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    Rwanda bill – live: Sunak warned Tories may never win power again as crunch debate begins

    Rishi Sunak should ‘pull the Rwanda bill’ now, says Tory right-wingerSign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak has been warned the Conservatives “could be out of power forever” as the crunch debate on his Rwanda bill begins.Speaking to Times Radio, former Tory leader Lord William Hague said that MPs “picking holes” in the prime minister’s plan rather than uniting ahead of the key vote tonight “have only got opposition to look forward to”.Home Secretary James Cleverly opened the Commons debate on the bill, which would designate Rwanda as a safe country for asylum seekers and be voted on at 7pm.The bid for Mr Sunak’s latest plan to “stop the boats” comes as it was confirmed that an asylum seeker died on the Bibby Stockholm barge, the accommodation used by the government to house migrants.The prime minister is facing a potential rebellion from warring factions of his party over the bill and hosted an emergency breakfast in Downing Street with rebels in an attempt to convince them to vote for the bill.Right-wing Conservatives are set to hold a joint meeting tonight to discuss the vote – but there is an increasing belief among Tory rebels that Mr Sunak’s bill will be successful.Show latest update
    1702392707Rebels warned of ‘consequences’ if they vote against Rishi Sunak’s planTory rebels have been warned not to vote against Rishi Sunak’s deal or there will be “consequences”, it has emerged. Those considering opposing the PM’s plan could lose the Conservative Party whip, The Sun’s political editor Harry Cole reported.Archie Mitchell, Political Correspondent12 December 2023 14:511702392660Watch: Cleverly promises investigation after asylum seeker dies on Bibby StockholmCleverly promises investigation after asylum seeker dies on Bibby StockholmTara Cobham12 December 2023 14:511702392565Jenrick: ‘The test of this policy is, “Will it work?”’Conservative former immigration minister Robert Jenrick told the Commons: “This is not a bad Bill but it is not the best Bill. I want this Bill to work.“The test of this policy is not ‘is it the strongest Bill we’ve done?’, it’s not ‘is it a good compromise?’, it’s ‘will it work?’.“That is all the public care about. They don’t care about Rwanda as a scheme, they care about stopping the boats. And we are sent here to do that for them.“I will never elevate contested notions of international law over the interests of my constituents, over vital national interests like national security, like border security.“This Bill could be so much better, let’s make it better. Let’s make it work.”Tara Cobham12 December 2023 14:491702392260Cleverly promises investigation after asylum seeker dies on Bibby StockholmThe home secretary told MPs in the House of Commons: “Tragically, there has been (a) death on the Bibby Stockholm barge. I’m sure that the thoughts of the whole House, like mine, are with those affected.“The House will understand that at this stage I am uncomfortable getting into any more details. But we will of course investigate fully.”Dorset Police said they received a report of a sudden death of a resident on the Bibby Stockholm at 6:22am.Rhys Jones reports: More

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    Keir Starmer attacks Tories for behaving like Donald Trump: ‘It’s all woke, woke, woke’

