Rwanda bill - live: Sunak doubles down on refusal to help Afghan heroes as no guarantee of fights by spring
Commons leader confirms Rwanda bill will return to the House of Commons on Monday
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Rishi Sunak has doubled down on his refusal to exempt Afghan heroes who served with British forces from being deported to Rwanda.
A No 10 spokesman said on Wednesday that the government would not be making any concessions on the Rwanda bill after the House of Lords last night voted in favour of the move.
The defiant upper chamber refused to cave to ministers’ demands and sent the flagship Rwanda plan back to the Commons.
Peers are also demanding the set up of a monitoring committee to assess whether Rwanda is safe before the government sends asylum seekers there.
Downing Street also on Thursday was unable to recommit to the prime minister’s pledge to get flights to Rwanda off the ground by the spring.
The spokesman said: “I’m not going to get ahead of the bill passing, which obviously we’ve seen again last night has continued to be held up.
“We’re working at pace to ensure these flights leave as soon as possible. It’s now incumbent on the Lords to pass this Bill such that we can trigger the final planning phases and ultimately stop the boats.”
ICYMI: Liz Truss, lettuce and the Deep State: Seven car crash moments from former PM’s book tour
In the lead-up to the release of her memoirs, Liz Truss may have spent more days promoting the book than she did serving as prime minister.
The Tory MP, who took over from Boris Johnson in the summer of 2022, offered a look behind the scenes of Ten Years to Save the West in a series of television and radio interviews.
Despite some very negative reviews, it seems the promotion has worked as the book soared to the fourth best-selling book on Amazon on Wednesday morning.
Full report:
Liz Truss, lettuce and Deep State: Seven car crash moments from former PM’s book tour
Britain’s shortest-serving prime minister has launched her new book, ‘Ten Years to Save the West’
ICYMI: Rishi Sunak delays Rwanda flight plans as Downing Street refuses to commit to Spring
Rishi Sunak has been forced to abandon his commitment to get flights off the ground to Rwanda by the end of spring, in a serious blow to the prime minister’s flagship policy.
Downing Street has admitted that the policy is now facing delays as the Lords refused to back down on amendments to the bill, meaning the government will not set out a new timeline for the first flight to take off until it is passed into law.
Full report:
Rishi Sunak delays on Rwanda flights taking off by Spring
Downing Street refused to confirm that flights would take off by Spring as previously promised
Westminster sleaze and scandals: All the MPs who are suspended or have lost the whip
Another day in Westminster, another party whip suspended or withdrawn – as allegations of sleaze, dishonesty or failure to uphold parliamentary standards land yet another MP in hot water.
Mark Menzies, the Tory MP for Fylde and a government trade envoy, is under investigation over allegations that he misused campaign funds and abused his position after making a late-night phone call saying he’d been locked up by “bad people” demanding thousands of pounds.
Full report:
Westminster sleaze and scandals: All the MPs who are suspended or have lost the whip
The number of MPs sitting as independents now outnumber the Lib Dems
ICYMI: Keir Starmer demands police probe into suspended Tory MP over ‘bad people’ payoff claims
Sir Keir Starmer has called for a police probe into allegations aTory MP misused campaign funds in the latest sleaze scandal to rock Rishi Sunak’s party.
Mark Menzies lost the Conservative whip after reportedly using thousands of pounds given by donors to fund medical expenses and making a late-night call to a 78-year-old aide asking for help because he had been locked up by “bad people” demanding money for his release.
Full report:
Keir Starmer demands police probe into Tory MP over ‘bad people’ payoff claims
Mark Menzies is accused of using thousands of pounds of party funds to payoff people who had locked him in a flat, but he disputes the allegations. Labour said the Tories were a party of “stagnation, scandal and sleaze”
Suspended MP Menzies loses trade envoy roles
Suspended MP Mark Menzies has been suspended from his role as one of Rishi Sunak’s trade envoys to several South American countries.
Mr Menzies has lost his unpaid, voluntary role aimed at boosting trade with Colombia, Chile, Peru and Argentina, a No 10 spokesperson said.
Post Office staff had ‘bunker mentality’ towards press, lawyer tells inquiry
A Post Office lawyer has said there was a “bunker mentality” among staff in relation to the media’s coverage of the Horizon IT system.
Rodric Williams, who joined the organisation as a litigation lawyer in 2012, was asked at the Horizon Inquiry on Thursday about an email sent to the Post Office by journalist Nick Wallis in 2014.
Full report:
Post Office staff had ‘bunker mentality’ towards press, lawyer tells inquiry
Rodric Williams, who joined the organisation as a litigation lawyer in 2012, gave evidence at the Horizon Inquiry on Thursday
Scotland ditches target of reducing emission by 75% by 2030
The Scottish government is ditching a climate change target committing it to reducing emissions by 75 per cent by 2030, the country’s net zero secretary confirmed.
Mairi McAllan told MSPs in a statement at Holyrood: “In this challenging context of cuts, UK backtracking, we accept the Climate Change Committee’s recent re-articulation that this parliament’s interim 2030 target is out of reach. We must now act to chart a course to 2045 at a pace and scale that is feasible, fair and just.
“With this in mind, I can today confirm that, working with parliament on a timetable, the Scottish government will bring forward expedited legislation to address matters raised by the Climate Change Committee, and ensure our legislative framework better reflects the reality of long-term climate policymaking.
“The narrowly drawn bill will retain our legal commitment to 2045 alongside annual reporting on progress, while introducing a target approach based on five-yearly carbon budgets.”
University chiefs to get security service Cobra briefing on hostile states
University leaders will be briefed by the security services after a government review found their institutions were being “targeted” by hostile states, the deputy prime minister has said.
The government ordered a review of protections for higher education in its refreshed Integrated Review of foreign and security policy last year amid concerns that hostile states, and particularly China, were gaining undue influence over the sector.
Full report:
University chiefs to get security service Cobra briefing on hostile states
A Government review has found universities are ‘vulnerable’ and being ‘targeted’ by hostile states, the Deputy Prime Minister has said.
Starmer: Government should be focusing on stopping the boats arriving in first place
Sir Keir Starmer has said the government’s Rwanda scheme would not work regardless of how asylum seekers travelled to the east Africa country amid reports the RAF could be used.
Asked whether he thought RAF aircraft should be used to deport asylum seekers, he told broadcasters: “I think the government should be concentrating on how they are going to stop small boats from arriving in the first place rather than wasting time and money, taxpayers’ money, on a gimmick, however they travel to Rwanda.
“There are tens of thousands of people waiting to have their claims processed and the government is talking about removing a few hundred.
“More people came in one day last week than this entire scheme will remove under its current provisions.
“It is a gimmick, it won’t work, it’s a waste of taxpayers’ money. Let’s do what matters, smash the gangs that are running this trade in the first place.”
No 10 declines to recommit to getting Rwanda flights in the air by spring
Downing Street has declined to recommit to the prime minister’s spring deadline to get deportation flights off the ground to Rwanda.
Rishi Sunak’s spokesman told reporters: “Our intention is to get this passed on Monday such that we can then set out the timetable for getting flights off as soon as possible.”
He said the timetable was initially set out in November “but obviously the bill has continued to be delayed”.
“I’m not going to get ahead of the bill passing, which obviously we’ve seen again last night has continued to be held up.
“We’re working at pace to ensure these flights leave as soon as possible. It’s now incumbent on the Lords to pass this Bill such that we can trigger the final planning phases and ultimately stop the boats.”
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