Thanks, interesting response. Why they won't publish the membership is beyond me, and I agree that would some way to quelling the storm that seems to have arisen around this. I have more sympathy with not publishing the minutes, given that SAGE will undoubtedly be analysing multiple scenarios, and making recommendations based on the best available evidence, not certainties. As you hint at, it might well be that the economic hit will hurt much more than the virus itself. If the messaging being published enforces this message and stops people from following Govt advice, I think not publishing them until all of this is over is reasonable. The caveat being that those minutes certainly should be shared with the Privy Council, which includes multiple members of the Opposition front bench, who should (and I believe now will) be constructively critiquing the government approach.
As for Cummings' attendance leading to questions around whether the Government was following the science, or vice versa, I'm afraid I still don't but it. If this was Llewellyn under Cameron or Powell under Blair attending this type of meeting, I find it hard to believe people would be speculating in the same way. You can just as easily flip it on its head and say how wonderful it is that Boris sent his most senior advisor to this meeting to hear first hand from the experts etc if one is inclined to support the Govt (which I'm not); and that the CMO briefings directly to the PM are hardly inhibited by one of his advisers attending meetings with other advisers.
Storm in a teacup from where I'm sat, which will suit the Government just fine as it means scrutiny is being avoided in areas where they have made serious failings.
From reading a few papers today and some posts on here, guess this is just one of those issues where people see it through their political lens first and foremost, and make the facts fit to confirm their bias. Like most issues, of course, and I'm by no means innocent of falling into that particular trap.