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailSir Keir Starmer has lashed out at Rishi Sunak’s Conservatives, claiming they behave like Donald Trump.The Labour leader launched a blistering attack on the Tories to mark the fourth anniversary of his own party’s electoral wipeout under Jeremy Corbyn.In a pitch to disaffected Conservative voters, he laid out the “complete overhaul” Labour has undergone since 2019. And he said the Tories under Boris Johnson, Liz Truss and now Rishi Sunak have “moved in the opposite direction”.Sir Keir said Britain has always been a “practical nation” in the past, even under Tory governments.“But these aren’t Churchillian tourists anymore, if anything they behave more and more like Donald Trump,” he added.The Labour leader said: “They look at the politics of America, and they want to bring it here. It’s all woke, woke, woke, wedge, wedge wedge, divide, divide, divide.“People can’t afford Christmas.”Sir Keir Starmer during a speech in Milton Keynes Sir Keir also attacked the Conservatives’ record on the NHS and crime, saying crimes are going unsolved and people do not know if ambulances will come when called.And he vowed Labour would no longer indulge in “performance art” policies such as the Rwanda scheme, but would indulge in “the mundane stuff, the bureaucratic stuff”.“It’s not about wave machines, or armoured jet skis, or schemes like your wonder you know will never work, it’s about doing the basics better,” Sir Keir said.In a speech from Milton Keynes, the Labour leader appealed directly to Conservative voters, saying: “Only a change of government can bring change to our country.”Sir Keir also used a Q&A after the speech to confirm the party would scrap Mr Sunak’s flagship Rwanda deportation policy.He said it is costing a “fortune”, will not work and is “against our values”. But he opened the door to the party considering a similar scheme, where asylum claims could be processed elsewhere, with successful asylum seekers able to return to the UK.Sir Keir said: “There are various schemes, as you know, around the world where individuals are processed, usually en route to their country of destination, elsewhere.”The Rwanda scheme isn’t one of those. This is a straight deportation scheme in relation to people who’ve already arrived.”Other countries around the world do have schemes where they divert people on the way and process them elsewhere. That’s a different kind of scheme.”And look, I’ll look at any scheme that might work.”Elsewhere in the speech, Sir Keir defended his time serving under predecessor Mr Corbyn. “We did lose our way, we lost our way into that 2019 election four years ago today,” he said.But he went further and appeared to criticise the leadership of other former leaders including Ed Miliband and ex-prime minister Gordon Brown.Asked about his claim that Labour had taken a “leave of absence from our job description”, “not just under Jeremy Corbyn, but for a while”, Sir Keir insisted he was not critiquing any “particular individual”.But said “it is a reflection of the fact that we have lost four elections in a row”, including under Mr Brown in 2010.Tory chairman Greg Holden said: “Once again Sir Keir Starmer showed he is only interested in short-term political positioning, not taking long-term decisions in the national interest.” More

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    What happens if Rishi Sunak loses Rwanda vote?

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe rejection of Rishi Sunak’s latest Rwanda bill will plunge his premiership into turmoil.The prime minister has denied that tonight’s result amounts to a vote of confidence in his leadership – but senior Tories have said otherwise.Of his five key pledges to the nation, the promise to “stop the boats” has taken up the most political capital.And MPs who support the Rwanda plan – which would see asylum seekers who arrive in the UK via “irregular routes” such as small boat crossings – believe it is a necessary deterrent.After it was struck down as unlawful by the Supreme Court, Mr Sunak published new planned legislation, entitled the Safety of Rwanda Bill, which would deem Rwanda safe in British law.It will be voted on in the House of Commons this evening and faces being the first bill defeated at its second reading since Margaret Thatcher’s 1986 Shops Bill – which would have ended the regulation of Sunday shopping in England and Wales.Prime Minister Rishi Sunak faces another long and difficult day, as he bids to see of a major rebellion Who is opposing the bill?The so-called “five families” groups of backbench Tory MPs pose the biggest threat to the bill’s passage.The European Research Group (ERG), New Conservatives, Conservative Growth Group, Common Sense Group, and Northern Research Group have commissioned a “star chamber” of lawyers to determine whether it goes far enough to ensure flights to Rwanda get off the ground.The groups fear that in its current form, the bill would see the policy undermined by a stream of individual court appeals against deportation flights.The ERG, which commissioned the star chamber, said the group only “provides a partial and incomplete solution” and called on Mr Sunak to “pull the bill”.Mr Sunak met with a group of Tory MPs from the right of the party on Tuesday morning to convince them over breakfast to vote for the billMr Sunak met for breakfast with a group of Tory MPs from the right of the party on Tuesday morning in a desperate bid to convince them to vote for the bill. Do they have the numbers?If 29 Tory MPs vote against the bill it will fail, so yes – many more MPs than that have expressed their concerns.But the right-wing groups have not publicly pledged to vote it down, with many planning to let it go through its second reading before trying to introduce amendments later.Abstentions could also see the law chucked out if 57 Conservative MPs decide to vote neither for or against the bill.What happens if Mr Sunak loses?The PM’s ability to govern would be shot and he could either quit, contest a Tory leadership challenge or go to the country by calling a general election.If Mr Sunak quits or choses to fight a leadership contest, challengers would likely include former immigration ministers Suella Braverman and Robert Jenrick. Others courting votes on the right of the party could include business secretary Kemi Badenoch and leader of the House of Commons Penny Mordaunt.Most Tory MPs are resigned to Mr Sunak leading the party into the next election, which is expected at some point next year. Yet another change of leader would see the fourth prime minister installed since Boris Johnson won the last election in 2019. The clamour for a general election would be immense.Some in the party, including senior MP Charles Walker, believe Mr Sunak would have to go to the country, adding that the prospect of a third Tory leadership contest in this parliament “leaves me cold”.If Mr Sunak goes straight to the country, he could fight the election on his promise to take tough action to “stop the boats”, using illegal immigration to draw a dividing line with the Labour Party. A win would give a strong democratic mandate to the Rwanda plan, which did not form part of the last Conservative manifesto.But with his party 20 points behind in the polls, a general election is likely to be a situation Mr Sunak will want to avoid.Can he defuse the rebellion?It is unlikely. If the bill passes its second reading tonight with the support of would-be right wing rebels, they will quickly turn their energy to seeking amendments.But any major changes pose two risks for the PM.One is that the Rwandan government has been clear with the UK that if the bill goes any further in disregarding international laws, it will pull out.Any amendments could also see the 100-strong One Nation group turn their backs on the bill, which would see it fall at a future vote.What if the bill gets through the commons?The bill would still face many hurdles, even if MPs approve it tonight. It will face rounds of discussion and debate, as well as a tricky passage through the Lords.And the Labour party has confirmed it will scrap the Rwandan deportation policy, meaning that if it fails to turn Tory fortunes around, it would have a limited time in force anyway. More

