Tory deputy chair Lee Anderson admits government has ‘failed’ on immigration – UK politics live
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Tory deputy chair Lee Anderson admits government has ‘failed’ on immigration in interview with Farage
Lee Anderson, the Conservative deputy chair, has admitted that the government has “failed” on immigration.
Anderson made the comment last night, in an interview with the former Ukip and Brexit party leader Nigel Farage on GB News.
As the Telegraph reports, Farage put it to Anderson that the government had “completely and utterly failed everyone” on immigration. Anderson replied:
Listen Nigel, I am not going to sit here and make excuses to anyone. This is out of control, we are in power at the moment, I am the deputy chair of the Conservative party, we are in government and we have failed on this. There is no doubt about it.
We have said we are going to fix it, it is a failure.
Anderson said the government had policies in place to address the small boats problem, such as the Rwanda deportations plan and the Illegal Migration Act, but he said progress “seems very slow”.
He also said the government faced opposition from “lefty lawyers”, human rights groups and charities. He went on:
Everything is against us but I am not making excuses. It is slowing us down. If the whole of parliament was behind us on this I am sure this would have got through by now.
Lee Anderson. Photograph: UK Parliament/Jessica Taylor/PA
Updated at 06.37 EDT
Key events
Jenrick says it’s ‘naive’ to think reducing asylum application claims backlog will solve small boats problem
During his morning interview round Robert Jenrick, the immigration minister, covered quite a range of small boat-related issues. Here are more lines from what he said not covered already.
Jenrick said it was “naive” to think that reducing the backlog of asylum applications would by itself sort out the small boat problems. Reducing the time spent waiting for applications to be processed might just encourage more people to come, he said. When it was put to him that the backlog was “the nub of the problem”, he told Sky News:
It isn’t the nub of the problem. But it is an important thing that we have to get right.
I say that because there are those, such as the Labour party, saying that just if you process claims quickly, that will fix it. I think that’s a naive view. That’s what they did when they were last in office. And that just encourages more people to come.
But it is right that we make the Home Office as efficient as possible and the good news is that we’re succeeding.
This is not the first time Jenrick has made this argument; in May he told MPs that cutting the asylum application backlog could increase the number of asylum seekers coming to the UK. But it is a perilous line to take, because it implies the Home Office is not fully committed to reducing the backlog, and because Rishi Sunak has made cutting the backlog a priority. In December Sunak told MPs that claims should be processed “in days or weeks, not months or years”.
We have written to those individuals who have so far declined to travel and, as I understand it, a significant proportion of them have already changed their minds and agreed to move. A significant number moved yesterday, I suspect more will move in the coming days.
He rejected claims that the UK was losing out because, as a result of Brexit, it was no longer party to the Dublin agreement that allowed people claiming asylum in the UK to be returned to safe countries in the EU they had travelled through previously. When this was put to him on the Today programme, Jenrick replied:
No, I dispute that.
The Dublin arrangement which you are referring to didn’t work well. In fact, in their last years of operation, more individuals were brought from the continent to the UK than were sent in the other direction, so the arrangement wasn’t working well.
I’m not able to say how much this morning, but what we are funding with Turkey is real investment in core law enforcement capability with a centre of excellence whereby Turkish national police will be training up to tackle this issue in Turkey.
Labour welcomes Lee Anderson’s admission government failing on immigration, but says his ‘back to France’ jibe wrong
Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, has welcomed Lee Anderson’s admission that the government is failing on immigraiton. She told the Today programme:
[Anderson] did admit that the government is failing to tackle the boats crisis. What we need is grip rather than gimmicks, we need solutions rather than just this ramping up the rhetoric all of the time.
And that is the problem – because they are failing, because they have been flailing around for years while they have just made things worse with the policies they have pursued, they have ended up now lashing out trying to promote division and trying to find someone else to blame.
That is not what responsible governments do. They should be getting on with trying to solve the practical problems around the gangs and around the backlog.
But, in her interview, Cooper criticised Anderson for saying yesterday that asylum seekers unhappy with barge accommodation should “fuck off back to France”. She said:
It is clearly the wrong language to use and it is ramping up the rhetoric as a distraction from the fact the government is failing.
