Rwanda bill – latest: ‘Dogs in the street’ know flagship immigration policy won’t work, senior Tory says

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Tory rebel Robert Jenrick says he is prepared to vote against Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda bill

There are “dogs in the street” that know deportation flights to Rwanda are “probably never going to happen”, a senior Tory has said.

Baroness Ruth Davidson, the former Conservative leader in Scotland, said it was right to have a “debate” about immigration but cast doubt on the government’s policies.

Her comments come after Rishi Sunak braced for a battle to get his Rwanda bill through the House of Lords after it passed in the Commons on Wednesday night.

“Every sovereign nation should be in charge of who comes in; not everybody has a right to go to every country in the world — I completely get all of that,”  Lady Davidson told the BBC Radio 4 Today podcast and programme.

“But where is the balance in this, rather than some of the language that is being used, some of the knots that people are getting into?”

She added: “And this thing about putting people on planes to Rwanda. I mean, there are dogs in the street that know that, one, it is probably never going to happen. “And two, if it does, it is going to be a number so small that it makes very little difference to the bottom line.”

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ICYMI: Robert Harris is right – Rishi Sunak’s popularity has entered ‘death valley’

With polling this bad, you could almost mistake it for the plot in one of the ‘Fatherland’ author’s new thrillers, writes John Rentoul. Yet the PM soldiers on – or, at least, he’s trying to…

Read John’s piece in full here:

Matt Mathers19 January 2024 09:21

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Tata steel bosses urged to ‘look again’ at alternatives

Tata Steel bosses should “look again” at an alternative, union-proposed plan to closing the blast furnaces in South Wales, a shadow minister has said.

Stephen Kinnock,  Labour MP for Aberavon – home of the Port Talbot steelworks – told Sky News: “The steelworks here in Port Talbot is the beating heart of our economy and of our community.

“Multi-unions (sic) have come together and put a plan on the table which would actually be much more of a bridge rather than a cliff edge to the changes that we know have to take place within our steel industry.

“But instead of that, we have got a plan which has been cobbled together between Tata Steel and the UK government which is going to use £500 million of taxpayers’ money to make 3,000 men and women redundant.

“And it is also going to remove the British capability to make its own steel from scratch.

“We will become the only country in the G20 that is no longer able to do that, so that is not the right way to go. Tata Steel should really look again at the multi-union proposal.”

More comments from Mr Kinnock below:

Matt Mathers19 January 2024 09:10

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Jeremy Hunt hints at more tax cuts before general election

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt has signalled he wants to cut taxes in the Budget, as the Tories gear up for an election in the face of dire poll ratings.

Holding out the prospect of more money for the NHS, families and the armed forces, Mr Hunt said he wanted to focus on growth in the Budget on 6 March.

Jane Dalton has more details:

Matt Mathers19 January 2024 08:55

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Government has ‘no industrial strategy’ – Labour

The government has “no industrial strategy”, says shadow immigration minister Stephen Kinnock, Zoe Grunewald reports.

Mr Kinnock has accused the government of “sitting on its hands” over the expected closure of the Tate steel plant.

He told Times Radio it was “deeply frustrating” that the government implemented a “short term plan” by pursuing a narrow Electric Arc Furnace-only model, rather than innovate.

Tata Steel is expected to confirm plans to press ahead with plans to close both blast furnaces at its biggest plant, likely resulting in more than 3,000 job losses.

Matt Mathers19 January 2024 08:40

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Home Office using dummy plane to practice forcing migrants onto Rwanda flights

Matt Mathers19 January 2024 08:25

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‘Dogs in the street’ know Rwanda flights are ‘probably never going to happen’ – senior Tory

A senior Conservative peer has cast doubt about whether prime minister Rishi Sunak’s Rwanda policy will ever see asylum seekers deported to east Africa.

Ahead of the House of Lords debating the Safety of Rwanda Bill, former Scottish Tory leader Baroness Ruth Davidson said there “are dogs in the street that know” that deportation flights are “probably never going to happen”.

In comments made to The Today Podcast and broadcast on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, Lady Davidson said: “Let’s have a debate about immigration, absolutely.

“Every sovereign nation should be in charge of who comes in; not everybody has a right to go to every country in the world — I completely get all of that. But where is the balance in this, rather than some of the language that is being used, some of the knots that people are getting into?

“And this thing about putting people on planes to Rwanda. I mean, there are dogs in the street that know that, one, it is probably never going to happen.

“And two, if it does, it is going to be a number so small that it makes very little difference to the bottom line.”

Matt Mathers19 January 2024 08:07

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Sunak out and about in southeast

Rishi Sunak will be out and about on a series of regional visits this morning and give interviews to local outlets.

He is likely to discuss immigration following the successful passage of his Rwanda plan through the House of Commons.

No 10 insists that the visits are not a campaigning trip, Playbook reports.

Yesterday, the prime minister visited Gatwick Airport where he met and chatted with staff.

Matt Mathers19 January 2024 07:59

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Chancellor hints at lowering taxes in budget

Chancellor Jeremy Hunt says he wants to cut taxes in the next budget, in what commentators believe is an effort to win back votes amid the Conservatives’ dire opinion poll ratings.

At the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Mr Hunt said: “In terms of the direction of travel we look around the world and we note that the economies growing faster than us in North America and Asia tend to have lower taxes, and I believe fundamentally that low-tax economies are more dynamic, more competitive and generate more money for public services like the NHS.

“That’s the direction of travel we would like to go in but it is too early to say what we are going to do.”

Jane Dalton19 January 2024 07:00

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Reminder: Brexit will leave UK £300bn worse off, say economists

In case you missed it: Brexit is set to leave Britain’s economy £311bn worse off by the middle of the next decade, a damning new report by top economists has found:

Jane Dalton19 January 2024 06:00

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Reader questions answered as Tory popularity plummets

The Independent’s chief political commenator John Rentoul has been answering reader questions:

Jane Dalton19 January 2024 05:00

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