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    Poland’s newly elected prime minister is to present his government and face a confidence vote

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster email Poland’s newly elected prime minister, Donald Tusk, is scheduled to deliver his inaugural speech to parliament on Tuesday morning and present a Cabinet that will then face a confidence vote later in the day.Tusk, a centrist leader who was previously prime minister from 2007-2014, returns as the head of a broad alliance that spans the ideological spectrum from left-wing via his own centrist Civic Platform party to more conservative parties.He was elected by parliament on Monday and faces many challenges, from restoring democratic standards in his own country, working for the release of European Union funding frozen due to democratic backsliding by his predecessors and facing the implications of a war just across Poland’s eastern border in Ukraine. One of his easier challengers will be restoring ties with the EU, which were badly strained during the past eight years of rule by a national conservative government.Tusk, who served as European Council president from 2014-2019 and has strong connections in Brussels, is expected to improve Warsaw’s standing in the bloc’s capital. Tusk’s ascension to power came nearly two months after an election which was won by a coalition of parties that ran on separate tickets, but promised to work together under Tusk’s leadership to restore democratic standards and improve ties with allies. More

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    Keir Starmer insists Labour overhaul is not just a paint job – with jab at Jeremy Corbyn

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailSir Keir Starmer is to insist that his overhaul of the Labour Party is “not just a paint job” but a total revamp of the party in a bid to win over disaffected Tory voters.The Labour leader will deliver a speech on Tuesday to mark the four-year anniversary of the 2019 general election – when Jeremy Corbyn led the party to its worst defeat since 1935.Sir Keir will aim a barb at Mr Corbyn as well as former Labour leader Ed Miliband, still a shadow minister, acknowledging the public has had problems with the party “for a while”. And he will promise to end the Tory “psychodrama” and give Britain hope.”Working people up and down our country looked at my party, looked at the journey we’d been on – not just under Jeremy Corbyn, but for a while. And they said ‘no’,” he is expected to say. “We’d taken a leave of absence from our job description. Reneged on an old partnership – the Labour bargain that we serve working people – as they drive our country forward.”Everything I’ve done as leader, every fight I’ve had, has been to reconnect us to that purpose. If you want a government committed to economic stability, the rule of law, good public services, restoring Britain’s standing, making family life more secure and putting the country first, this is what a changed Labour Party will deliver.”Sir Keir Starmer will say he has made Labour the ‘party of service’ again (Maja Smiejkowska/PA)Sir Keir will also seize on the threat to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s authority posed this week by a Tory Party bitterly divided over his Rwanda Bill, a piece of emergency legislation aimed at reviving the Government’s flagship asylum policy.”We’re all stuck in their psychodrama, all being dragged down to their level,” he is expected to say.”While they’re all swanning around self-importantly with their factions and their ‘star chambers’, fighting like rats in a sack, there’s a country out here that isn’t being governed.”He will urge parts of the electorate who have previously voted Conservative that the change they hope for “will not (come) from a Tory fifth term”.”It’s about doing the basics better. The mundane stuff. The bureaucratic stuff. Busting the backlogs, rebuilding a functioning asylum system, removing people more quickly so you don’t have to run up hotel bills, and cross-border police force that can smash the smuggler gangs at source.”Sir Keir’s leadership has seen Labour shift away from the left-leaning Opposition headed by Mr Corbyn after the party suffered a landslide defeat in 2019.He recently appeared to attempt to court traditionally Tory voters by writing for the Conservative-supporting Telegraph newspaper that Margaret Thatcher had sought to “drag Britain out of its stupor by setting loose our natural entrepreneurialism”.Sir Keir later sought to calm criticism of the move by telling a Scottish Labour gala dinner that she did “terrible things” and he “profoundly disagrees” with some of her actions.Tory chairman Richard Holden said: “The truth is Labour hasn’t changed. It’s the same old ideas of more borrowing, more debt and more taxes.“Sir Keir Starmer will never take the difficult decisions to deliver the long-term change this country needs.” More

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    Rishi Sunak defends Eat Out to Help Out scheme under intense pressure at Covid inquiry

