
20,000 small-boat migrants this year and counting: Labour's abject failure to protect our borders laid bare
Nearly 900 arrived in Dover from France on Monday, the latest official figures revealed.
On top of a confirmed 19,982 arrivals since the start of the year, there were at least 300 more today, and the Mail witnessed scores awaiting a traffickers' 'taxi boat' off the French coast.
This means the year's tally has already hit 20,000 – a milestone not reached until mid-August in previous years. Small-boat arrivals are up by 48 per cent on the same period in 2024.
The news comes almost exactly a year after Labour took power and scrapped the Conservatives ' Rwanda asylum deal, which was designed to deter migrants from mounting perilous Channel crossings.
Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'One year into Labour's Government and the boats haven't stopped – they've multiplied. Labour tore up our deterrent and replaced it with fantasy.
'This is the worst year on record, and it's become a free-for-all.
'We need a removals deterrent so every single illegal immigrant who arrives is removed to a location outside Europe. The crossings will then rapidly stop.
'People are furious – and rightly so. Under new leadership, only the Conservatives have a credible plan to stop the crossings, restore control, and end the chaos.'
Tories predicted that this year's annual total could hit a record-breaking 50,000.
Since 2018, more than 170,000 migrants have reached Britain by small boat – but only about 4 per cent have been removed.
Labour pledged to 'smash the gangs' by placing a new emphasis on law-enforcement tactics. But arrivals are soaring and the number of asylum seekers housed in hotels at the taxpayers' expense has gone up since the election, despite a Labour pledge to end their use.
David Wood, the Home Office's former director general of immigration enforcement, told the BBC's Today programme today: 'It won't work, and it never was going to work.'
He added that Labour's efforts to gather intelligence on traffickers relied on European police having the resources and determination to make arrests.
'The evidence the strategy doesn't work is it's gone up 40-odd per cent in the last year,' Mr Wood said.
It came after the chief inspector of borders and immigration, David Bolt, revealed last week that he wrote to ministers last summer to say he 'wasn't convinced' that their policy would succeed.
Pictured: Migrants attempting to cross the English Channel in a small boat in Gravelines, France, on June 30
Even the pro-migrant Refugee Council said Labour's approach was not working.
Its chief executive, Enver Solomon, said: 'The fact remains that these measures alone are so far not achieving the intended outcome, with deadly crossings rising.'
In 2022 – the year in which there was a record annual total of 45,700 arrivals – the 20,000 point was not passed until August 14. In the following two years it took place at the end of August.
Today, the Mail observed some 100 migrants lined up on the bank of a canal at Gravelines, between Calais and Dunkirk.
They watched as other migrants tried to fix an outboard engine on a broken-down 'taxi boat'. Two dozen Police Nationale CRS riot squad officers arrived at the scene only after the boat was in the water.
Migrants would have attempted to cross to Britain aboard the dinghy, had it not malfunctioned.
President Emmanuel Macron's government has finally agreed to change its rules to let gendarmes and other officials intercept dinghies that are already in the water.
But one British expert has warned that the new powers – due to come into force this month – will have a negligible impact on illegal migration.
President Emmanuel Macron's government has finally agreed to change its rules to let gendarmes and other officials intercept dinghies that are already in the water
Lucy Moreton, of the ISU trade union, which represents Border Force staff, said migrants may simply switch to other modes of transport such as yachts and concealing themselves in HGVs.
French police unions also are understood to have concerns that their members may be required to enter the water wearing body armour that can weigh up to 6lb, putting them at risk of drowning.
Additionally, French officers are said to have raised fears about being unable to carry firearms if they have to go into the sea, because salt water would damage them.
But French police colonel Olivier Alary told the BBC last month that they 'will be able to do more' once the new rules come into force.
Illegal migration will be one of the key topics addressed by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Mr Macron during the French leader's state visit to the UK next week.

