The Scotsman

Sunak talks of unity amid letters of no confidence

The Prime Minister has put all his eggs in the Rwanda basket and they could break very easily

- Alexander Brown

The UK Government passing its controvers­ial Rwanda Bill appears, on paper, a clear win for the Prime Minister.

Unfortunat­ely for Rishi Sunak, that was just one of the hurdles it needed to clear. The legislatio­n still needs to get through the House of Lords unamended, which is no easy task, avoid breaking internatio­nal law, which the government isn’t confident over, and then come to pass before the election where Labour would scrap it.

These obstacles all come at a time the Conservati­ve party is once again fighting itself. A total of 11 MPS ultimately rebelled over the Bill, and letters of no confidence were submitted yesterday morning.

If that wasn’t enough, Mr Sunak’s popularity is now as low as his predecesso­r Liz Truss before she was forced to resign. The latest polling shows his party on 20 per cent, which would give Sir Keir Starmer a win bigger than former Labour leader Sir Tony Blair in 1997.

It is with this backdrop the Prime Minister held a press conference yesterday, when instead of announcing anything, he instead used a speech to take aim at the House of Lords, urging them to pass his legislatio­n as quickly as possible and without amendments. Given how long the Lords spent trying to oppose Brexit, his calls are likely to fall on deaf ears.

He is bringing a legally questionab­le Bill before a chamber full of more moderate Tories. His response is nothing short of desperatio­n.

Then there is the matter of party discipline. Mr Sunak told journalist­s “the Conservati­ve party has come together” and is “completely united”. But the declaratio­n came in a week dozens of his MPS rebelled, and three of them resigned. The PM appears to be a leader trying to will his narrative into existence, when the reality is letters are going in and his Cabinet colleagues are already positionin­g themselves to run after the election.

Most importantl­y, there is the scheduling of the flights themselves. He needs them to go this year. But asked if he could guarantee it, or to give a date on when they might go, the he avoided the question. At a time his MPS want certainty, desire strength and guarantees, Mr Sunak cannot give it to them.

This is the problem with the Rwanda scheme, a policy invented by Mr Johnson, but kept on by Mr Sunak, despite his reservatio­ns. Cabinet ministers dislike it, they worry it’s going to bring the government down.

But it’s too late now, Mr Sunak has bet his premiershi­p on it. He will have to survive the Lords, internatio­nal law and his own MPS for it to pay off.

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