Comment: How will London survive a jobs crisis? | MPs take back control

Imagine a disaster film where a boat is stranded in a river, drifting towards a huge waterfall. Those trapped on board know it is coming. The roar gets louder. They struggle to save themselves. What happens next?

It’s a bit like that with the jobs disaster being caused by coronavirus. For months, we’ve known that a deep recession is on its way, but quick work by the Treasury with things such as furlough and the business bailout has held back the pain. But not for much longer.

Today brings two pieces of evidence.

The first is our exclusive poll which suggests that more than a third of London commuters who are now working from home do not expect to return to their offices before Christmas. For some, the new way of life has proved a lot happier — and more home-working is likely to be a permanent part of many people’s lives.

But if people stay away from central London, they also stay away from all the things which link us together to make this city — and others in our country — a powerhouse. They won’t be there to eat out, shop, pop into a gallery, or have a drink after work.

Everything shrinks — and there is a price to pay in jobs. Russell & Bromley, the smart retailer which once kept Theresa May in shoes, is closing seven shops in central London which had just reopened after lockdown.

The second piece of evidence comes this morning from the Office for National Statistics. Its early estimates show that 649,000 fewer people were in work in June than in March.

The rate of decline actually slowed last month — but that’s probably more to do with the success of the furlough scheme than an economic bounce back. When the scheme ends in October, as it must, the real impact will be felt.

A third of commuters do not expect to return to their offices before Christmas

How do we stop the cities emptying and the jobs being lost. Confidence.

How do we get it? It will take clear rules to show that office work can be safe — the ongoing muddle on masks from ministers hardly help.

It means doing what other European countries have already done and getting people back on to public transport.

The Tube and trains are safe, and government guidance needs to reflect that. Above all it means a comprehensive testing and tracing system to contain spikes and prevent a city-wide second wave.

All this helps us live and work with the virus as we await new vaccines and treatments — with encouraging reports today from scientists in Oxford.

Confidence breeds hope and thanks to hope we don’t yet know how this ­disaster film ends.

MPs take back control

Remember when Brexiteers such as Jacob Rees-Mogg wanted to restore the power and glory of Parliament? They kept talking of sovereignty.

Well, members of the key Intelligence and Security Committee have just done their own bit to take back control — by rejecting Downing Street’s weak candidate to run it and backing Julian Lewis instead.

Isn’t that exactly the sort of robust, free Parliament we were told Brexit would bring back?

Just imagine the fuss from the likes of Mr Rees-Mogg if they were still on the backbenches.

Instead all we hear is deafening silence from those former champions of parliamentary freedom.