Labour civil war as MPs launch rebellion against radical asylum reform | Politics | News


Labour is once again engulfed in a civil war this morning as MPs are already breaking rank to attack the partyโ€™s new asylum reforms. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood will deliver the radical update in the Commons this afternoon, announcing huge changes to deportations and processing.

The new policy includes changing how the ECHR is interpreted by UK judges, so that illegal migrantsโ€™ right to a family life isnโ€™t prioritised over the safety of Britons. The number of years before an illegal migrant can apply for Indefinite Leave to Remain will also be quadrupled from five to 20 years. However while the Tories and Reform have criticised the measures for not going far enough, Labour MPs are already blasting the Home Secretary for being too right-wing.

Tony Vaughan, a 2024 intake MP who represents the south coast beaches of Folkestone and Hythe – a key target for migrant dinghies, emerged last night to demand that the government โ€œthink again on thisโ€.

Mr Vaughan, who is notable for not being a typical backbench rebel, fumed: โ€œThe idea that recognised refugees need to be deported is wrong.โ€

โ€œThe rhetoric around these reforms encourages the same culture of divisiveness that sees racism and abuse growing in our communities.

โ€œThe Government is wrong to think that reviews of safety in the person’s country every few years will mean refugees can be returned at scale. That hasn’t happened in Denmark.

“Brutal dictators tend to hang onto power. It would just move huge amounts of resources away from making our asylum system work as it should – by cutting initial decision delays and the appeals backlog, sorting out asylum accommodation, making the UK-France deal work, removing those whose claims fail, etc.โ€

John McDonnell, the former shadow Chancellor who was recently admitted back into the Labour Party, warned he suspects Mr Vaughan โ€œis reflecting here what many in the PLP feel.โ€

The Folkestone MPโ€™s tweet was also shared by seven other MPs, namely: Bell Ribeiro-Addy, Stella Creasy, Clive Lewis, Nadia Whittome, Kate Osborne, Olivia Blake and Peter Lamb.

Itโ€™s also reported that the plans to deport existing refugee families should their home countries become safe has left one minister on resignation watch.

This morning, borders minister Alex Norris urged Labour backbenchers to wait for the Home Secretaryโ€™s asylum announcement later on Monday amid an outcry.

Asked about opposition from backbenchers, he told Times Radio: โ€œI respect my colleagues and their views.

โ€œI know they want what we want, which is a safe system where people donโ€™t make dangerous journeys. They want a system that is controlled, that has the confidence of the British public.โ€

Asked about accusations that the policy was racist, he said: โ€œI disagree with that characterisation. Of course, they have not seen the package yet and I ask them to look at it closely. I know they will.โ€

Yesterday Ms Mahmood ramped up her rhetoric about the migrant crisis, warning it is โ€œtearing our country apart.โ€

She said that despite being the daughter of immigrants, tackling the small boat crossings is a โ€œmoral missionโ€ for her.

โ€œIt is dividing communities, people can see huge pressure in their communities and they can also see a system that is broken and where people are able to flout the rules, abuse the system and get away with it.

โ€œI am not willing to stand by and pretend there isnโ€™t a problem, when I know there is one, and then suggest that any solution to that cannot work because I believe they can.โ€

The hard-line Home Secretary also warned potential Labour MP rebels that โ€œdark forces are stirring up angerโ€ over immigration, warning that the government must not fail to act.

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