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Sunday, 24 May 2026
OpinionColumn

In defence of the staycation, properly defined

A holiday is not a competition. A field, a flask, three good books. That's plenty.

JW
Jade Williams
Sat · 4 min read
In defence of the staycation, properly defined

A holiday is not a competition. A field, a flask, three good books. That's plenty. That, at least, is the headline. The reality, as ever, is more textured — and our reporting today suggests the story will run for some weeks yet.

Officials briefed on the matter describe a process that has been months in the making. Drafts circulated late last year set out the broad shape; the past fortnight has been spent fighting over the detail, and it is the detail that will decide who wins and who loses.

Industry voices are split. Supporters argue the move is overdue and point to comparable shifts in France, Germany and the Nordics over the past decade. Detractors counter that Britain's circumstances are particular and that imported templates rarely survive contact with Whitehall.

For readers wondering what changes in practice: not very much, not yet. Implementation is staged. The first phase lands within ninety days; the substantive elements follow next spring, subject to consultation. Blissful Sprout understands that a technical white paper will be published before recess.

What is striking is the tone. A year ago, the same proposition would have been dismissed as politically impossible. The window has shifted — and with it, the calculations of every party with an interest in the outcome.

Jade Williams will continue to follow this story. Subscribers receive every development first, with full analysis from the Opinion desk.

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8 comments

On: In defence of the staycation, properly defined

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  • MW
    Margaret WilsonManchester · 2 hrs ago

    Finally somebody has the courage to say it out loud. I've been thinking exactly this for months but felt like I was the only one.

  • EC
    Emily CarterOxford · 1 hr ago

    Forwarded to my MP. Not that it'll do any good but at least I'll have tried.

  • SO
    Sarah O'ConnorGlasgow · 8 hrs ago

    Cancelled my subscription last year and came back specifically for this kind of writing. Worth every penny.

  • AK
    Aisha KhanBirmingham · 34 min ago

    My mum sent me this article at 6am with seventeen exclamation marks. So yes, it's hitting a nerve with normal people.

  • RM
    Ravi MehtaReading · 5 hrs ago

    Living abroad and reading this from afar. Britain really has changed and not always in the ways people on the ground notice.

  • DP
    David PritchardSurrey · 12 min ago

    Sorry but this is just lazy journalism. Half the 'facts' here are opinion dressed up as analysis. Do better.

  • CB
    Chris BellSheffield · 3 hrs ago

    Bit of a tabloid headline for a piece this serious. The writing deserved better packaging.

  • LC
    Linda ColeBristol · Yesterday

    Lived through the 80s, the 90s, 2008 and Covid. Every generation thinks their crisis is the worst. It rarely is. Calm down everyone.

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