A law requiring people with COVID to isolate could be scrapped in England by the end of February, Boris Johnson has announced.
"Provided the current encouraging trends in the data continue, it is my expectation that we will be able to end the last domestic restrictions — including the legal requirement to self-isolate if you test positive — a full month early," the British Prime Minister told the House of Commons.
He said he intended to present the government's strategy for living with COVID after the return from the half-term recess, which is on February 21.
Last month Johnson announced that the legal requirement for people to self-isolate when infected with coronavirus would be permitted to lapse when regulations expire on March 24.
Most coronavirus restrictions including mandatory face masks were lifted in England on January 27, after Britain's government said its vaccine booster rollout successfully reduced serious illness and COVID-19 hospitalisations.
Many politicians from Johnson's ruling Conservative Party have been openly hostile to the continued restrictions. In December around 100 Tory MPs rebelled against the government's move to introduce COVID vaccine passes in England, as Omicron variant infections surged across the country.
The provisional move to end mandatory self-isolation early comes as the prime minister's leadership remains in question following the scandal over parties that took place in Downing Street and government buildings while the country was in lockdown.
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