The Guardian (USA)

Keir Starmer arrives in Canada to set out stall on immigratio­n policy

- Peter Walker and Kiran Stacey

Keir Starmer has arrived in Canada to set out his doctrine for tackling internatio­nal threats at a gathering of world leaders, the latest step in the Labour leader’s move to flesh out policy in politicall­y turbulent areas such as immigratio­n.

Amid continued efforts by Starmer and his team to push back against the “nonsense” that closer cooperatio­n with the EU would involve the UK having to accept 100,000 asylum-seekers a year, the Labour leader was in Montreal for the Global Progress Action Summit of centre-left politician­s.

After expected talks with Justin Trudeau, the Canadian prime minister, among others, Starmerwil­l travel to

Paris next week to meet the French president, Emmanuel Macron, with refugees and small boats likely to be on the agenda.

The diplomatic and media blitz for Starmer, who is joined in Canada by

David Lammy, the shadow foreign secretary, will also include appearance­s on the Sunday morning political shows.

With an election potentiall­y less than a year away, Starmer is aiming to use the Montreal summit to set out his proposals on asylum in the context of what he has termed an “axis of instabilit­y”, also taking in other cross-border issues like the climate emergency and terrorism.

After spending Thursday in The Hague talking to officials from the EU’s law enforcemen­t agency, Europol, about cross-border cooperatio­n on stopping people-smugglers, Starmer said he wanted an EU-wide returns deal and was willing to discuss the UK accepting a quota of people in return.

The comments sparked 24 hours of attacks from Conservati­ve MPs, who claimed Labour’s plans could result in an extra 100,000 people coming to Britain from the EU every year.

There was also some disquiet from a few Labour MPs about Starmer’s pugnacious language in an article for the Sun, where he said those who disagreed with proposals such as treating criminals involved in cross-Channel people-smuggling as terrorists were “un-British”.

Yvette Cooper said on Friday that the claims about 100,000 arrivals year were “fiction”. The shadow home secretary said her party would not sign up to be a member of the official EU quota system, under which countries have to take an agreed share of people or pay €20,000 (£17,200) for each person they

refuse to take.

“What we are talking about is having a negotiatio­n around a returns agreement where, for example, we think that should look at family reunion for children who have family in the UK who currently have no safe legal route to be able to join that family in the UK,” she told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “As a result they end up on these boats, they end up being exploited by these criminal gangs.”

Starmer’s hope is to shrug off such criticism and present cooperatio­n with the EU over unofficial Channel journeys as a more grownup and confident approach, contrastin­g this with what he will say is the Conservati­ves’ inability to cooperate internatio­nally.

The other aim is to set out a robust response to global issues as a strength for left-leaning parties, with a Labour aide telling the Times on Friday: “Border security is a progressiv­e cause.”

Neverthele­ss, some on the left have criticised Starmer’s recent promises to “smash” criminal people-smuggling gangs.

Steve Smith, the chief executive of Care4Calai­s, told the Guardian: “‘Smash the gangs’ may get him a headline in the Sun, but it’s not a plan.”

 ?? James Manning/PA ?? Keir Starmer is expected to talk with the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau. Photograph:
James Manning/PA Keir Starmer is expected to talk with the Canadian prime minister, Justin Trudeau. Photograph:

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