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRishi Sunak mounted a fierce defence of his controversial Eat Out to Help Out scheme and said it was unfair to call the Treasury a “pro-death squad” during the pandemic.The prime minister used an eight-hour evidence session to brush off accusations that he launched the controversial scheme without proper scientific advice. He praised the “incredibly hardworking people” working in the Treasury while he was chancellor, hitting back at Boris Johnson’s suggestion they were happy to oversee an increase in deaths in order to lift lockdown restrictions.The now-PM also said he “consistently” warned his predecessor Mr Johnson about the wider impacts of lockdown, blaming the “economic scarring” it left for the nation’s parlous finances today.Mr Sunak opened his evidence hearing with an apology to families bereaved during the pandemic. He proceeded to make the extraordinary claim that he had not been able to hand over his WhatsApp messages from the pandemic because he “had changed phones multiple times and the messages did not come across”.Prime Minister Rishi Sunak giving evidence to the UK Covid-19 InquiryBut despite coming under intense pressure from inquiry lead counsel Hugo Keith KC, Mr Sunak came off largely unscathed from the hearing. He also pointedly refused to criticise his former boss.As the PM’s flagship Rwanda policy was under intense scrutiny, the Covid inquiry heard:Mr Sunak denied having called parents who cannot afford food for their children “freeloaders”The former chancellor said it was unfair to describe the Treasury during the pandemic as the “pro-death squad”He fiercely defended the controversial  Eat Out to Help Out policy, insisting it was the “right thing to do”Mr Sunak blamed “economic scarring” from lockdown for the “historically high” tax burden facing households todayAnd former PM Mr Johnson became “agitated” that he did not have a plan for easing lockdown, believing the “sooner we get [the economy] open the better”Mr Sunak said on Monday morning he was “deeply sorry to all of those who lost loved ones”.“It’s important that we learn the lessons so that we can be better prepared in the future,” Mr Sunak said. He promised to give evidence “in the spirit of constructive candour”.After Mr Sunak was asked about his WhatsApp messages, a disappointed Mr Keith pressed the PM on whether he was warned by officials that he would need to keep access to the messages for use in a future inquiry.But the PM insisted he is “not a prolific user of WhatsApp” and “anything of significance”.The PM went on to say it was unfair to describe the Treasury under his leadership during the pandemic as a “pro-death squad”.The former chancellor was asked by Mr Keith whether he was aware of the description which Sir Patrick Vallance recalled Mr Johnson used to refer to the department being opposed to the strongest public health interventions.Jean Adamson, who lost her father Aldrick Adamson to Covid, outside the Covid inquiry The prime minister said: “I wasn’t and I do not think it is a fair characterisation on the incredibly hardworking people that I was lucky to be supported by at the Treasury.”He was quizzed by Mr Keith on the litany of claims heard by the inquiry so far that Mr Johnson himself presided over a toxic and chaotic working environment in No 10.Despite tensions between the pair, Mr Sunak declined to criticise his predecessor and said he was not aware of the concerns people had raised.Mr Keith said: “The administration was described privately as brutal and useless, or criminally incompetent or operationally chaotic? Was any of that known to you?”“I don’t think any of those comments were shared with me at the time,” Mr Sunak said.In a revealing slip of the tongue, Mr Sunak accepted at one point that the tax burden on households was “historically high”, before quickly correcting himself to say taxes are “higher than I would like”.The PM blamed “economic scarring” on the country’s borrowing during the pandemic.Celia Macey lost her husband Neil Macey in August 2021 to CovidMr Sunak said: “The impact of having to pay it back only comes well after the fact when everyone can forget why it was necessary.“And now everyone is grappling with the consequences, I am grappling with the consequences of that, as we have a historically high … tax burden that … is higher than I would like.“That is a direct consequence of the support that was provided during the pandemic.”Mr Keith told him off for using the inquiry to excuse his government’s tax rises, adding: “Please do not go on to the issue of tax burdens.”Mr Sunak went on to claim he had “consistently” warned Mr Johnson about the wider impacts of lockdowns.The prime minister said he wanted Mr Johnson to “consider the totality” of the effects of lockdown.Mr Sunak said: “One of the consistent arguments I made from the beginning was making sure we collectively and the prime minister considered the totality of the impacts of the decisions that we were making.”The inquiry was then shown an email from Elizabeth Perelman, Mr Sunak’s then-principal private secretary, which revealed that in April the former PM was agitated about not having a plan to lift lockdown and said “the sooner we get this open the better”.It showed that Mr Johnson thought Britain had “overdone” lockdown, highlighting that other countries had not closed their construction sectors, for example.Asked about Eat Out to Help Out, for which he has drawn criticism after Sir Chris Whitty and Sir Patrick Vallance were not asked about the scheme before it was announced, he said it was “safe” and “the right thing to do” to protect jobs.Mr Sunak’s evidence concludes a slew of bumper appearances from the top scientific advisers and ministers in charge during the pandemic. 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    Rwanda bill – live: Tory MPs urge Sunak to ‘pull bill now’ ahead of key vote

    Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda bill ‘doesn’t do the job’, says Robert JenrickSign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailRight wing conservatives have urged the prime minister to “pull” the Rwanda Bill and come up with a a “completely new” piece of legislation.Mark Francois, chairman to European Research Group (ERG), said there was a “consensus” among right-wingers that Rishi Sunak should “pull the bill”.The senior rebel said No 10 should “come up with a revised version that works better than this one which has so many holes in it”.David Jones, the ERG deputy chair, added that he agreed that the current Rwanda bill was “not easily amendable” at the committee stage – even if goes through the first hurdle on Tuesday.It comes after the so-called “star chamber” of lawyers for the right-wing European Research Group (ERG) said the bill “provides a partial and incomplete solution” but does not go “far enough to deliver the policy as intended”.The lawyers, led by veteran Eurosceptic Tory MP Sir Bill Cash, said “very significant amendments” to the legislation – which is due to be voted on tomorrow – are needed.Show latest update
    1702305155Rishi Sunak should ‘pull the bill’ now, say Tory right-wingersMark Francois, chairman to European Research Group (ERG), said there was a “consensus” among right-wingers that Rishi Sunak should “pull the bill”.The senior rebel said No 10 should “come up with a revised version that works better than this one which has so many holes in it”.David Jones, the ERG deputy chair, said he agreed that the current Rwanda bill was “not easily amendable” at the committee stage – even if goes through the first hurdle on Tuesday.Mr Jones said the government “needs to review it” should “maybe consider a completely new piece of legislation.” He said there were “so many gaps in the [current] legislation”.But Mr Francois suggested MPs in the ERG – and other right-wing groups – would not necessarily agree on how to vote on Tuesday.“I’m not sure if final decision will be taken even today,” he said on MPs’ decisions. Pushed on whether the “logical conclusion” of the fierce opposition to the bill was that MPs would vote against it, Mr Francois said: “We have dropped the government a broad hint – we’ll see how the government replies.”Alexander Butler11 December 2023 14:321702305935Brexiteer will vote for Rwanda bill on TuesdayVeteran Tory MP Sir Michael Fabricant, a member of the European Research Group (ERG), said he would be voting for the Rwanda Bill on Tuesday.But he indicated the group would be pushing for changes in January. Sir Michael said: “It is not perfect (no bill ever is), but I agree with its principle: to deter the slavers providing dangerous channel crossings. Amendments can then be made later in the usual way.”Joe Middleton11 December 2023 14:451702305035Tory right-winger suggest he won’t back bill without changesRight-wing MP Simon Clarke, a figure in the Conservative Growth Group, said the ERG verdict was “very concerning”. The ex-minister in the Liz Truss government said he “really hopes” Rishi Sunak could be persuaded to make changes.Suggesting that he could vote against the bill at some stage – whether on Tuesday or early next year – Mr Clarke said: “There is no point frankly in our relitigating this issue unless it does work.”New Conservatives co-chairman Danny Kruger said: “We’ll be discussing later with colleagues in light of the report that we’ve just received, and having further conversations with government over the course of the next 24 hours.”Joe Middleton11 December 2023 14:301702304135Robert Jenrick will speak to ‘five families’ on Tory right at 6pmRobert Jenrick – the former Sunak who quit as his immigration minister – will speak at a meeting of Tory right-wingers at 6pm on Monday, the European Research Group (ERG) chief Mark Francois has said.Asked whether ERG members would be told to