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Starmer predicts Government will win crunch vote on Rwanda Bill

The Labour leader also indicated he would consider a third-country asylum offshoring scheme.

Sophie Wingate
Tuesday 12 December 2023 07:41 EST
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Starmer says Rwanda plan is a gimmick and piece of political performance art

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Sir Keir Starmer predicts the Governmentā€™s Rwanda legislation will sail through a parliamentary vote on Tuesday ā€“ and indicated a Labour government could consider a third-country asylum offshoring scheme.

As Rishi Sunak battles to ward off a revolt from his MPs over his Bill, the Labour leader said he has no doubt the Tories will back it in a crunch Commons vote.

Answering questions after a major speech in Buckinghamshire, Sir Keir told reporters on Tuesday: ā€œItā€™ll go through tonight, I donā€™t doubt. Thereā€™ll be a lot of shouting and screaming but in the end, itā€™ll go throughā€¦

Iā€™ll look at any scheme that might work

Sir Keir Starmer

ā€œI donā€™t think we should allow them the indulgence of pretending itā€™s going to be tight and heā€™s done a brilliant job to get it over the line.

ā€œHeā€™s got an 80-seat majority, he should get it over the line very, very easily.ā€

If Mr Sunak does lose the vote, Sir Keir said ā€œof course he should call a general electionā€.

Labour will vote against the Safety of Rwanda Bill, a piece of emergency legislation aimed at reviving the Governmentā€™s flagship asylum policy after the Supreme Court ruled it unlawful.

ā€œWe will oppose the scheme this evening for a number of reasons ā€“ it doesnā€™t work, it will cost a fortuneā€¦ and it is against our values,ā€ Sir Keir said.

He accused the Tories of being in an ā€œindulgent vortexā€ of infighting, as he promised ā€œpracticalā€ ways of preventing small boats from crossing the Channel, including tackling people-smuggling gangs.

Sir Keir, who has dismissed the Prime Ministerā€™s bid to deport some asylum seekers to the African nation as a ā€œgimmickā€, signalled that he would consider a scheme under which asylum claims are processed elsewhere.

Pointing out how this would differ from the Rwanda plan, he said: ā€œThis is a straight deportation scheme in relation to people whoā€™ve already arrived.

ā€œOther countries around the world do have schemes where they divert people on the way and process them elsewhere. Thatā€™s a different kind of scheme.

ā€œAnd, look, Iā€™ll look at any scheme that might work.ā€

The Opposition leader said that if the Rwanda legislation passes and Labour wins a general election next year, as polls suggest it is on track to do, he would scrap the scheme.

He said the Ā£240 million already spent would not prevent him from repealing the law, saying the money has ā€œalready been wastedā€.

Conservative Party chairman Richard Holden said Sir Keir is blocking the Rwanda plan ā€œbecause he has never truly believed in being tough on illegal immigration and deterring people from making dangerous Channel crossingsā€.

ā€œWhilst Labour stick to their same old short-term approach of more migration, more borrowing and more taxes, we are taking the long-term decisions to secure Britainā€™s future.ā€

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