Piers Morgan has dismissed Boris Johnsonās public apology to those whoād lost loved ones to Covid-19 after the UK death toll topped 100,000.
During Wednesdayās edition of Good Morning Britain, Piers and co-presenter Susanna Reid commented on the PMās public address the previous evening, in which he said he was ādeeply sorry for every life lostā.
Johnson went on to say his government ādid everything that we could to minimise suffering and minimise loss of life in this country as a result of the pandemicā, adding: āWhat I can say is that the government will continue to do everything we can to minimise life lost as we go forward.ā
The following morning, Piers told GMB viewers: āThe prime minister, heās sorry. Heās really sorry, he bowed his head, and said all the right things.
āAnd empathyās fine, Iām all for leaders showing empathy, but whatās he sorry for? Is he sorry for any of the actions he took? And judging by what he said, no heās not. Heās not actually sorry for anything heās done.ā
Quoting the prime minister, Piers said: āāWeāve done everything we could have doneā¦ and weāll carry on doing everything we canā. Thatās not an admission of doing anything wrong, and yet the obvious conclusion from this horrible milestone is that he did a lot of things wrong. And I want to start hearing this government admitting it.ā
The pair then began listing the governmentās shortcomings in the pandemic, with Susanna stating: ā[We were] late to lockdown, didnāt ban mass gatherings, we were slow on PPE...ā
āWe prepared for a flu pandemic,ā Piers continued. āWe pursued herd immunity, because thatās what you do with flu, but it was the wrong strategy. Then we abandoned it
āWe had a testing system that didnāt work. We had no PPE, which is why 800 health and care workers have died.
āThrough the summer, what did we do? We had Eat Out To Help Out, what did that do? Excited the virus again, didnāt it? Had millions of people all crammed into small places.ā
Susanna added: āWe ignored the advice about a circuit breaker and went late into a lockdown in November, which really wasnāt a very strict lockdown at all.
āAnd then at the end of November the government announced that come Christmas, we could all have a big party.ā
āFive days,ā Piers agreed. āWhich made no sense to anybody. Without testingā¦ how could that possibly have made any sense? It didnāt.
āThen the new variant comes. And rather than learn all the lessons from the late lockdowns earlier in the year, and just locking down immediately to suppress itā¦ we let it just run around, for a week. Two weeks. Eventually locked down in early January. By which time it was everywhere. And now we see 1500, 1600, 1700 deaths recorded every single day.ā
Piers added: āEvery single step of the way Boris Johnson has been too late and too dithering, and too keen to please, and listening to too many idiots in his ear telling him, ādonāt you dare lock down, we can control this virus, weāre all getting on with our normal livesā.ā
Throughout the pandemic, Piers has won praise for holding government ministers to account with their interviews, which resulted in a period where there were no appearances on Good Morning Britain from any MPs for more than 200 days.
While the divisive presenter has been one of the current governmentās loudest critics of late, he did vote for Boris Johnson in the 2019 general election, saying he felt that the Conservatives were most likely to deliver on Brexit.
āI voted for Boris Johnson and the Conservative Party,ā he told LBC. āNot from any great love of either, but because, as I have made clear on Good Morning Britain for the last three years, I was incensed by the failure to honour the result of the referendum.
āI voted to Remain and I would vote to Remain again. Iām not a great fan of Brexit. However, Iām a much bigger fan of democracy. And to me, Boris Johnson was the only major party candidate who was offering to honour democracy and to respect the fact that 17.4 million people had voted to leave the European Union.ā
Good Morning Britain airs weekdays at 6am on ITV.