Keir Starmer faces Labour revolt over migrant deal with France | Politics | News


Clive Lewis MP told The Telegraph: โ€œLast week felt like it was the starting gun on more Labour MPs beginning to seriously question the Government. You canโ€™t help but think its judgment will now be called into question far more frequently.โ€

Mr Lewis continued: โ€œOn immigration and asylum, why donโ€™t we have safe routes? Thereโ€™s no safe routes; if you want to stop the boats, establish safe routes.

โ€œLabour should have a practical, humane policy. But any sense of a logical process that is based on human rights, basically what a Labour Government would traditionally be expected to do, is now out of the window.

โ€œTony Benn was right โ€“ if you want to know what your government would do to you if they could get away with it, look at how they treat asylum seekers. Thatโ€™s what you saw this week with disabled people and youโ€™re seeing it again with this.โ€

Another Labour MP added that the proposed deal โ€œcould be illegal under international lawโ€.

One senior Labour MP and former minister said: โ€œI am very concerned by the proposal. Itโ€™s a bit like the debate we had last week about welfare and disability payments. It just doesnโ€™t really seem like a Labour thing to do.

โ€œMy view is that we should have more safe routes. But there are a number of my colleagues, particularly those in Red Wall seats, that think being seen to be more conservative on immigration will help them win again next time.

โ€œI know that [Downing Street Chief of Staff] Morgan McSweeney has been a strong voice for moving Right on immigration. Many of us disagree with this approach.โ€

One MP suggested any revolt over the scheme could be as big as this weekโ€™s rebellion over disability benefits which saw 49 rebels vote against the Governmentโ€™s Bill on welfare reform despite a series of concessions from No 10.

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