logo
It's not our fault! Ministers try to dodge blame as number of small-boat migrants to reach Britain since Labour came to power hits 50,000

It's not our fault! Ministers try to dodge blame as number of small-boat migrants to reach Britain since Labour came to power hits 50,000

Daily Mail​2 days ago
Ministers tried to dodge the blame yesterday after the number of small-boat migrants reaching Britain under Labour passed 50,000.
Keir Starmer was slammed for 'incompetence' over the handling of the Channel crisis, with the soaring figure a clear indication of the lack of a plan since he axed the Tories ' Rwanda deportation scheme on his first day in power.
Remarkably, former Labour home secretary Jacqui Smith blamed the Tories, claiming: 'What is happening is the result of the last government.'
Yesterday, large groups of migrants were seen sprinting into the surf off Gravelines beach, between Calais and Dunkirk, to board a boat to Britain.
At first light, as French police stood and watched and a navy boat patrolled nearby, scores waded into the water to clamber on to a taxi boat that appeared just off shore. Only a few of them wore life jackets for the perilous crossing.
The Government's 'returns deal' with France appears to have done little to deter those determined to get to Britain, with the latest total including more than 1,500 arrivals in the seven days since the 'one in, one out' scheme launched.
Official figures revealed there were 474 arrivals on Monday alone, bringing the total since the general election on July 4 last year to 50,271, despite the Prime Minister's promise to 'smash the gangs' behind the trafficking trade.
The milestone was passed seven months earlier than under his Conservative predecessor, Rishi Sunak.
It does not include hundreds brought into Dover by Border Force vessels yesterday after being picked up mid-Channel, with the number to be confirmed today.
Baroness Smith – who is now an education, women and equalities minister under Sir Keir – said: 'It is a completely legitimate claim to say that what is happening is the result of the last government that chose to focus on gimmicks with the Rwanda scheme.'
Asked if the crossings were not Labour's fault, she insisted that the Government was taking responsibility now, but added: 'I don't believe it is our fault that it was enabled to take root in the way in which it has done by a government who failed to do what was necessary at that point.
'The last government enabled this hideous criminal activity to really get its roots into Europe. There was a lengthy period at the time in which the criminal gangs... behind this had the opportunity to have this operation set up and really embedded.
'And that's the task that this Government now has – to deconstruct that.'
However, her attempt to evade responsibility was met with incredulity. Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: 'The Government has confirmed 50,000 illegal immigrants have crossed the Channel in Labour's short time in power – the worst crisis in our history.
'Labour has surrendered our borders, and the consequences are being felt in our communities, from rising crime to shocking cases of rape and sexual assault by recent arrivals. Labour has scrapped Conservative deterrents and created the conditions for chaos, leaving the British people to foot the bill.'
Labour scrapped the Tories' Rwanda asylum deal – designed to deter migrants from crossing – as one of its first acts, pledging instead to 'smash the gangs' by boosting law enforcement.
However, small boat numbers are soaring, with 27,029 arrivals this year, up by 47 per cent on the same point last year and 67 per cent on the same point in 2023.
Since the start of the crisis in 2018, 178,167 migrants have reached Britain, with only about four per cent of them removed.
Yesterday, Tory leader Kemi Badenoch insisted she would reduce migrant crossings to zero if the Conservatives regained power. She added: 'Labour's plan to smash the gangs was just a slogan. Things are so much worse since Labour came into office.
'Their one in, one out scheme isn't going to work, and what we're seeing is a lot of local communities having to pay the price and bear the brunt of the Government's incompetence.'
Asked if the Tories would cut the number of crossings to zero, she replied: 'I think we can. It wouldn't happen straight away, but it would happen quickly.
'My team are looking at what we can do in terms of detention centres. But stopping people from coming here in the first place – if they think they're going to be sent to Rwanda and not get here, get a free hotel, get benefits, then they won't come here.'
It emerged yesterday that a woman drowned off the French coast as she tried to board a traffickers' dinghy on Monday.
Thought to be a Somali in her late twenties, she was reportedly unable to get aboard and went into the sea off Dunkirk at 4am. She was brought back to the beach but could not be revived, making her the 19th small-boat migrant to die this year.
The 'one in, one out' deal involves small-boat arrivals being sent back to France, with the UK accepting in return an equal number who have legally applied to come through official channels.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trade envoy's trip to Cyprus 'is like visiting Russia-occupied parts of Ukraine'
Trade envoy's trip to Cyprus 'is like visiting Russia-occupied parts of Ukraine'