vote against it, and whether they could vote as a pack, Mr Francois said: “You don’t always announce what you’re going to do well before the bell was ringing.”The meeting is set to be attended by right-wing MPs from the ERG, the New Conservatives group run by Danny Kruger and Miriam Cates; the Common Sense Group run by Suella Braverman’s ally John Hayes; the Conservative Growth Group, made up of Liz Truss allies, and the Northern Research Group of red-wall MPs.Adam Forrest11 December 2023 14:151702303235VIDEO: Rishi Sunak accepts taxes are ‘historically high’ at Covid inquiryRishi Sunak accepts taxes are ‘historically high’ at Covid inquiryJoe Middleton11 December 2023 14:001702302223Gary Lineker offers Lee Anderson job at Walkers Crisps after next electionTory MPs have had another busy day taking part in one of their favourite pastimes – arguing with Gary Lineker on X, formerly Twitter.Mr Lineker has irked Conservative MPs over his support for a “fair” plan for refugees in Britain. Right-winger Jonathan Gullis earlier today accused the Match of the Day presenter of “yet another breach” of the BBC’s rules on political impartiality. Mr Lineker hit back by suggesting that the Stoke-on-Trent MP may be illiterate. He said: “Jonathan hasn’t read the new guidelines….or, should I say, had someone read them to him?”Lee Anderson has also waded into the row and said that what the British people want “is to stop the boats and to tell overpaid crisp salesmen to put a sock in it.”Mr Lineker responded: “I guess we’ll find out what the will of the British people is at the next general election. If you do end up out of work, I’ll put in a word for you with @walkers_crisps”Joe Middleton11 December 2023 13:431702300719Sunak in crisis as Tory right-wing rebels’ ‘star chamber’ rejects his Rwanda billRishi Sunak’s premiership has been thrown into crisis after right-wing rebels delivered a scathing rejection of the flagship Rwanda bill – saying it does “not go far enough”.In a huge blow to the PM, the so-called “star chamber” of lawyers convened by Tories on the European Research Group (ERG) said the bill won’t get deportation flights started.They group said it offers only a “provides a partial and incomplete solution” to the problem of asylum seekers using the courts to block flights ahead of Tuesday’s crunch vote on the issue.The group of lawyers, led by veteran Tory Eurosceptic Sir Bill Cash, said “very significant amendments” would be needed by rebel MPs to make it work.Adam Forrest reports.Joe Middleton11 December 2023 13:181702299832Tory ‘star chamber’ tell ERG Rwanda plan provides ‘partial and incomplete solution’ to small boats problemThe Tory ‘star chamber’ – a group of lawyers employed by the right-wing of the party – has told the Conservative European Research Group (ERG) that the Rwanda bill is a “partial and incomplete solution” to the small boats problem.BBC Newsnight’s Nicholas Watt posted the announcement on X, formerly Twitter. However, despite the advice, the ERG is not what it will advise its members to do on Tuesday’s vote.Joe Middleton11 December 2023 13:031702299635Video: Boris Johnson’s indecision ‘not necessarily a bad thing’, Sunak says at Covid inquiryBoris Johnson’s indecision ‘not necessarily a bad thing’, Sunak says at Covid inquiryJoe Middleton11 December 2023 13:001702298590Sunak will stick will ‘toughest version’ of bill, No 10 suggestsNo 10 has suggested that Rishi Sunak will stick with the “toughest version” of the Rwanda bill in face of plans by Tory rebels to “fix” it in committee stage.Asked if the PM would listen to Tory MPs who will put down amendments in January, Mr Sunak’s official spokesman said: “We will continue to listen carefully to MPs.”By the No 10 official suggested there was little room for changes, saying the PM was “confident this is the toughest version of the legislation that will stop the boats”.Adam Forrest11 December 2023 12:43 More

