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Hospital bosses have spoken out after Boris Johnson was pictured speaking to staff without a face mask.

The prime minister chatted and bumped elbows with masked nurses at Hexham General Hospital in Northumberland on Monday morning.

Soon after the photo opportunity, Mr Johnson put a mask on after an aide handed him one.

Britain's Prime Minister Boris Johnson meets with medical staff during a visit to Hexham General Hospital in Hexham, Britain, November 8, 2021. Peter Summers/Pool via REUTERS
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The PM elbow bumped the nurses without a mask on before an aide reminded him to wear one and handed him a mask

Mr Johnson was then seen without a face covering during a television interview at the hospital.

Members of the public questioned why the prime minister was not wearing a mask when the government advice to help prevent the spread of COVID-19 is to wear one “in crowded and enclosed spaces where you come into contact with people you do not normally meet”.

Bosses at Northumbria Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, which runs the hospital, said everyone on the official visit was “formally advised and reminded” of the “very clear” mask-wearing rules and information was “included in the written programme”.

They reassured the public that infection prevention and control “has always been and continues to be of utmost priority” in all its hospitals and sites.

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The bosses said the prime minister had left a welcome meeting and was walking along a corridor “for a very short period of time without a mask”.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson with Marion Dickson, Executive Director of Nursing, Midwifery and Allied Health Professionals, and Executive Director for Surgery and Community Services for Northumbria Healthcare during a visit to Hexham General Hospital in Northumberland. Picture date: Monday November 8, 2021.
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The hospital trust said Mr Johnson did not wear a mask for a short period as he walked down a corridor

“This brief moment was captured on camera,” they said.

“As soon as this was identified he was given a mask and he put it on. The prime minister did wear a mask for the majority of the visit.

“He didn’t have a mask on when he did his media interviews, but this was with agreement with everyone else in the room, who did wear a mask.”

The trust’s bosses apologised “for any upset this has caused” and hoped their statement “helps to clarify the situation”.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson watches as nurse Sandra Guy gives a COVID-19 booster jab during a visit to Hexham General Hospital in Northumberland. Picture date: Monday November 8, 2021.
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The hospital bosses said Mr Johnson wore a mask the rest of the time apart from a news conference where everyone else was wearing one

They added that the hospital rules include mask wearing and other infection prevention and control measures, such as hand-washing, tucking away loose clothing such as ties and having rolled-up sleeves.

Their statement came after Deputy Prime Minister Dominic Raab insisted on Tuesday that Mr Johnson had followed “all the protocols and procedures” while he was at the hospital.

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SEC custody rule made crypto regulation a ‘political football’ — Rep. Nickel

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SEC custody rule made crypto regulation a ‘political football’ — Rep. Nickel

The SEC’s proposed crypto custody rule and its “hostility” to the industry isn’t in Joe Biden’s “best interests,” Representative Wiley Nickel told Gary Gensler.

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Sunak and Starmer facing historic unpopularity with ethnically diverse communities, polling suggests

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Sunak and Starmer facing historic unpopularity with ethnically diverse communities, polling suggests

Rishi Sunak and Sir Keir Starmer are both facing a historic lack of popularity among ethnically diverse communities, new polling suggests.

While ethnically diverse community voting trends are incredibly complex and almost always hard to predict, some polling can give useful indications that can speak to the mood of the country.

A comprehensive set of data based on polling by Ipsos and shared exclusively with Sky News gives us a general sense of how the leaders of the two main parties are faring at this very specific time.

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Sunak more popular with white voters

Mr Sunak was named the UK’s next leader on the festival of Diwali, serving as a reminder of the milestone in Britain’s evolution as a multicultural and multi-faith society.

He’s the UK’s first prime minister from an ethnically diverse background and the first Hindu prime minister, but in terms of how much ethnically diverse communities have rewarded him for these historic firsts, it’s a somewhat surprising figure.

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Over the past year, his approval rating among ethnically diverse communities is -53.

That figure is historic too – it’s one of the worst of any prime minister in nearly 30 years.

Actually, from these figures, he’s much better liked by white voters – who give him a rating of -41.

This is perhaps unsurprising, given that historically the majority of ethnically diverse communities have voted Labour.

Though support for the Conservatives reached a high of 30% in the first half of 2016 and only falling sharply in the aftermath of Brexit and then in the 2017 general election under a different leader.

Sir Keir behind Blair and Brown

For the Labour Party then, the stakes could not be much higher as they bill themselves as the party of equality and progressive politics and ethnically diverse communities have traditionally rewarded them for it.

The party has consistently held large leads with ethnically diverse community voters over the last few decades and under previous Labour leaders, often given net positive satisfaction levels.

The current leader, Sir Keir Starmer, has a more favourable rating than the current prime minister, with an average satisfaction rating over the past year of -32.

But he is also considerably more popular among white voters.

And when you compare these numbers to previous Labour leaders, it is more stark.

Sir Keir’s standing with ethnically diverse community voters currently is the lowest level a Labour leader has recorded among black and south Asian voters since 1996.

Far worse than the very worst ratings recorded by either Tony Blair (at -11 during the Iraq War) or Gordon Brown (at -13).

‘The Gaza Effect’

Now, there are myriad reasons why individuals and different communities have drifted from the central parties and traditional voting patterns, but Ipsos has outlined one specific thread of dissatisfaction with both parties that they call “The Gaza Effect”.

During by-elections and the recent local elections we saw a wave of independent candidates running on this single issue platform, most prominently George Galloway in Rochdale, but this data shows an indication of how deep that sentiment runs.

When you compare the aggregate satisfactions levels across the year for both leaders, you can see how different ratings become for ethnically diverse communities when compared to white voters.

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For white voters, there’s next to no effect in satisfaction levels towards the two leaders post 7 October.

When you compare that data to the rating ethnically diverse community voters have given the two leaders, there is a noticeable drop in support.

For Mr Sunak the drop is only around 13 points, but for Sir Keir, it is far more significant with a huge fall of 29 points.

The scale of the impact is almost impossible to predict, and the drop in these figures won’t necessarily translate into votes or even seats – but what is clear is these figures show both parties will need to offer ethnically diverse communities much more to win their vote at the next election.

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First US Presidential debate planned for June 27 — Will crypto be on the agenda?

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First US Presidential debate planned for June 27 — Will crypto be on the agenda?

Neither then-Democratic candidate Joe Biden nor President Donald Trump discussed digital assets or blockchain when they last faced off on the debate stage in 2020.

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