Newslinks for Wednesday 8th March 2023 | Conservative Home

Migration 1) Sunak  is ‘ready to battle judges’ over migration bill

“Rishi Sunak has declared he is “up for the fight” with judges in Europe over plans to detain and deport almost all migrants who arrive in small boats. The prime minister accused the European Court of Human Rights of abusing “natural justice” by issuing last-minute injunctions without a right of appeal that have stalled the government’s Rwanda deportation scheme. He insisted legislation was the only way to stop the Channel crisis, even if it led to a clash over human rights. “We’re up for the fight and we’re confident that we will win,” he said. “If challenged we will fight that hard, because we believe that we’re doing the right thing and it is in compliance with our obligations.”… The law will be retroactive, applying to anyone who enters the country from now on… – The Times

  • Tory MPs call for the BBC to sack Linker for comparing migrant crackdown to Nazi Germany – The Daily Mail
  • Sunak ‘extinguishing right to seek refugee protection in UK’ – The Guardian
  • Only 13 asylum seeker children found by government since January, leaving 191 still missing – The I
  • Stripping illegal cross-Channel migrants of the right to be considered for asylum is a necessary step – Editorial, The Times
  • Lineker should stick to football, not pontificate about small boats – Editorial, The Daily Telegraph
  • Is the tide turning on Channel traffickers? – Editorial, The Daily Mail
  • If Labour wins power, they will abandon the chance to control our borders – Editorial, The Sun
  • Is Sunak muddying the migrant waters for an election victory? – Tim Stanley, The Daily Telegraph
  • If Sunak and Braverman hold their nerve, this could finally be the turning point we need – Alp Mehmet, The Daily Mail
  • Why I’m backing the small boats bill – Damian Green, The Daily Telegraph
  • Illegal immigration is queue jumping under cloak of asylum – Lee Anderson, Daily Express
  • We must defeat small-boat migrant do-gooders or Tories will never be forgiven – Marco Longhi, The Sun
  • At last some action after all the tough talk on small boats – Esther Krakue, Daily Express

>Today:

Migration 2) He says Rwanda deportations ‘could start this summer’

“Deportation flights to Rwanda could start as soon as this summer, Rishi Sunak has said, as he maintained that thousands of migrants could be removed to the central African state under the scheme. The Prime Minister indicated he was “confident” the Government would fend off legal challenges to the scheme which have prevented any flights taking off since the first was blocked by the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) last June. The case is currently before the Court of Appeal, after the High Court backed the legality of the Rwanda flights, under which migrants are sent…to claim asylum in the African state…Mr Sunak said ministers will “look to start operationalising” the Rwanda partnership once the UK legal proceedings are complete.” – The Daily Telegraph

  • Plans to deter asylum seekers ‘hinge on getting Rwanda plan up and running’ – The I

Migration 3) The Government ‘admits’ the legislation puts UK at the ‘outer limits’ of human rights obligations

“Suella Braverman yesterday said that Britain’s patience over migrant crossings has run out as she unveiled the details of new laws to “stop the boats”. The home secretary announced that nearly all migrants who cross the English Channel will be barred from claiming asylum and that she will have a legal duty to remove them. The government has admitted that the new laws will put the UK at the “outer limits” of Britain’s obligations under the European Convention on Human Rights. The government hopes to push the illegal migration bill through parliament by September… To do this the home secretary’s duty to remove migrants will take “primacy” over their ability to appeal against their removal using the Human Rights Act or UN Refugee Convention.” – The Times

  • Small-boat migrants will be deported within 28 days from today says Home Secretary – The Sun
  • How the Home Secretary’s bill will work, and which measures might fall foul of ‘the Blob’ – The Daily Mail
  • Does Braverman’s migration bill breach the Human Rights Act? – The Times
  • The Home Secretary ‘hits out’ at Labour MP who begged to keep lag in Britain – The Sun
  • The British people have had enough of migrants pouring over the Channel. That’s why stopping the boats is my top priority – Suella Braverman, The Daily Mail
  • Braverman’s launch sails into stormy waters – Quentin Letts, The Times
  • The Home Secretary has just set herself up for an almighty battle – David Maddox, Daily Express

Sunak ‘refuses to say’ Case should stay in post after WhatsApp backlash

“Rishi Sunak has refused three times to say he has confidence that Simon Case will remain the Cabinet Secretary until the next election, amid a growing backlash to his pandemic-era WhatsApp messages. The Prime Minister was on Tuesday night asked to comment on speculation that Britain’s most senior civil servant was preparing to stand down, but initially said only that he “continues to support the government’s agenda,” including on small boat crossings. It came as Labour sources said Sir Keir Starmer would sack Mr Case if he was to win the next election and The Telegraph revealed new WhatsApp messages in which he criticised “bouncing Boris” Johnson for being too optimistic about the economy during the pandemic.” – The Daily Telegraph

