Ex-PMs including Blair, Brown and Cameron told Boris Johnson to make test and trace his ‘priority’

Ex-PMs Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, John Major and David Cameron joined together MONTHS ago to tell Boris Johnson to make test and trace his ‘number one overwhelming priority’ in order to beat coronavirus

  • Former chancellor George Osborne revealed the letter was sent to PM in July
  • It was signed by David Cameron, John Major, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown
  • Only living PM not to sign the letter was immediate predecessor Theresa May

Boris Johnson was urged to make a fully functioning test and trace system his Government’s ‘number one overwhelming priority’ in the summer in an extra-ordinary intervention by his predecessors in Number 10.

Former chancellor George Osborne has revealed that Conservatives David Cameron and Sir John Major and the Labour former prime ministers Gordon Brown and Tony Blair wrote a private letter to the current occupant of Number 10 in July.

In it they urged him to focus on making the struggling and badly under-performing system the centre-piece of the fight against the pandemic to get the country back up and running.

But speaking to Times Radio Mr Osborne said that the system had been left to the NHS and health officials to manage instead of having Mr Johnson’s full attention.

‘All the former Prime Minister’s bar one wrote privately to Boris Johnson in July, saying this was the priority, and I still feel it’s been too much something that has been given to the health department, given to the NHS, and the rest of the government has not thrown the full weight of the British state behind it,’ he told the broadcaster.

‘And it’s been distracted by other things, you know, and it shouldn’t be this is the absolute number one overwhelming priority facing the country’

The only living PM not to sign the letter was Mr Johnson’s immediate predecessor Theresa May – who is still a serving Conservative MP –  Mr Osborne claimed.

Boris Johnson was urged to make a fully functioning test and trace system his Government’s ‘number one overwhelming priority’ in the summer in an extra-ordinary intervention by his predecessors in Number 10

Tony Blair

Sir John Major

Former chancellor George Osborne has revealed that Conservatives David Cameron and Sir John Major (above right) and the Labour former prime ministers Gordon Brown (below left) and Tony Blair (above left) wrote a private letter to the current occupant of Number 10 in July.

Gordon Brown

Theresa May

The only living PM not to sign the letter was Mr Johnson’s immediate predecessor Theresa May (right) – who is still a serving Conservative MP – Mr Osborne claimed

Asked by presenter Matt Chorley who had put their names to the letter, he added: ‘My understanding is it was everyone but Theresa May. I don’t know why she didn’t want to write the letter… 

‘If you’ve got Conservative and Labour Prime Ministers who’ve between them have got many decades of experience … that I think is something that should have been listened to.’ 

The Test and Trace system developed by the Government has been widely criticised after being badly delayed and then failing to achieve widespread results.

Baroness Harding, the Tory peer who runs it, will be quizzed by MPs this morning over the mounting failures in the £12billion system.

It comes after more than 40 per cent of close contacts of people who tested positive in England were not contacted through the system in the week ending October 28. 

Speaking to Times Radio Mr Osborne said that the system had been left to the NHS and health officials to manage instead of having Mr Johnson's full attention

Speaking to Times Radio Mr Osborne said that the system had been left to the NHS and health officials to manage instead of having Mr Johnson’s full attention

Dame Anne Johnson, professor of infectious disease epidemiology at University College London, told the joint session of the Commons Health and Social Care Committee and Science and Technology Committee that contact tracing is ‘always a leaky system’.

‘So even with the best contact tracing system, given what we now know, which is that around 40 per cent of cases are asymptomatic, you will never, even with the best system, be able to identify those cases,’ the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) member told MPs.

‘There are losses at every stage of that cascade. People may not get tested if they’re symptomatic, they may not isolate, they may not report all their contacts, and so on.

‘And so it’s always been a leaky system.’

Dame Anne said that contact tracing was ‘only one part of the system’, emphasising the benefits of other non-pharmaceutical interventions, such as face coverings and social distancing.

She added: ‘We were very clear that the test and trace system is very important, but it’s only one part of the many interventions we have to make to keep on top of this epidemic.’