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Liverpool Echo
Liverpool Echo
World
Sophie McCoid

Boris Johnson warns food shortages could last until Christmas

Boris Johnson has warned the British public to expect empty shelves in the run-up to Christmas as he said the economy was in a "period of transition" following Brexit.

On the opening day of the Tory Party conference in Manchester, the Prime Minister insisted the fuel crisis was finally "abating" after days of lengthy queues and filling stations running dry.

But he repeatedly refused to say whether the shortages across the wider economy - due to a lack of lorry drivers and other workers - would be resolved in time for the festive season.

READ MORE: Keir Starmer breaks 2020 S*n pledge

In an interview with the BBC's The Andrew Marr Show, Mr Johnson admitted he had known for months about the crisis that was building in the haulage industry.

He was adamant however that he would not address the gaps in the labour market by pulling "the big lever marked uncontrolled immigration" to let in more foreign workers.

Foreign Secretary Liz Truss meanwhile insisted that the Prime Minister could not be held to blame for empty shelves as he was not "responsible for what's in the shops".

In his BBC interview, Mr Johnson was pressed on a warning by Chancellor Rishi Sunak that problems in the global supply chain meant shortages could continue to Christmas.

The Prime Minister replied: "Rishi is invariably right in everything he says," before adding hurriedly: "It depends how you interpret what he is saying."

Pressed again later on the prospects for Christmas during a visit to a youth centre, he said only that it would "considerably better" than last year when festivities were largely cancelled due to Covid.

Mr Johnson acknowledged the economy was facing "stresses and strains" as it moved away from the "broken model" which, he said, had been rejected by voters in the 2016 Brexit referendum.

Asked about a warning in June by the Road Haulage Association that a major crisis was building due to the shortage of drivers, he said he had known about the problems "long before then".

He told the BBC: "They have been a chronic feature of the way the road haulage industry has worked" adding that the way to get more drivers was to ensure they were decently paid.

He added: "We have got to make sure people come on stream as fast as we practically can.

"When people voted for change in 2016, when they voted for change again in 2019 as they did, they voted for the end of a broken model of the UK economy that relied on low wages and low skills and chronic low productivity. We are moving away from that.

"The way forward for our country is not to just pull the big lever marked uncontrolled immigration and allow in huge numbers of people."

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