A public vote (known as a referendum) was held in June 2016, when 17.4 million people opted for Brexit. Read his answers to our Movie Love Questionnaire


In this first phase the Government aimed to contain, delay, research and mitigate the virus.The Prime Minister ordered the public to stay at home except for "very limited purposes" including key work where they could not work from home, shopping for basic necessities or medical need, and one form of exercise a day. Outdoor exercise classes, such as pilates and yoga, may be permitted too if participants can spread out in a large open space.The Czech Republic, which last month became the first European country to relax restrictions, has allowed some outdoor activities to resume. We are no longer accepting comments on this article.Part of the Daily Mail, The Mail on Sunday & Metro Media GroupThe proposals are to be split into five stages over the coming months, and a leaked version of the plan has suggested the first changes on Monday will see garden centres allowed to open and unlimited exercise allowed.There will also be a return to sunbathing and picnics, more key workers' children will go back to school, staff will start returning to businesses that stayed open during the lockdown and open-air markets may reopen.The second stage at the end of May will then see primary schools gradually return with smaller classes and some outdoor sports such as golf and tennis potentially resuming – possibly along with open-air swimming.Premier League football could return behind closed doors towards the end of June, secondary schools will reopen before the summer holidays and outdoor gatherings of up to 30 people are expected to be allowed.Cafes could also reopen, before pubs and restaurants follow towards the end of August – although it may take until October for all remaining areas of the economy including gyms to remove their shutters.Here, MailOnline looks at what could happen at each stage of the Government's five point plan: Garden centres reopen and more children back to schoolNew NHSX Covid-19 contact tracing app doesn't work on...Was Britain's full lockdown a waste of time? When suddenly mysterious deaths happen and Marie can feel something strange happening to her body. For any arrivals that don't have accommodation to isolate in, then this could be provided by the Government. Most of the time, director Arnby, using a script by Rasmus Birch, whose “Brotherhood” deals with Danish servicemen thrown together in a neo-Nazi group, tries to penetrate Max’s mind, his expertise being able to let us in the audience know what it’s like to be in an extreme existential crisis.The pace is slow, picking up during the final fifteen minutes when Max decides whether he wants to go through with the plan or has cold feet. “Exit Plan” is a virtually a chamber piece whose focus is fixed on the principal character, who by his expressions tries to tell us in the audience what he’s thinking and feeling. This means that anyone arriving in the UK by plane, ferry or train - including UK nationals - will have to provide an address for where they will remain for 14 days.
Companies will also put up signs asking workers to maintain social distancing by staying two metres apart. 'Restaurants had also faced being landed with artificially high rates bills for the next five years because their premises would have been taxed based on pre-crisis rents, but ministers yesterday postponed the rates change.Pub customers in Britain could only be allowed back in beer gardens at first post-lockdown, with the Greene King chain saying punters will have to order drinks outside via a phone app with social distancing measures in place.

'But there's also very strong evidence that outdoors the spread is much, much lower so there may be workarounds that some businesses, for instance cafes especially over the summer, might be able to put into place. "Exit Plan" begins with a tech-age device: the video last will and testament, delivered via tablet.