Daily Mail​

time29 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Trade envoy's trip to Cyprus 'is like visiting Russia-occupied parts of Ukraine'

A trade envoy's controversial trip to northern Cyprus was last night likened to visiting the Russian-occupied areas of Ukraine. Sir Keir Starmer faced yet more pressure to sack Afzal Khan, who has caused a diplomatic spat with an unauthorised visit to a territory the UK does not recognise. Labour MP Mr Khan, UK trade envoy to Turkey, posed for pictures in the self-declared Turkish Republic of northern Cyprus, standing alongside the breakaway state's leader. The Cypriot government in the south regards the north as a rogue state. It says Mr Khan's trip, which it has branded 'absolutely condemnable', confers recognition on it. On Thursday, Christos Karaolis, president of the National Federation of Cypriots in the UK, said: 'No UK Government minister would travel to Crimea…or be pictured alongside flags and symbols representing the so-called 'Republic of Crimea' regime. 'The only difference between the occupation in Crimea and the northern part of Cyprus is time - Cyprus has been militarily occupied for 40 more years. Time cannot legitimise an occupation. 'Therefore, Mr Khan's position as UK-Turkey Trade Envoy is untenable. His removal would send a clear signal from the Government that his actions are condemnable and not in line with the UK's longstanding policy regarding non-recognition of the occupation regime.' Tory foreign affairs spokesman Wendy Morton said it was 'high time' Sir Keir sacked the MP who 'has created a diplomatic crisis'. She added: 'A government representative would never visit occupied Donbas or Crimea. So for Afzal Khan to unofficially visit occupied northern Cyprus is totally unacceptable. 'Spineless Keir Starmer has sat on his hands whilst one of his MPs has created a diplomatic crisis. It is high time he grew a backbone and sacked him.' Officials are said to have been unaware of his trip. The Government said there was no change to its position regarding northern Cyprus.

Rachel Reeves is accused of 'living under a rock' as economic growth slows to just 0.3%
Rachel Reeves is accused of 'living under a rock' as economic growth slows to just 0.3%

Daily Mail​

time29 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Rachel Reeves is accused of 'living under a rock' as economic growth slows to just 0.3%