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    Home Office will spend £700m on small boats plan, contracts reveal

    Sign up for the View from Westminster email for expert analysis straight to your inboxGet our free View from Westminster emailThe Home Office plans to spend at least £700m on managing migrants who arrive on small boats during this decade, according to government contracts.Rishi Sunak faces his most perilous week at No 10 as the fate of his flagship Rwanda bill – aimed at fulfilling “stop the boats” pledge – lies in the hands of two warring Tory factions.But it has emerged that home secretary James Cleverly’s department has seta aside huge sums for dealing with asylum seekers who arrive across the English Channel.Some £700m will go on reception and detention and facilities until 2030, with the option of extending the contracts until 2034, according to plans first highlighted by the BBC.The documents show that the Home Office wants at least one partner firm to help manage two large facilities in Kent in the years ahead.The money will be spent running the Western Jet Foil facility in Dover, and the reception centre at the former Manston airfield in Kent.One part of the contract is aimed at overhauling the controversial Manston facility, aimed at accommodating up to 1,600 migrants while their claims are processed.A migrant held at Manston trying to communicate with journalists “The Home Office is currently transforming the site at Manston to establish permanent, purpose-built facilities,” the document states – saying the government want to “process arrivals with dignity and respect”.Labour’s shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper said it showed that “even the Home Office doesn’t believe Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda plan is going to work”.She added: “Instead of sending nearly £300m of taxpayers money to Rwanda for a failing scheme, the prime minister should be using the money to stop the criminal smuggling gangs who are organising boat crossings in the first place.”Mr Sunak’s official spokesman responded: “A government plans for all eventualities – that is the responsible thing to do.”It emerged last week Home Office has paid £100m more to Rwanda than previously admitted – taking the total cost of the plan so far to £290m.Meanwhile, it has emerged that Mr Sunak’s government will publish a summary of its legal advice on the legislation to revive the stalled Rwanda asylum deportation scheme.The unusual step of releasing a summary of the advice will be seen as an attempt to placate Tory MPs as rival factions decide their positions on the bill.No 10 denied it was an unusual move – saying there was “significant” interest in the bill. Mr Sunak’s official spokesman said: “I’m sure it’s something MPs will wish to consider.”A Home Office spokesperson said it would be “inappropriate” to comment on the department’s ongoing procurement plans. More