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People who make the rules must abide by them, Matt Hancock has said, as he acknowledged his own infamous lockdown-breaking clinch undermined public confidence in efforts to tackle coronavirus.

Giving evidence to the COVID-19 inquiry, the MP said he had taken accountability by resigning as health secretary in June 2021 after leaked footage emerged of him kissing aide Gina Coladangelo, which broke social distancing guidelines.

Mr Hancock, who was appearing at the inquiry for the second day, also claimed during the pandemic some local leaders “were not constructive” and “put politics ahead of public health”.

The former Tory MP, who now sits as an independent in the Commons after losing the party whip for appearing on ITV’s I’m A Celebrity reality TV show, played a central role during the health crisis.

Politics latest: Hancock snaps back during questioning at COVID inquiry

During questioning, inquiry counsel Hugo Keith pointed out Professor Neil Ferguson, whose COVID modelling was instrumental to the UK going into lockdown, had quit as a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (SAGE) for flouting the rules.

Highlighting that Mr Hancock had “transgressed” himself, Mr Keith added: “I’m sure you acknowledge the incredible offence and upset that was caused by that revelation.”

Pressed over whether he thought such breaches had an impact on “the public’s propensity to adhere to rules”, Mr Hancock said: “Well, what I’d say is that the lesson for the future is very clear.

“And it is important that those who make the rules abide by them, and I resigned in order to take accountability for my failure to do that.”

Mr Keith said the resignation “must have been a reflection of the fact that you understood the importance of, or the deleterious consequences of, rule-breaking or guidance-breaking on public confidence in the public at large”.

In response, Mr Hancock said: “Yes.”

Read more:
Hancock: UK ‘should’ve locked down 3 weeks earlier’

In a witness statement to the inquiry, Mr Hancock also expressed frustration over the tier system for controlling the spread of the virus, saying: “I was in despair that we had announced a policy that we knew would not work.”

He told the inquiry it was flawed because local politicians were “under significant pressure” not to accept measures.

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He singled out for praise the former Mayor of Liverpool, Joe Anderson, for his “spirit of collaboration” during negotiations over the tier system.

The former health secretary said: “Joe Anderson… he was incredibly supportive.

“And we ended up in Liverpool having a package of measures that was effective after a very constructive negotiation.”

But Mr Hancock pointed out other local politicians were “not constructive” and in some cases he thought they gave “actively unhelpful input that I felt put politics ahead of public health”.

Asked about a reference in the diaries of former government chief scientific adviser Sir Patrick Vallance regarding difficult negotiations with Manchester, Mr Hancock said: “Yes, I would say the diary entry might be better written as political leadership in Liverpool and political leadership in Manchester – I have got no beef with the fine city of Manchester.”

Mr Hancock also insisted “every decision was a choice between difficult options”, as he discussed the decision to discharge hospital patients to care homes.

He said: “I fear that if we had left those patients in hospital – those who were medically fit to discharge – there is a high likelihood that more would have caught COVID and the problem could have been bigger.”

He added that he had not heard of a solution to the problem of discharging patients that in hindsight would have “resulted in more lives saved”.

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Coinbase expands in Poland with Blik mobile payments integration

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Coinbase expands in Poland with Blik mobile payments integration

Major US cryptocurrency exchange Coinbase is expanding payment options in Poland by integrating with one of the country’s most widely used mobile payment systems.

Coinbase has partnered with European payment processor PPro to enable payments via Blik, a popular Polish mobile payment network with nearly 20 million users.

The announcement was made by Coinbase executive and NFT Paris co-founder Côme Prost, who joined the exchange in February 2024 to lead its French operations.

“Improving local payment rails is a key focus for us,” Prost said in a LinkedIn post on Wednesday, highlighting the importance of simple, fast and familiar payment options in driving crypto adoption.

Coinbase holds MiCA licence as Poland struggles to pass crypto bill

Coinbase’s local expansion comes as Poland struggles to pass cryptocurrency legislation amid political divisions. Last week, the Polish government reintroduced an identical version of a strict crypto bill that had been vetoed by President Karol Nawrocki just weeks earlier.

Coinbase holds a license under the European Union’s Markets in Crypto-Assets Regulation (MiCA), which it secured in June.

“It has been a pleasure working with the team at Coinbase to launch Blik on their platform to enable Polish customers to access Crypto,” PPro executive Tom Benson wrote in a LinkedIn post on Wednesday.

Source: Tom Benson

He added that he was confident the partnership with Coinbase would deepen in 2026 as the company adds more local payment methods and expands collaboration across additional areas.

Poland’s crypto adoption booming despite lagging local regulation

Crypto adoption in Poland has surged despite slow-moving local legislation, with the country emerging as one of the leaders in Chainalysis’ 2025 European Crypto Adoption report.

Poland is the only EU member state without a functioning national legal framework to enforce the MiCA regulation, even though the framework applies even without formal implementation.

Poland ranks eighth in Europe by total crypto received, according to Chainalysis’ 2025 European Crypto Adoption report. Source: Chainalysis

Following the president’s veto of the government’s bill, Poland is indeed the only EU member state without any step toward implementation,” Juan Ignacio Ibañez, a member of the Technical Committee of the MiCA Crypto Alliance, told Cointelegraph recently.

Related: Coinbase adds stock trading, prediction markets in ‘everything app’ push

“Not every country has a single implementation law,” he added, pointing to Germany and France, which have specific laws, while other member states, such as Spain and Luxembourg, rely on amendments to existing financial legislation.

Ibañez noted, however, that a lag in implementation does not mean all countries are equally advanced, nor does it imply that Poland is more hostile to crypto. Hungary, for example, has implemented MiCA with additional regulations that are “more unfriendly to crypto asset service providers than Poland,” he added.