Rachel Reeves was accused of 'living under a rock' Thursday as economic growth dwindled following her tax raid on businesses. Output grew only 0.3 per cent between April and June – a sharp slowdown on the previous three-month period when the economy expanded by 0.7 per cent. The Chancellor boasted that the Office for National Statistics data was 'a strong start to the year'. But economists and business leaders warned that the expansion was driven by Government spending, while households tightened their belts and corporate investment nosedived. And it came after the World Bank found that Britain's living standards had fallen behind debt-laden Italy 's for the first time since 2001. Official data also revealed that productivity – a measure of output per hour worked – has fallen 0.8 per cent since Labour came to power. That could pose a major challenge to Ms Reeves if it prompts the Office for Budget Responsibility – the UK's fiscal watchdog – to downgrade its forecasts, which would blow an even bigger black hole in the public finances. She is already preparing to raise taxes in the October Budget as she scrambles to fill a £50billion shortfall. In a further blow to Labour, UK exports to the US have fallen £2billion to a three-year low, despite Sir Keir Starmer's boast that he was the first leader to secure a trade deal with Donald Trump. And the Government is still struggling to hit its target of making Britain the fastest-growing G7 economy. Shadow chancellor Mel Stride said the UK was going through a 'summer of uncertainty towards the Budget where inevitably taxes will be heightened still further, still damaging our economy'. 'The Chancellor is living under a rock,' Mr Stride said. 'On Rachel Reeves's watch inflation is up, taxes are up, borrowing is up, growth has stagnated and more tax rises loom. Rachel Reeves is taxing your family's future to fund her failure.' Stuart Morrison of the British Chambers of Commerce said: 'The numbers mask the underlying pain being felt by businesses across the UK. Tax burdens at home, alongside uncertain global trading conditions, created a very challenging environment for the UK's small and medium enterprises.' He added: 'There must be no more business taxes in the autumn Budget'. Tina McKenzie of the Federation of Small Businesses, said: 'These figures will be no comfort to small firms.' Government borrowing jumped to a five-year high of £20.7billion in June while unemployment has risen by more than 200,000 in Labour's first year of government, taking the jobless total to 1.67million. The downturn has been blamed on Ms Reeves' £25billion raid on employer national insurance, a sharp rise in the minimum wage, and plans to impose new workers' rights. The Bank of England predicts inflation will reach 4 per cent next month, dashing hopes of a September rate cut. Ms Reeves insisted the growth figures were 'positive with a strong start to the year and continued growth in the second quarter'. But she admitted that the 'economy has got stuck'.

Nearly half of voters fear the Government will not be able to 'smash the gangs' after migrant count hits 50,000
Nearly half of voters fear the Government will not be able to 'smash the gangs' after migrant count hits 50,000

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Nearly half of voters fear the Government will not be able to 'smash the gangs' after migrant count hits 50,000

Nearly half of voters think the Government can't control migrants arriving on small boats. While the poll applies to British governments in general, it indicates a lack of faith in Sir Keir Starmer 's 'smash the gangs' policy to control the boats. The survey came as the number of illegal migrants who have crossed the Channel since Labour was elected just over a year ago reached 50,000 – a figure reached more quickly under Sir Keir than previous prime ministers. His first act upon winning the election was to scrap the Rwanda deterrent scheme that the Tories had banked on to get the boat crossings down. The Government's 'returns deal' with France appears to have done little to deter those determined to get to Britain, with more than 2,000 arrivals in the seven days since the 'one in, one out' scheme launched. The YouGov poll, which sampled 8,731 adults, revealed that 48 per cent thought British governments did not have the ability to control the number of arrivals. Just 44 per cent had faith that ministers would be able to restrict the number of small boats, while eight per cent didn't know. Respondents were asked: 'Thinking about the powers and abilities of British governments in general, rather than specific governments, how much do you think a British government has the ability to control the number of migrants coming to the UK on small boats?' Of the five responses – ranging from 'a great deal' to 'none at all' – the most cited category was 'not very much' when it came to controlling numbers. Ministers attempted to dodge the blame after figures confirmed the number of small-boat arrivals had passed 50,000 under Labour even though the milestone – equivalent to one migrant arriving every 11 minutes – was passed seven months earlier than under Sir Keir's Conservative predecessor, Rishi Sunak. Hundreds more arrived at Dover on Sunday with official figures released on Monday Former Labour home secretary Jacqui Smith blamed the Tories, saying: 'What is happening is the result of the last Government.' She told BBC Breakfast: 'It is an unacceptable number of people. It demonstrates the way over the last six or seven years that the criminal gangs have got an absolute foothold in the tragic trafficking of people across the Channel.' But Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp dismissed Baroness Smith's claims, saying Labour had 'surrendered our borders'. Small-boat numbers are soaring, with 27,029 arrivals this year, up by 47 per cent on the same point last year and 67 per cent on 2023. Since the start of the crisis in 2018, 178,167 migrants have reached Britain, with only about four per cent of them removed. Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch this week vowed to stop all small-boat migrants. Asked if the Conservatives could reduce the number of crossings from five figures to zero, Mrs Badenoch replied: 'I think that we can.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store