Senior UK politician warns people to avoid 'snogging under the mistletoe' over the holidays as Omicron raises fears of uncontrolled spread
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Marianne Guenot
Dec 2, 2021, 18:08 IST
A couple kiss under the mistletoe at a Santa-themed event in Seattle, Washington in 2014. UK minister Thérèse Coffey this week warned against doing the same.Reuters/David Ryder
People should avoid "snogging" strangers under the mistletoe, a top UK politician warned.
The advice comes amid concerns over the spread of the Omicron variant in the UK and around the world.
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People should probably avoid "snogging under the mistletoe" this holiday season, as scientists attempt to learn more about the potential impact of the Omicron coronavirus variant, a senior UK politician said Wednesday.
Asked if people should be cautious in the coming weeks or carry on with plans unchanged, UK Work and Pensions Secretary Thérèse Coffey told ITV's Peston program: "Well, for what it's worth, I don't think there should be much snogging under the mistletoe," referring to a British slang term for kissing.
"You don't need to be doing things like that!" — she said.
It is not yet clear whether Omicron is more transmissible, if it escapes the immune protection from vaccines or previous infection, or if it causes symptoms that are different from other variants, Insider's Erin Schumaker previously reported.
Coffey's comments drew criticism from Harry Cole, the political editor of the newspaper The Sun, who said in a tweet on Wednesday that her words amounted to "more mixed messaging" from the government.
Cole's comment came after the UK's prime minister Boris Johnson on Wednesday contradicted advice from Jenny Harries, the chief executive of the UK Health Security Agency.
Harries said on Tuesday that the public should "decrease our social contacts a little bit," per the Financial Times, while Johnson said that people should not cancel Christmas plans, The Guardian reported.
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Coffey later tweeted in response to Cole's tweet that people should avoid kissing strangers specifically, but that the government was working "exceptionally hard" so that everyone could enjoy a "proper Christmas knees up," a British saying meaning a lively and energetic party with dancing.
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