Ex-immigration minister threatens to toughen Rwanda bill after leak suggests Sunak tried to scale back scheme
Robert Jenrick dramatically quit last month warning the PM his plan would not work
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Your support makes all the difference.Rishi Sunak faces a growing battle over his flagship Rwanda legislation after his former immigration minister threatened to lead a parliamentary revolt to try to toughen the bill.
Robert Jenrick warned that if the prime minister did not strengthen the new emergency laws then he would lay amendments next week to ensure they were āsufficiently robustā.
Mr Jenrick dramatically quit the government last month saying the Rwanda legislation would not work ā just hours after former home secretary Suella Braverman told Mr Sunak he faced electoral āoblivionā over the issue.
Mr Jenrick revealed his plan to Sky News as Mr Sunak was accused of āconningā the public over the controversial Rwanda deal after leaked documents suggested he harboured significant doubts about the scheme ā and argued for it to be scaled back ā while he was chancellor.
Mr Sunak was unsure the plan to deport asylum seekers would achieve its ultimate goal, to deter channel crossings, a month before it was unveiled by then prime minster Boris Johnson.
He was concerned about the cost of sending asylum seekers to the African country and wanted to limit the numbers, according to the documents seen by the BBC
The prime minister faces a battle this month to get new emergency legislation through the Commons, after the Supreme Court ruled his Rwanda plan unlawful.
Losing the vote could imperil the future of the scheme and even Mr Sunakās leadership, as Tory MPs pile pressure on him to fulfil his pledge to voters to stop the boat ahead of a looming general election.
Mr Sunak committed to keeping the Rwanda plan as he fought to win the leadership contest to replace Mr Johnson as Tory leader.
Asked about the leaked reports, Mr Jenrick told Sky News: āI know the prime minister very well and I believe that he does see the urgent need to control our borders to get the Rwanda plan up and running ā because thatās such a critical element to stopping the small boat crossings.
āBut it is important that we get that right.
āAnd as I said last year, I donāt think that the bill thatās going through parliament is sufficient ā if we say weāre going to do whatever it takes, we have to do whatever it takes and that means strengthening that bill. I hope that he will strengthen the bill thatās coming through parliament.ā
Mr Jenrick added: āAnd Iāve been very clear that if he doesnāt do that, then I will lay amendments to the bill next week to make sure that it is the piece of legislation that is necessary that is sufficiently robust to do the job that the British public expect.ā
Shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said the papers show the Rwanda plan was a ātotal conā and āhow incredibly weak Rishi Sunak isā.
āHe knew costs were extortionate (and) resisted as chancellor. But heās now so weak heās writing Ā£400m cheques to Rwanda for no one to be sent,ā she said.
She accused the government of ācontinually going for gimmicks rather than ever getting a gripā.
When he was chancellor Mr Sunak wanted to reduce the numbers the scheme would send to Rwanda, from 1,500 in the first year to 500, and from 5,000 to 3,000 in the two years after that, according to the documents seen by the BBC.
He is also described as believing the ādeterrent wonāt workā and saying that he felt āhotels are cheaperā than reception centres to house migrants.
In a sign of the tactics used over the Rwanda policy, No 10 suggested Mr Sunak should be told to consider his āpopularity with the baseā if he was reluctant to sign up.
David Campbell Bannerman, the chair of the Conservative Democratic Organisation, questioned if Mr Sunak had sought to āsabotageā the Rwanda plan āright from the startā.
āThese papers suggest Treasury undermined plan by cutting resources for it,ā he tweeted.
A government source said that, as chancellor, Mr Sunak had funded the Rwanda scheme and then had gone on to āput it at the heart of his 10-point plan the month after becoming PMā.
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