Lauren Goodger slams Boris Johnson's restrictions and blames government for missing work
The former TOWIE star, 34, was less than impressed when the Prime Minister advised people to work from home in a bid to flatten the second spike of coronavirus cases
Video Loading
Click to play
Tap to play
The video will start in 8Cancel
Boris Johnson's address to the nation last night raised many eyebrows across the country, including Lauren Goodger's.
The former TOWIE star, 34, was less than impressed when the Prime Minister advised people to work from home in a bid to flatten the curve of coronavirus cases.
Lauren rushed to social media to slam the government's latest guidelines, before claiming that she'd lost out on "a whole year of work" because of the restrictions in place.
As the PM announced a 10pm curfew on pubs, bars and restaurants, Lauren was left fuming as she wrote: "I don't need to party, I need to work."
Lauren - who was forced to cancel her huge birthday bash earlier this month - owns her own beauty salon called Lauren's Aesthetics.
She's recently been spotted polishing her beauty skills at Manchester's Cosmetic Couture Clinic as she arrived to various classes for training.
Taking to her Instagram Story, unhappy Lauren fumed at the PM: "Boris you can lock me down indoors all you want from 10pm no problem I don't care about the nighttime."
She went on: "But do not stop me from working in the day as I've lost this whole year of work! I can't do tv shows as planned cancelled because of Covid so I'm back on my grind and nearly ready @lg_aestheticslondon @cosmeticcouture_!
"Work mode & need the paper I don't need to party I need to work."
The PM also announced that the "Rule of Six" is still very much in place - meaning people should not mix in groups any bigger than six people.
Numbers allowed to attend weddings will be slashed from 30 to 15 from Monday and indoor sports such as five-a-side football will be axed.
Businesses who flout the rules face fines of up to £10,000, in line with penalties for people who refuse to obey orders to self isolate.
Mr Johnson set out the rules in the Commons on Tuesday, where he suggested the measures could last for up to six months if a vaccine is not found.
He also said the majority of people had been obeying the rules but said law-breakers were putting everyone at risk.
He said: "We have to acknowledge this this is a great and freedom-loving country; and while the vast majority have complied with the rules there have been too many breaches – too many opportunities for our invisible enemy to slip through undetected."
The PM warned the public to think of others: "Your mild cough can be someone else's death knell."
MirrorCeleb