UK Covid-19 Inquiry Unveils Government Failings, Calls for Urgent Reforms Amid £204M Investigation
March 4, 2026
The UK Covid-19 Inquiry has produced damning verdicts about government handling, with CBFFJ co-founder Matt Fowler arguing thousands of lives were cut short due to alleged incompetence and chaos.
Although only two of ten final reports have been published, the chair Lady Hallett’s findings already critique strategic flaws in pandemic planning and a chaotic government culture under No. 10, blaming figures such as Boris Johnson and Matt Hancock.
When the inquiry’s recommendations are fully acted on, they are meant to strengthen preparedness for future pandemics.
Officials note that several remaining reports will be published in the coming years, emphasizing the inquiry’s value in preparing for future crises despite its cost.
Campaigners vow to pursue accountability through all routes, ensure the public remembers those lost, and push for decisive action and reforms informed by the inquiry.
Bereaved Families for Justice UK welcomed the findings while urging stronger recommendations and ongoing advocacy for policy changes and accountability.
Future reports will address healthcare systems, vaccines and therapeutics, procurement, the care sector, and the test-trace-isolate system, with several due in coming months to form a potential blueprint for saving lives.
The inquiry has become the most expensive public inquiry in UK history, costing nearly £204 million, with hundreds of witnesses and tens of thousands of documents across ten modules.
The tenth and final module examined the pandemic’s societal impact, including effects on domestic abuse victims, homelessness, and funeral attendance, with more reports expected soon.
CBFFJ highlights that the forthcoming Exercise Pegasus pandemic simulation will reveal further gaps, and that Hillsborough Law could reduce future inquiry costs by mandating candour from public authorities.
By late 2025 the inquiry had spent around £204 million, with focus shifting to drafting remaining reports and recommendations to improve future pandemic preparedness; several reports are anticipated by mid to late 2027.
Relatives and supporters gathered outside the London hearing centre to observe a minute of silence, underscoring the personal impact and the public call for accountability.
Summary based on 7 sources
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Sources

The Guardian • Mar 4, 2026
Covid inquiry reaches ‘bittersweet’ final day of witness testimony
The Independent • Mar 4, 2026
Covid-19 Inquiry: Deaths caused by ‘government incompetence, chaos and callousness’, bereaved families say