  • The Prime Minister ‘rebukes Hancock’ over revealed plot to block disability funding – The Daily Telegraph
  • Covid not deadly enough to fast-track vaccines, Whitty advised ministers – The Daily Telegraph
  • Will under-fire Case make it to the coronation? – The Times
  • The now Cabinet Secretary said he was ‘Mr Killjoy’ in meetings – The Daily Telegraph
  • Case would be mad not to be considering his future – Stephen Bush, The Financial Times
  • Life is becoming impossible in the Way Too Much Information Age – Sarah Vine, The Daily Mail
  • The official Covid inquiry is turning into a ruinous, out of control monster – Philip Johnston, The Daily Telegraph
  • We warned lockdown would bankrupt us, and so it proved. Next time a pandemic hits, our leaders can’t make the same mistakes – Carl Heneghan and Tom Jefferson, The Daily Mail

Hunt ‘set to unveil’ Budget tax breaks for business investment…

“Chancellor Jeremy Hunt will use next week’s Budget to set out a new capital allowances regime for businesses, to offset a sharp rise in corporation tax and the end of a £25bn “super-deduction” tax break for investment. Conservative MPs have urged Hunt to be bold and unveil tax cuts to offset headwinds caused by the increase in corporation tax from 19 per cent to 25 per cent in April, even if the fiscal situation is tight. Hunt recently told business groups the new tax regime would not be anything like as generous as the “eye-wateringly expensive” one it replaces: the super-deduction is estimated to have cost £25bn over two years… Hunt’s consultation included “full expensing”, which would allow all qualifying capital expenditure to be written off by companies…” – The Financial Times

>Today:

…as the Treasury ‘tries to curb’ NHS plans for more doctors and nurses…

“The Treasury is pressing the NHS to water down plans to increase the numbers of doctors and nurses. Senior officials are understood to have suggested removing all numbers from a blueprint for training doctors and nurses over the next decade. While Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, is unlikely to accept this, Treasury officials are pushing NHS chiefs to include lower estimates of the need for doctors and nurses for fear that the present shortages will commit the taxpayer to higher spending for a decade. NHS bosses are preparing to resist the call and believe that publishing the plan offers a rare opportunity to put public pressure on the chancellor for a bigger training budget. Senior doctors said it would be “deeply concerning” to backtrack on the plans.” – The Times

…and as plans for UK investment zones are set to be ‘scaled back’

“Only a handful of “investment zones” based mostly around UK universities will get approval in next week’s Budget in a much more restrictive approach than that envisaged by former prime minister Liz Truss when she announced them last year. During her shortlived tenure in Downing Street, Truss wanted to introduce as many as 200 of the low-tax, low regulation sites across the country in a demonstration of the government’s “levelling-up agenda” designed to narrow regional inequalities. But Jeremy Hunt, the UK chancellor, has decided to scale back the plans sharply and is taking a more traditional Treasury approach by aiming to use the scheme to “catalyse” a limited number of growth clusters around research bases such as universities.” – The Financial Times

>Today:

Cleverly ‘launches gender equality plan’

“The UK government has launched a new strategy to advance gender equality around the world on the same day that MPs announced plans to investigate the impact of UK aid cuts on women…The global strategy, launched by the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) on International Women’s Day…will, it says, put more focus on gender equality in its work, while also supporting sexual and reproductive health programmes and funding grassroots women’s rights groups. “Advancing gender equality and challenging discrimination is obviously the right thing to do, but it also brings freedom, boosts prosperity and trade, and strengthens security – it is the fundamental building block of all healthy democracies,” said…James Cleverly…” – The Guardian

Badenoch ‘set to introduce’ new measures designed to protect British steel

“New measures making it easier for ministers to protect the embattled steel industry – by overruling independent advice on tariffs – are set to be announced by Kemi Badenoch. They will allow the Business and Trade Secretary greater discretion when following recommendations by the Trade Remedies Authority (TRA), the Mail understands. The body was set up in 2021 as Britain took over responsibilities handled by the EU to combat unfair practices. But its authority was called into question when then international trade secretary Liz Truss rejected some recommendations on steel tariffs amid an outcry from UK industry about Chinese ‘dumping’ of cheap exports. The TRA had said protectionist tariffs and quotas on ten types of product should be maintained…” – The Daily Mail

Shapps ‘banned energy ministers from taking foreign trips’

“Ministers in the newly formed energy department faced a ban on foreign trips due to a mounting backlog of issues raised with them by MPs, the Guardian can reveal. Grant Shapps issued the edict last month in a bid to speed up the “outrageously” slow response to cases raised on behalf of constituents, some of whom were struggling to claim support with their energy bills during the cost of living crisis. A disabled woman in Cumbria was said to have been left without advice from the Department for Energy Security and Net Zero when she struggled to claim financial assistance. According to the local MP, Tim Farron, she was told she was eligible for the warm homes discount, having been forced to give up her job due to a degenerative health condition.” – The Guardian