One person likely to welcome Cooper’s condemnation is Anderson himself. In an interview with the Daily Express, which could be seen as confirmation that his reactionary soundbites are primarily crafted with the intention of provoking a reaction, he in effect complained that Labour MPs weren’t criticising him publicly over his France comment. Anderson told the paper:
The leftwing mainstream media has gone into meltdown over my comments but, interestingly, I am yet to see one Labour frontbench MP disagree with my comments.
Is this another U-turn from Labour because their silence is deafening.
Updated at 06.38 EDT
Tory deputy chair Lee Anderson admits government has ‘failed’ on immigration in interview with Farage
Lee Anderson, the Conservative deputy chair, has admitted that the government has “failed” on immigration.
Anderson made the comment last night, in an interview with the former Ukip and Brexit party leader Nigel Farage on GB News.
As the Telegraph reports, Farage put it to Anderson that the government had “completely and utterly failed everyone” on immigration. Anderson replied:
Listen Nigel, I am not going to sit here and make excuses to anyone. This is out of control, we are in power at the moment, I am the deputy chair of the Conservative party, we are in government and we have failed on this. There is no doubt about it.
We have said we are going to fix it, it is a failure.
Anderson said the government had policies in place to address the small boats problem, such as the Rwanda deportations plan and the Illegal Migration Act, but he said progress “seems very slow”.
He also said the government faced opposition from “lefty lawyers”, human rights groups and charities. He went on:
Everything is against us but I am not making excuses. It is slowing us down. If the whole of parliament was behind us on this I am sure this would have got through by now.
Lee Anderson. Photograph: UK Parliament/Jessica Taylor/PA
Updated at 06.37 EDT
Liberty, the human rights group, has expressed alarm at the suggestion that the Conservative party could support leaving the European convention on human rights. (See 10.02am.) In a tweet it said:
The European Convention on Human Rights protects everyone in the UK
The rights and freedoms we’re all familiar with come from it
Dragging the UK out of the ECHR will allow the Government to knowingly commit human rights abuses against anyone
Jenrick suggests he’s open to backing parliamentary move to force byelection in Nadine Dorries’ constituency
Robert Jenrick has suggested he would not rule out backing a parliamentary move to punish Nadine Dorries for not attending parliament as a means of forcing a byelection.
Dorries, the former culture secretary, had infuriated many MPs, including her colleagues, by her failure to formally resign her seat despite her announcing in early June that she was going to do so “with immediate effect”.
All three main English parties are gearing up for a byelection in her Mid Bedfordshire constituency, and her non-resignation has focused attention on how little work she appears to be doing as an MP. She has voted in the Commons six times this year, and has not spoken in the chamber since last summer.
Last week Sunak criticised Dorries, saying she was not properly representing her constituents.
Today, in an interview with Sky News, Jenrick, the immigration minister, used similar language to Sunak. But he went further in hinting that he might back a parliamentary move to oust Dorries.
Asked if it was time for Dorries to go, Jenrick replied:
Yes. I think being a member of parliament is a special privilege. You sign up for a term in office. If you decide you want to leave parliament for whatever reason, you need to get on and do that.
I don’t think that Nadine Dorries’ constituents are being properly represented.
I hope she’ll reach that conclusion soon.
Jenrick was then asked if he supported a proposal from Sir Chris Bryant, the chair of the Commons standards committee, to force Dorries out. In an interview with the Financial Times, Bryant, who is promoting his new book on conduct in parliament, said he favoured resurrecting a parliamentary rule from 1801 stating that “no member do presume to go out of town without leave of this house”. Bryant suggested that a process like this could end up with Dorries being suspended for more than 10 days, which would trigger a recall petition and then a byelection (if the 10% threshold were met).
On Monday, asked about the Bryant proposal, Downing Street declined to endorse it, and said ultimately it was for constituents to decide who should serve as an MP.
But when Jenrick was asked about the plan, he sounded more enthusiastic. Asked if he would support Bryant’s proposal, he replied:
I’m not familiar with the details of his proposal, I know he’s relying on quite an arcane piece of legislation.
Obviously the government will consider that, but it’s probably a matter for the House of Commons rather than for the government.
And so if he brings forward serious proposals, then as individual members of parliament we’ll have to consider.
Dorries, who is a loyal Boris Johnson supporter, has said that before she resigns as an MP she wants to get a proper explanation as to why she was blocked from getting a peerage in his resignation honours. She has not responded to the recent criticism of her attendance record in parliament, or her failure to quit, but yesterday she did post a message on Twitter accusing Bryant of being a publicity seeker.
