Saturday 14 May 2022 02:31 AM Working from home DOESN'T work, says PM: Boris Johnson demands millions get ... trends now

Saturday 14 May 2022 02:31 AM Working from home DOESN'T work, says PM: Boris Johnson demands millions get ... trends now
Saturday 14 May 2022 02:31 AM Working from home DOESN'T work, says PM: Boris Johnson demands millions get ... trends now

Saturday 14 May 2022 02:31 AM Working from home DOESN'T work, says PM: Boris Johnson demands millions get ... trends now

Working from home doesn't work, Boris Johnson declares today as he calls for a return to the office.

In an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail, the Prime Minister says full workplaces will lift productivity and revive town and city centres.

Taking a swipe at the out-of-office culture that has taken hold across Whitehall, he adds: 'My experience of working from home is you spend an awful lot of time making another cup of coffee and then, you know, getting up, walking very slowly to the fridge, hacking off a small piece of cheese, then walking very slowly back to your laptop and then forgetting what it was you're doing.'

He claims staff are 'more productive, more energetic, more full of ideas' when surrounded by colleagues. He says: 'I believe in the workplace environment.

'And I think that will help to drive up productivity, it will get our city centres moving in the weekdays and it will be good for mass transit. And a lot of businesses that have been having a tough time will benefit from that.'

In an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail, the Prime Minister says full workplaces will lift productivity and revive town and city centres

In an exclusive interview with the Daily Mail, the Prime Minister says full workplaces will lift productivity and revive town and city centres

In the wide-ranging interview, the Prime Minister also vows to change the law if 'Leftie lawyers' obstruct plans to send Channel migrants to Rwanda.

He says that he is ready to 'dig in for the fight' against those seeking to block 'the will of the people'.

Mr Johnson reveals that the first 50 'illegal entrants into this country' have already been served notice that they will be sent to Rwanda within a fortnight.

But Government sources say they are braced for a blizzard of legal claims under human rights laws.

In the wide-ranging interview, the Prime Minister also vows to change the law if 'Leftie lawyers' obstruct plans to send Channel migrants to Rwanda

In the wide-ranging interview, the Prime Minister also vows to change the law if 'Leftie lawyers' obstruct plans to send Channel migrants to Rwanda

Asked whether he might respond with a review of the European Convention on Human Rights, Mr Johnson replies: 'We'll look at everything. Nothing is off the table.'

In other developments:

Unions threatened strike action over plans to axe 91,000 civil servants; The PM warned EU leaders he was 'not bluffing' over moves to tear up the Northern Ireland Protocol; He predicted Britain could avoid a recession, despite gloomy economic data; A consultation was launched on increasing the number of children who can be cared for by a minder, in a bid to cut costs; Ministers agreed to delay a ban on supermarket promotions of unhealthy food; Mr Johnson warned Vladimir Putin to 'find a way out' of the war in Ukraine; He hinted he is considering a drive to persuade over-50s to return to the workplace.

Ministers are locked in a struggle with Civil Service unions over the working from home culture in Whitehall.

Tens of thousands of officials are required to attend the workplace for only two or three days a week, and unions are resisting a full return.

Cabinet Secretary Simon Case is expected to launch a major push on the issue in the coming weeks, amid concerns that failure to return to the office will damage long-term productivity.

Ministers are locked in a struggle with Civil Service unions over the working from home culture in Whitehall (stock photo used)

Ministers are locked in a struggle with Civil Service unions over the working from home culture in Whitehall (stock photo used)

Ministers have blamed large-scale working from home for the huge backlogs built up at the Passport Office and DVLA.

The PM says flexible working has a role to play but will damage productivity and creativity if allowed to become the norm.

He says he is 'not antediluvian about technology...things like Zoom and Teams can increase productivity, rather than just be an excuse for people to stay at home.'

But he adds: 'We need to get back into the habit of getting into the office. There will be lots of people who disagree with me, but I believe people are more productive, more energetic, more full of ideas, when they are surrounded by other people.'

Members of the FDA union, which represents senior civil servants, this week said work was 'no longer a place' and urged ministers to drop 'indiscriminate demands... for civil servants to return to office-based working'.

Jacob Rees-Mogg yesterday warned the calls from unions could lead to employers 'offshoring' their staff.

The Brexit opportunities minister told LBC Radio: 'It's a very privileged thing to say – for people in manufacturing, work is a place, for people cleaning work is a place, for security work is a place, for millions of people across this country work is a place.