Brady to step down as an MP at next general election

“Conservative backbench chief Sir Graham Brady will step down at the next election, he has announced. As chairman of the powerful 1922 Committee of Tory backbenchers, he has overseen the election of three party leaders and prime ministers – Theresa May, Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak. He also oversaw the no-confidence votes against Mrs May and Boris Johnson. One of Sir Graham’s roles was to amass letters of no confidence from disgruntled MPs, keeping the number a closely-guarded secret until the threshold to trigger a vote was reached. The MP for Altrincham and Sale West in Greater Manchester said in a statement that his time in Parliament had been an “immense privilege”… He joins a slew of senior Tories…announcing their exit plans amid a polling slump.” – The Daily Telegraph

  • Polling suggests he would lose his seat in Greater Manchester at the next election – The Times

Anderson will become ‘latest Tory MP’ to host show on GB News

“Lee Anderson will become the latest Conservative MP to host a show on GB News, the channel has announced. The Conservative party deputy chair and MP for Ashfield in Nottinghamshire, will join fellow Tories Jacob Rees-Mogg, Esther McVey and Philip Davies as a GB News host and contributor. He said: “GB News is the true voice of the great British silent majority. I’m joining the people’s channel to ensure their voice is heard.” The MP has proved controversial since his election in 2019, calling for the return of the death penalty and claiming people on universal credit were not in poverty. Even before his election, he was criticised for asking a friend to pose as a swing voter while being filmed by veteran political reporter Michael Crick.” – The Guardian

Cates ‘leads Tory revolt’ over graphic sexual content taught to children in school

“Rishi Sunak is facing a Tory revolt over the failure to end “age-inappropriate” sex education in schools. Almost 50 Conservative MPs have written to the Prime Minister urging him to launch an independent inquiry after evidence emerged of the widespread teaching of contentious gender ideology and graphic sexual content without parents’ knowledge or consent. Signatories to the letter, co-ordinated by Miriam Cates, the Penistone and Stocksbridge MP, include Priti Patel, the former home secretary, Simon Clarke, former levelling up secretary and former education ministers Andrea Jenkyns, Brendan Clarke-Smith, Jonathan Gullis and Kelly Tolhurst. The Telegraph revealed last week that…primary school children in some schools are being taught about masturbation.” – The Daily Telegraph

Boring leadership best for Britain, says Reeves

“Rachel Reeves has argued that “boring” government is the way to boost growth as she urged Jeremy Hunt to resist “siren voices” calling for corporation tax cuts. The shadow chancellor argued that the way out of “enduring economic malaise” was through stable government with targeted incentives for business investment, saying predictability was better than low taxes. She ruled out nationalising “a whole swathe of industries”, suggesting that only train operators would be brought back into public ownership under a Labour government. Reeves was once criticised for being “boring snoring”, but speaking to manufacturers at the Make UK conference, she argued that business should welcome predictability under Labour after years of Conservative turmoil.” – The Times

  • How a Labour council applied for its own 400 vehicles to be exempt from Khan’s ULEZ expansion – The Daily Mail
  • Illegal immigration measures are fuelling ‘xenophobia and racism’, says Labour MP – The Daily Telegraph
  • Gray is clean but her job swap is a mistake – Daniel Finkelstein, The Times

No ‘magic wand’ for Scottish independence, warns Yousaf

“There is “no magic wand” that can deliver independence, the favourite to become Scotland’s next first minister has warned his governing Scottish National party, saying a sustained majority for leaving the UK was vital to overcome Westminster’s veto of a second referendum on the issue. The comments from Humza Yousaf, Scotland’s health secretary and the bookmakers’ frontrunner to replace Nicola Sturgeon as first minister, are likely to dismay those SNP members who are impatient with the party’s failure to make progress on ending Scotland’s 316-year union with England. In an interview with the Financial Times, Yousaf, 37, said he wanted an end to the “rotten union” as urgently as anyone, but also made clear he did not support Sturgeon’s plan…” – The Financial Times

  • Vote for me to wipe away Sturgeon’s ‘mediocrity’, says Forbes – The Daily Telegraph
  • SNP leadership candidates ‘trade personal blows’ in televised debate – The Guardian

News in Brief:

  • The SNP is beginning to tear itself apart – Lucy Dunn, The Spectator 
  • The battle to control America’s mind – David Samuels, UnHerd 
  • Gray matters: fussing about honours misses the point about who really exercises power – William Atkinson, CapX
  • The culture wars drag on – Fred Shulthorp, The Critic 
  • Iraq was all about blood – Ed West, Wrong Side of History 

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