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Whole Tory cabinet knew Rwanda Bill wouldn’t work, Robert Jenrick claims | Politics News

‘Everyone in cabinet’ knew the Rwanda deportation bill would not work, according to Conservative leadership hopeful Robert Jenrick.

Speaking to the Politics Hub With Sophy Ridge, the former Home Office minister implied that every senior government minister in the last administration didn’t think the plans to send asylum seekers to Kigali would work.

Mr Jenrick resigned from Rishi Sunak’s government at the end of 2023, saying he did not believe the plans went far enough.

Politics latest: Countdown to budget nears finale

Speaking to Sky News, Mr Jenrick explained why he left government: “There was a choice for me at the time: take a bill through parliament which I knew didn’t work and which, frankly, everyone in cabinet knew didn’t work; or leave the government and make the case in parliament, where I was honest with myself and with the public.”

Asked to confirm if he thought everyone in the cabinet – which includes the prime minister, home secretary and all senior ministers – thought the Rwanda Bill would not work, he said: “I think everybody involved in that decision knew perfectly well that that policy was not going to succeed, but they turned a blind eye to it.

“I wasn’t willing to be a minister like that.”

Mr Jenrick would not give specific names of who in cabinet – aside from himself – did not think the plans would work.

He has said he wants a legally enforced cap on migration, and also to leave the European Convention on Human Rights.

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Tory leadership candidate Robert Jenrick
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Tory leadership candidate Robert Jenrick

Mickey Mouse mural

Sophy Ridge also asked Mr Jenrick about one of the most controversial moments of his time in the Home Office – when he ordered a mural of Mickey Mouse at a reception centre for young asylum seekers be painted over.

During the leadership race he has said he would not do the same thing again – but he has so far refused to apologise.

“I would never want to do anything that was anything other than compassionate towards children,” he said.

“When I was a minister responsible for immigration, I did a lot to try and ensure that we were looking after unaccompanied children properly.

“When I came into office, we were housing them in rudimentary hotels in seaside towns. [We] closed them down and got those young people into foster care and more appropriate accommodation.”

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Mr Jenrick says he was concerned about “a large number of adults” entering the UK and posing as children – “placing actual children” in “real danger”.

Jobs for the old rivals

Another topic touched on in the in interview was whether Mr Jenrick would give other MPs who wanted to be leader a job in his shadow cabinet, should he win.

“I want to get the best players on to the pitch,” Mr Jenrick said.

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He added that the other member of the final two, Kemi Badenoch, “should get a senior position in which she can play a full part in restoring and renewing the Conservative Party”.

And James Cleverly, who came third, would be welcome to serve as Mr Jenrick’s deputy if he wishes, as he’s “a unifying presence”.

Boy, 16, charged with murder after ‘vulnerable’ Robert Price dies in Dagenham house fire | UK News

A 16-year-old boy has been charged with murder after a man died following an alleged firework attack on his home.

Robert Price, 76, died from inhalation of fumes, and burns, following a fire at a house in Dagenham, in east London, at around 5.40pm on 27 July.

Firefighters forced entry to the house on Oval Road North and found Mr Price. He was pronounced dead at the scene, according to the Metropolitan Police.

The teenager, who is also charged with arson with intent to endanger life, will appear in custody at Barkingside Youth Court on Monday.

He is the second youth charged in connection with Mr Price’s death. Neither of them can be named for legal reasons.

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A 17-year-old appeared at the Old Bailey on Friday, also charged with murder and arson with intent to endanger life.

The court heard he was alleged to have been part of a group that deliberately started a fire at Mr Price’s home, who was described as a “vulnerable adult”.

The 17-year-old defendant was not accused of throwing a firework himself during the alleged attack. But the prosecution claimed he was part of the group.

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The Met’s Detective Chief Inspector Phil Clarke, the senior investigating officer on the case, said: “I would like to reassure the community that while the investigation remains ongoing, police are not seeking to identify any further people in connection with the fatal fire on Oval Road North.

“I also ask that the privacy of Mr Price’s family is respected.”

Robert Jenrick says Conservatives can win next election as he officially launches bid to lead party | Politics News

Robert Jenrick thinks the Tories can win at the next election – but he added the party has a “mountain to climb” and must show “where we went wrong”.

The former immigration minister will formally launch his campaign for the Conservative leadership on Friday.

He will say the Tories need to undergo “serious changes” to restore voters’ trust following the party’s worst-ever general election result.

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The Newark MP is expected to tell a campaign rally in the East Midlands: “We have a mountain to climb.

“Trust is hard-fought but easily lost. It can’t be restored overnight.

“But if the party learns the hard lessons, listens to the country and shows the party has changed – if we show the country that we have listened, if we show the country we know where we went wrong and have learned our lessons – if we show that we understand the scale of the challenges this country faces and are capable of delivering for Britain again, if we show that we have come together, a broad church, but united by a common creed…

“Above all, if we show that we have changed, I know we can win again.

“Not in two terms. Not in a decade. But at the next general election.”

Mr Jenrick is the sixth Conservative MP to declare their intention to run in the race to replace Rishi Sunak as Tory leader.

