Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Evening Standard
Evening Standard
World
John Dunne

Facemasks introduced in English schools to ‘avoid argument’ with Nicola Sturgeon, leaked files suggest

Face masks were introduced in schools for the first time after Boris Johnson was told it was “not worth an argument” with Nicola Sturgeon over the issue, leaked files suggest.

Johnson went ahead with the policy despite England’s Chief Medical Officer saying there were “no very strong reasons” to do so.

The policy was only ended in January 2022, 16 months after it was introduced.

Sturgeon had already announced the compulsory wearing of face masks in corridors and communal areas in Scottish secondary schools and in August 2020.

Johnson asked his chief medical officer for advice on whether they were necessary in England.

In WhatsApp messages, obtained by the Telegraph, Sir Chris Whitty appeared ambivalent when asked for his opinion. He said: “No strong reason against in corridors etc, and no very strong reasons for,” before adding: “So agree not worth an argument.”

The following day the Government announced that secondary school children returning to classes in September in areas subject to local lockdown would be required to wear face masks in corridors and communal areas where social distancing was difficult to maintain. The policy was later extended to the classroom.

The guidance at the time applied to a third of a million pupils in secondary schools in Greater Manchester, parts of Lancashire, West Yorkshire, and Leicester.

In other areas in England, schools were given the power to “recommend” face mask be worn in communal areas.

The decision prompted a backlash with one headteacher complaining that “masks mean mayhem”.

The communications show how Mr Johnson appears to have felt compelled to introduce maske after the Scottish leader went ahead with the change in Scotland on August 25 2020.

In a group WhatsApp one week before schools in England were due to reopen Mr Johnson wrote: “Folks I am about to asked about masks in schools. Before we perform another u turn can I have a view on whether they are necessary?”, the Telegraph reported.

Lee Cain, Mr Johnson’s director of communications, questioned why Downing Street would “want to have the fight on not having masks in certain school settings” while Simon Case, the permanent secretary for Covid who was promoted a week later to Cabinet Secretary, said “nervous parents will freak out” if children are wearing masks in Scottish schools but not English ones.

The guidance at the time applied to a third of a million pupils in secondary schools in Greater Manchester, parts of Lancashire, West Yorkshire, and Leicester. In other areas in England, schools were given the power to “recommend” face mask be worn in communal areas.

The decision prompted a backlash with one headteacher complaining that “masks mean mayhem”.

The communications show how Mr Johnson appears to have been bounced into the decision after Ms Sturgeon introduced the change in Scotland on August 25 2020. Schools north of the border begin the school year earlier than those in England.

Allowing devolved nations to set their own Covid policies is understood to be one of Boris Johnson’s pandemic regrets.

In a group WhatsApp on the same day, one week before schools in England were due to reopen. Mr Johnson wrote: “Folks I am about to asked about masks in schools. Before we perform another u turn can I have a view on whether they are necessary?”

Lee Cain, Mr Johnson’s director of communications, questioned why Downing Street would “want to have the fight on not having masks in certain school settings”.

Meanwhile Simon Case, the permanent secretary for Covid who was promoted a week later to Cabinet Secretary, said “nervous parents will freak out” if children are wearing masks in Scottish schools but not English ones, the Telegraph reported.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.