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No concessions on Rwanda Bill, says Downing Street amid parliamentary stand-off

Debate on the Safety of Rwanda Bill could continue long into Wednesday night if peers insist on pressing their amendments.

Christopher McKeon
Wednesday 17 April 2024 09:09 EDT
Downing Street has ruled out making concessions on its Safety of Rwanda Bill as MPs and peers prepare for another round of parliamentary ping pong (John Walton/PA)
Downing Street has ruled out making concessions on its Safety of Rwanda Bill as MPs and peers prepare for another round of parliamentary ping pong (John Walton/PA) (PA Wire)

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Downing Street has ruled out making concessions on its Safety of Rwanda Bill as MPs and peers prepare for another round of parliamentary ping pong.

Peers voted to amend the legislation for a third time on Tuesday, further prolonging parliamentary wrangling over the law intended to clear the way for asylum seekers who cross the Channel in small boats to be deported to Rwanda.

The Government had been reported to be considering making some concessions to ensure the Billā€™s passage, including on exemptions for Afghan nationals who assisted British forces.

But the Prime Ministerā€™s official spokesman ruled out any such move, telling reporters: ā€œWe are not considering concessions.

ā€œWe believe the Bill as it stands is the right Bill and the quickest way to get flights off the ground.ā€

MPs are therefore likely to reject the Lordsā€™ amendments once again, before sending the legislation back to theĀ Upper House later on Wednesday.

It will then be up to peers to decide whether to press their changes further, with Labour saying it would back two amendments proposed by the Lords.

A party spokesman said Labour would ā€œcontinue to take the position that we have so farā€, including by supporting proposals to exempt Afghans who helped UK troops.

There is potential for further debate on the Bill until late on Wednesday night as the legislation passes between Parliamentā€™s two houses if agreement is not reached.

We must stop the boats because it is a matter of fairness

Rishi Sunak

Despite the wrangling, ministers remain confident deportation flights to Rwanda will take off this spring.

Treasury minister Laura Trott said there were ā€œmany definitions of springā€ when pressed about a timeline for getting planes off the runway.

Rishi Sunak has made ā€œstopping the boatsā€ a key pledge of his leadership, and sees the Rwanda scheme as a vital deterrent to Channel crossings.

The Prime Minister has previously said he hopes the flights can be begin before the end of spring.

Asked if this was still the case, Ms Trott told Sky News: ā€œWe will be ready for flights to take off in the spring when the legislation passes.ā€

She added: ā€œI think there are lots of definitions of spring but we are hoping to get them up and running as quickly as possible.ā€

The Bill and a treaty with Rwanda are intended to prevent further legal challenges to the stalled asylum scheme after the Supreme Court ruled the plan was unlawful.

As well as compelling judges to regard the east African country as safe, it would give ministers the power to ignore emergency injunctions.

But the Lords insisted on an amendment to restore the jurisdiction of domestic courts in relation to the safety of Rwanda and enable them to intervene.

Peers also renewed their demand for the Bill to have ā€œdue regardā€ for international and key domestic laws, including human rights and modern slavery legislation.

In addition, they backed a requirement that Rwanda cannot be treated as a safe country until an independent monitoring body has verified that protections contained in the treaty are fully implemented and remain in place.

An exemption from removal for those who worked with the UK military or government overseas, such as Afghan interpreters, secured renewed support.

All the Government has done is to write more and more cheques to Rwanda

Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper

The Lordsā€™ insistence on the amendments ensures a third round of ā€œping-pongā€ over the Bill, where legislation is batted between the two Houses until they agree on its final wording.

The Upper House has set aside time for the Bill to return on Wednesday afternoon after MPs debate it.

The Prime Minister could use RAF Voyager aircraft for Rwanda deportation flights after the Home Office failed to find an airline that would charter the flights, The Times reported.

Downing Street has drawn up plans to order the Ministry of Defence to repurpose at least one of the leased aircraft for this purpose, according to the newspaper.

Asked whether it would be appropriate to use RAF aircraft, Mr Sunak told broadcasters: ā€œMy priority is to stop the boats.

ā€œI said this very clearly when I became Prime Minister and right now we are trying to get the Bill through Parliament in the face of enormous opposition from the Labour Party.ā€

He added: ā€œWe must stop the boats because it is a matter of fairness.ā€

Nearly two years after then-home secretary Dame Priti Patel first announced the deal with Rwanda, Labour attacked the Tories over the plan, noting that more than 75,000 migrants have made the journey since then.

Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said: ā€œOn the two-year anniversary of the Rwanda farce, ministers need to be honest with the public about how much time and taxpayersā€™ money has been wasted.

ā€œThey were warned repeatedly about the cost and weaknesses of the Rwanda scheme.

ā€œMeanwhile the serious problems with our border security, with criminal gangs and rising asylum hotel bills have all got worse and worse. Yet all the Government has done is to write more and more cheques to Rwanda. Talk about fiddling as Rome burns.

ā€œThe Prime Minister must end this farce and instead back Labourā€™s plan to boost our border security and fix the asylum chaos.ā€

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