert crackdown to online harms law, says police chief

       A scam advert crackdown should be included in the duty of care law to stop officers fighting fraud with “one arm tied behind their back”, a policing chief has said.

       The Online Harms Bill is intended to take tougher action on technology firms and social media companies that allow harmful content on their platforms. Read the full story.

       5. Unvaccinated workers must come clean to employers under new Covid rules

       Unvaccinated workers will have to declare their vaccination status to their bosses for the first time, as new rules mean they cannot test themselves daily to avoid self-isolation.

       All close contacts of Covid cases must take lateral flow tests for seven days to avoid quarantine under measures that come into place on Tuesday in an attempt to slow the spread of the virus. Read the full story.

       Stay up-to-date with breaking news and the latest politics from The Telegraph throughout the day.

       


标签:综合
关键词: Covid     Telegraph     new year lockdown     advert     Boris Johnson     Lynton     story    
滚动新闻