He will compete against shadow communities secretary Kemi Badenoch, shadow work and pensions secretary Mel Stride, shadow security minister Tom Tugendhat, shadow home secretary James Cleverly and former home secretary Dame Priti Patel.

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On Monday former home secretary Suella Braverman, once seen as the choice of the right for future Tory leader, ruled herself out of the race after claiming she had been branded “mad, bad and dangerous” by colleagues.

Mr Jenrick, who has represented Newark since 2014, has held a number of ministerial roles in the Commons, including as housing secretary, as health minister and as exchequer to the Treasury.

He was an ally of Mr Sunak, but resigned as immigration minister last year over the former prime minister’s plan to send migrants to Rwanda, describing the bill as a “triumph of hope over experience”.

In a campaign video this week, Mr Jenrick said Mr Sunak’s party had been “unable or unwilling” to do what was required to reduce migration to the UK.

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Badenoch and Braverman had traded jibes before the contest even began. Pics: PA

Mr Jenrick will run on a platform of cutting immigration and pulling out of the European Convention on Human Rights, which Mr Sunak had been reluctant to commit to.

Nominees for Tory leader must have 10 backers to submit their papers to enter the race.

The field will be whittled down to four in time for the Tory conference in Birmingham before MPs vote for a final two candidates, who will face a ballot of Conservative members.

The new leader will then be announced on 2 November.

Robert Jenrick ‘prepared’ to vote down Rwanda bill as Tory divide deepens | Politics News

Robert Jenrick says he is “prepared” to vote against the Rwanda bill if the government does not adopt “robust” changes to the proposed legislation.

The proposed law is heading back to the Commons for two days of debate this afternoon, with the aim of deterring asylum seekers from coming to the UK via small boat crossings.

Rishi Sunak has said the new bill, which includes clauses to define Rwanda as a “safe country” and reduces the ability for people to appeal, answers the concerns of the the UK Supreme Court – which ruled the plan unlawful – while also ensuring deportations will take place.

But many on the right of the party – including Mr Jenrick, who resigned as immigration minister over the issue – want the prime minister to toughen up the legislation with a raft of amendments, including one that would block injunctions on flights taking off.

Make this move, however, and Mr Sunak risks upsetting the centrist wing of his party, with the One Nation faction already concerned the bill goes too far from the UK’s international obligations.

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Speaking to Sky News’s political editor Beth Rigby, Mr Jenrick said he did not want to get to the “situation” where he would have to rebel against the government, but added: “I am prepared to vote against the bill… because this bill doesn’t work, and I do believe that a better bill is possible.

“So the government has a choice. It can either accept my amendments… or it can bring back a new and improved bill, and it could do that within a matter of days because we know the shape of that bill.”

He added: “The opportunity here is immense. Let’s not waste it by creating a scheme that is like a bucket riddled with holes.”

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Jenrick: ‘Tens of thousands more’ will come if bill not ‘fixed’

The former immigration minister said he “didn’t accept” that if the bill failed in the Commons, Mr Sunak’s premiership would be in crisis – despite two deputy Tory chairmen now risking the sack to vote for the rebel amendments.

“This isn’t about the prime minister or his leadership of the Conservative Party,” Mr Jenrick said. “This is about fixing one of the biggest problems facing not just this country, but countries all over the world.

“And as I’ve set out in great detail since I resigned on principle last month, if we don’t fix this problem, we’ll see tens of thousands more people coming to our country.

“I don’t want to see the bill either fail or proceed in its current state. Neither is a satisfactory outcome. But I do know that a better bill is possible and the ball is in the government’s court here.”

He added: “The point is that there’s no point having a moment of unity in passing a bill that doesn’t work – that’s an illusion.

“What matters is whether it works. And if we’re celebrating this week, but in August there are still thousands of people coming across in small boats, no one will remember the events of this week.”

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PM claims Tories are ‘completely united’ in wanting to stop the boats

Govt ‘risks clogging up the courts’

Sky News understands the government still doesn’t plan to accept any of the amendments from right-wing MPs.

However, shortly before the debate was set to begin – and in an attempt to appease rebels – Justice Secretary Alex Chalk confirmed 25 hearing rooms had been prepared and more than 100 additional staff had been recruited to help speed up appeals and deportations.

But Mr Jenrick said: “Adding more judges into the mix simply accepts my central argument that there will be an absolute cascade of individual claims from migrants as they arrive into the country and [that] will clog up the courts.

“It will delay things and the scheme will become completely inoperable.”

The former minister also rejected the government’s argument that any strengthening of the law would lead to the Rwandan government pulling out of the scheme altogether, rather than risk being linked with breaches of international law.

“It is quite an implausible suggestion from the government, which was raised at the 11th hour,” he said.

“I think it’s a highly convenient argument… you weren’t born yesterday, neither was I. I don’t think that is going to wash with parliamentary colleagues.”

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Would Labour support Rwanda plan?

Mr Jenrick continued: “All we care about is what works. It is absolutely critical for the country not to talk about the government, but to actually get the Rwanda scheme up and running.

“Illegal migration is doing untold damage to our country. I won’t allow that to continue.

“I said, as did the prime minister, that we would do whatever it takes. And the bill before parliament this week is not that.

“That is why we need to amend it, to toughen it and to ensure those flights do truly get off to Rwanda.”