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Keir's first year: Starmer under pressure after a rocky start for Labour
Labour swept back into Downing Street with more than 400 MPs on July 4 last year – clinching a majority just short of Tony Blair's landslide in 1997. A year later, polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice is calling it 'the worst start for any newly elected prime minister'. Sir Keir was accused of setting a gloomy tone at the outset, telling the public that 'things will get worse before they get better' and warning of 'tough choices' and a 'black hole' left in the finances by his predecessors. Soon after, a plan was unveiled to cut back winter fuel payments for pensioners, only for an enduring backlash to see the Government U-turn and widen eligibility months later. This and the recent climbdown over plans for welfare cuts to stave off a backbench rebellion have raised the prospect of further tax rises in the autumn budget as the Chancellor seeks to balance the books. 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The Herald Scotland
30 minutes ago
- The Herald Scotland
Keir's first year: Starmer under pressure after a rocky start for Labour
A year later, polling expert Professor Sir John Curtice is calling it 'the worst start for any newly elected prime minister'. Sir Keir was accused of setting a gloomy tone at the outset, telling the public that 'things will get worse before they get better' and warning of 'tough choices' and a 'black hole' left in the finances by his predecessors. Soon after, a plan was unveiled to cut back winter fuel payments for pensioners, only for an enduring backlash to see the Government U-turn and widen eligibility months later. This and the recent climbdown over plans for welfare cuts to stave off a backbench rebellion have raised the prospect of further tax rises in the autumn budget as the Chancellor seeks to balance the books. It has also raised the prospect of rebellious MPs being emboldened to continue pushing back on future policy, putting Sir Keir's plans at risk. When it comes to whether voters like him, Sir John has argued that the Government has a 'lack of direction' and that the Prime Minister was 'never especially popular' and that 'the public still don't know what he stands for.' 'The only vision he's really presented is: 'We'll fix the problems the Conservatives left us.' But it's not clear how he wants to change the country,' he told Times Radio. Sir Keir has acknowledged the 'challenge' of 'getting our story across'. 'If I was to list to you all the things we've done, it's a big long list of things. [But] how do we tell the story of what we've done? How do we make sure it's actually felt by working people?' he said in an interview with The Times. He also said he took 'ownership' of all decisions made by his Government, and that he did not get to grips with the growing rebellion over welfare reforms earlier as he was focused on international affairs. Although that rebellion was eventually reduced from 126 MPs to just 49, it required extensive concessions and marked the biggest revolt of his premiership so far, just days before he celebrated his first year in office. He has played a balancing act on the world stage, strengthening ties with the EU while courting US President Donald Trump, who he wooed with an invitation for a second state visit to the UK when they met in the White House. The football-loving Prime Minister lists a 'hat-trick' of deals – an EU 'reset', a deal with India, and an agreement for relief from Mr Trump's tariffs which has been partially implemented – among his key achievements. Sir Keir said he took 'ownership' of all decisions made by his Government (Kin Cheung/PA) He also touts his commitment to get defence spending up to 2.5% of GDP by 2027 – and the new Nato defence and security spending pledge of 5% of GDP by 2035. At home, he is battling the rise of Reform UK. A YouGov megapoll released last week said a general election now could see Reform UK taking more seats than Labour, while the latest Ipsos poll puts Nigel Farage's party at 34% with Labour behind at 25%. Sir Keir framed Reform UK as Labour's main opposition at a press conference in May, saying the Conservative Party has 'run out of road'. It came after Reform UK hoovered up council seats across England in local elections, as well as gaining a seat previously held by Labour in the Runcorn and Helsby by-election. An immigration speech in which the Prime Minister said the UK could become an 'island of strangers' drew criticism and comparisons with Enoch Powell's infamous 'rivers of blood' address that was blamed for inflaming racial tensions in the 1960s. Sir Keir has since expressed regret at the phrasing. But he reportedly plans to target 'authoritarian-leaning' voters with a focus on tackling migration and crime. In recent polling by LabourList of members, 64% said they wanted the party to shift to the left, with only around 2% favouring a move to the right. Sir Keir has pledged to lead a 'decade of national renewal' (Jordan Pettitt/PA) The next test at the polls will be Welsh and Scottish elections in May, at which Reform UK hopes to end Labour's 26-year domination in the Senedd next year. Sir Keir again took aim at the party in a speech to the Welsh Labour conference last weekend, saying Mr Farage has 'no plan at all' for the nation. Political historian Sir Anthony Seldon has praised Sir Keir's ability to react to crises in foreign policy and during the riots last summer, but urged him to counter Reform UK by communicating 'growth' and 'optimism'. 'Show people that you're Prime Minister, show people you've got a story, show people things are getting better across the whole country with growth and then, you know, that will deal with Reform,' he told Sky News. Sir Keir has pledged to lead a 'decade of national renewal' and said that the first year of that has been 'cleaning up that mess' his Government inherited. In a signal he is seeking to put a positive spin on the future, he told business leaders last week: 'We've wiped the state clean, we've stabilised the economy, and now we can go on to the next phase of government, building on that foundation.'