EAT Out to Help Out helped protect hospitality workers from “devastating” job losses, Rishi Sunak has told the Covid Inquiry as he defended the policy.

The scheme was introduced by the Prime Minister, when he was chancellor during the pandemic, in summer 2020, in a bid to support struggling restaurants as the UK emerged from coronavirus restrictions imposed during the first lockdown.

The policy has been heavily scrutinised by the UK Covid-19 Inquiry, which has heard top scientists were not consulted about the plan despite questions about whether it contributed to the spread of infection.

Giving evidence to the inquiry on Monday, a defensive Sunak said he still believed Eat Out to Help Out had been the “right thing to do to protect” what he said were “millions” of jobs held by “particularly vulnerable people”.

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He said: “All the data, all the evidence, all the polling, all the input from those companies suggested that unless we did something, many of those jobs would have been at risk with devastating consequences for those people and their families.”

While the policy was geared at helping hard-hit hospitality venues, concerns have been raised that by encouraging people back into social spaces it aided the spread of Covid.

The plan formed part of Sunak’s summer economic update on July 8 2020, and provided 50% off the cost of food and/or non-alcoholic drinks.

The announcement blindsided both key scientific advisers and Sunak’s then cabinet colleagues, including former health secretary Matt Hancock, who said the first they knew of it was when it was made public.

The National: Chris Whitty

Professor Chris Whitty (above), England’s chief medical officer, is said to have privately referred to the scheme to boost the restaurant industry as “eat out to help out the virus”.

Patrick Vallance, who was chief scientific adviser, previously told the inquiry the scheme was “highly likely” to have fuelled deaths.

Questioned by lead counsel Hugo Keith KC about the scheme, Sunak said such concerns were not raised with him despite there being a one month gap between it being announced and the discount coming into effect.

He said there had been “ample opportunity” for people to raise concerns with him or then prime minister Boris Johnson during that period.

Sunak said the Eat Out to Help Out scheme was a “micro policy” within the overall reopening plan after the first lockdown, with indoor hospitality “already” open again as part of the Government’s May plan to lift restrictions.

The Prime Minister added: “Eat Out to Help Out only operated within that context.

“And indeed there were a significant range of other [non-pharmaceutical interventions] that were in place, including social distancing, Covid secure guidance, table service, contactless ordering, one-way systems, all of which had been put in place.”