British Prime Minister Boris Johnson has tested negative for the CCP virus, but will continue to self-isolate according to government guidance.
“He took a test yesterday and that test was negative but he will in accordance with the rules on self-isolation continue to self-isolate,” a Downing Street spokesman told reporters on Tuesday.
In a video communication posted on Twitter on Monday in which he appeared smiling and cheerful, Johnson said he felt “great,” was “fit as a butcher’s dog” and “bursting with antibodies,” but would “follow the rules” and self-isolate for 14 days.
He confirmed he would have “plenty more to say in the course of the next few days … by Zoom and other means of electronic communication.”
The person Johnson had been in contact with was Lee Anderson, MP for Ashfield in Nottinghamshire, who attended a 35-minute meeting with the prime minister on Thursday and had since tested positive for the virus.
Five other Tory MPs and two political aides are reportedly self-isolating after attending the same meeting with Johnson and Anderson.
From his quarantine in a flat above No. 10, the prime minister is expected to continue to grapple with the CCP virus outbreak.
If it is approved by the medicines regulator, the vaccine could be delivered to the UK and Europe as early as spring 2021, with the potential for the government to procure more doses next year, the government said.
This would follow the first deliveries of the Pfizer/BioNTech and the Oxford University/AstraZenece vaccines which could be available before the end of the year.