'The idea that civil servants should swan off abroad to do their job is slightly giving the game away, that this isn't about efficiency, this is about lifestyle.

'Unless of course the FDA means that they'd like us to go for offshoring, but I'd be very surprised if a Left-wing trade union thought the answer to problems was sourcing cheaper labour overseas.'

The PM's plan to send potentially thousands of Channel migrants to Rwanda is designed to smash the business model of people-smuggling gangs by breaking the link between boarding a dinghy in France and achieving a new life in Britain.

The plan has provoked howls of protest from the Left. Legal claims against the initiative have been lodged at the High Court before removals have even begun.

But the Prime Minister says he is determined to drive the plan forward

Jacob Rees-Mogg yesterday warned the calls from unions could lead to employers 'offshoring' their staff

Jacob Rees-Mogg yesterday warned the calls from unions could lead to employers 'offshoring' their staff

Boris Johnson says 50 migrants have already been warned they have two weeks to produce legal representation or face removal to the African state. (file photo used)

Boris Johnson says 50 migrants have already been warned they have two weeks to produce legal representation or face removal to the African state. (file photo used) 

'There's going to be a lot of legal opposition from the types of firms that for a long time have been taking taxpayers' money to mount these sorts of cases, and to thwart the will of the people, the will of Parliament. We're ready for that.

'We will dig in for the fight and you know, we will make it work. We've got a huge flowchart of things we have to do to deal with it, with the Leftie lawyers.'

Mr Johnson rejects claims that the scheme is inhumane saying the Government has a duty to tackle the 'evil trade'.

n Conservative MPs rounded on Jeremy Hunt last night after he claimed Mr Johnson has a 'big mountain to climb' to win the next general election.

The former foreign secretary said it was wrong to put the Conservatives' losses at last week's local elections down to mid-term blues.

'To win an election, the Conservative Party has to promise a well-funded NHS and the prospect of tax cuts. If we make people choose between one or the other, we're not going to win,' he told Times Radio.

But a Tory ex-minister said: 'History shows that divided parties lose elections. If Jeremy were to stop being so critical publicly and if he stopped his scheming ... then the Tories' chances of winning will be much better.'

WFH? You spend all your time walking to the fridge, hacking off cheese and then forgetting what you're doing: Boris Johnson on 'war criminal' Putin, battles with 'Leftie lawyers', kick-starting the economy...and the perils of home working 

By Jason Groves for the Daily Mail  

Boris Johnson can't resist a boast.

'I remember sprinting down the Olympic track in Beijing,' he tells a group of young athletes, who have been showing off their skills at the new Commonwealth Games stadium in Birmingham.

The youngsters look him up and down incredulously and chorus: 'Really? Did you?' 

With a sheepish laugh the Prime Minister revises his claim downwards, saying: 'Well, I tried to sprint.'

It later transpires that the incident involved an after-hours 'race' in the famous Bird's Nest stadium with his press aide Guto Harri, who is now reunited with him after more than a decade apart.

Both men wore suits. Neither troubled the record books.

The PM is nursing a troublesome cough today but is otherwise in irrepressible form. 

He won't comment on Sir Keir Starmer's 'Beergate' woes, but he can't prevent a broad grin creeping across his face when asked whether he has experienced a tinge of schadenfreude over the tangle the Labour leader has got himself into over allegations of lockdown rule-breaking.

On his own Partygate troubles, which have now produced 100 fines for No 10 staff, he sticks rigidly to the line that he'll 'have more to say' once the police have finally completed their exhaustive enquiries.

But, despite continuing rumbles of discontent from his own MPs, not to mention the loss of 500 council seats at this month's local elections, it is clear he thinks things are going significantly better than they might seem.

At a rally for local activists in Solihull later, he appears astonished by Labour's failure to exploit the Government's mid-term woes, saying it is 'absolutely extraordinary' that the Opposition managed to make net gains of just 22 seats in England 'after all this country has been through and after everything thrown at this Government'.

Anaemic growth figures have just landed showing GDP rose by only 0.8 per cent in the first three months of this year, and actually shrank in March as families starting tightening their belts.

But asked whether Britain can avoid recession, the PM remains boosterish.

'Yes!' he replies. 'If we continue to make the investments that we're making in infrastructure, skills, and technology.

'I'm not going pretend that it's going to be plain sailing but the fundamentals are very, very strong.

The demand in the UK, the opportunities in the UK, are massive. International investment coming into the UK is massive.'

Giving an example, Mr Johnson enthuses about ceramics firm Churchill China, in Stoke, which he visited earlier.

'They are booming,' he says of a

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