Ahh, Chris Bryant has a book out – well, I never. This latest bout of publicity seeking was so unlike him… All is now clear…
Dorries, of course, is no slouch when it comes to publicity-seeking.
Updated at 06.16 EDT
Jenrick suggests Tories would take UK out of ECHR if that offered only means of stopping small boats
Robert Jenrick, the immigration minister, has suggested that the government might withdraw from the European convention on human rights if that offers the only means of stopping asylum seekers coming to the UK on small boats.
Asked if leaving the ECHR was an option for the government, Jenrick said the government would “take whatever necessary action is needed”.
Jenrick was responding to a question prompted by a BBC report saying senior Conservatives believe the party will campaign on a manifesto proposing ECHR withdrawal. The report, by Nick Eardley, also quotes an unnamed minister claiming the UK is being “punished” by the European court of human rights, which enforces the convention, because of Brexit.
Rishi Sunak has played down the prospect of leaving the ECHR, arguing that the UK is instead in a good position to secure reforms to how the European court operates that might help it implement its Rwanda policy.
But Sunak has never ruled out leaving the convention, or the court, and one recent survey showed that 70% of Conservative party members wanted the UK to leave the convention. Suella Braverman, the home secretary, has in the past said she agrees with this view, although she now tends not to say that publicly because it is not government policy.
In an interview with Times Radio, asked if the government was ruling out withdrawal from the convention, Jenrick replied:
You can see from the prime minister, the home secretary and myself, our total commitment to this challenge.
That’s why we’re working on every possible front. That’s why we have produced the most comprehensive plan, I believe, of any European country to tackle this issue.
And we’ll do whatever is necessary ultimately to defend our borders and to bring order to our asylum system.
Asked if “whatever is necessary” might include leaving the ECHR, Jenrick replied:
We will do whatever is required, take whatever necessary action is needed.
Robert Jenrick on Sky News this morning. Photograph: Sky News
Updated at 05.59 EDT
Labour says it would set up commission to tackle 60% fall in proportion of crimes solved since 2015
Good morning. In August, as “normal” political news dries up, journalists are more dependent than usual on what the political parties are offering and the government is still banging away with announcements designed to show that it is dealing with the small boats problem. Robert Jenrick, the immigration minister, has been promoting a deal with Turkey intended to tackle illegal migration. The Home Office statement is here, and our story about the initiative is here.
But today Labour has got its own, rival announcement. It is about crime, and how to ensure more crimes lead to suspects being charged, and it is inspired in particular by this chart in the document Keir Starmer published earlier this year explaining his “making Britain’s streets safe” mission. It shows the detection rate for offences in England and Wales has fallen by 60% since 2015.
Detection rate for crimes in England and Wales from 2003 Photograph: Labour party
Labour says that, in addition to proposals it has already announced to deal with this (more neighbourhood police officers, more people working as crown prosecutors), it will set up a charging commission to ensure more cases go to trial. It says a body is needed to speed up the process because the time taken to charge suspects is getting longer (up from 14 days, on average, in 2016, to 44 days now), and because 2.4m cases were dropped due to evidential difficulties in the past year.
Another problem is the huge increase in the proportion of victims who just give up on wanting to see a case through.
Proportion of cases closed due to victims not supporting further action, from 2015 Photograph: Labour party
In an article for the Daily Mirror, Yvette Cooper, the shadow home secretary, says a charging commission is needed because, for every 500 people who get burgled, only 20 cases go to court. She says:
Across England and Wales today, over 500 people will have their home broken into. Only 20 of those burglars will face court. Shockingly, less than 5% of burglaries are solved.
For violent crime the figures are worse. More than 5,000 people will face a violent attack or abuse today alone. But less than 300 of the criminals responsible will face court.
Under the Tories the proportion of crimes that are solved has dropped by two thirds. Bluntly, more criminals are getting off, more victims are being badly let down.
The Labour commission will be chaired by Dame Vera Baird, a former Labour MP and former victims’ commissioner. Explaining what it would do, she said:
Investigations and prosecutions for serious crimes like rape are in a dismal state, the criminal justice system is in chaos, and things simply cannot stay as they are.
This commission will bring together voices from across policing and prosecutions to forensically investigate the causes of this charging crisis, and set out robust recommendations for recovery.
Jenrick and Cooper have both been doing media rounds this morning. I will post the highlights shortly.
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Updated at 05.04 EDT