The Daily Telegraph - Saturday

Rwanda could splinter Tories as seriously as Brexit division

- An ‘emotional’ departure Where’s Robert? A political tightrope The star chamber The absent third reading A matter of confidence

scheme from legal challenge so flights carrying asylum-seekers could get back in the air.

There had been weeks of behind the scenes negotiatio­ns between Downing Street, the Home Office and various Tory factions about what exactly the proposed law would say.

In the end, to No 10’s mind, they picked a “hard-core” option. Rwanda would unilateral­ly be declared a safe country, meaning the UK courts would have to effectivel­y accept as much.

The Human Rights Act would be disapplied in Rwanda deportatio­n cases. It was also made clear that UK government ministers could ignore European Court injunction­s on the matter.

The problem for the Prime Minister was twofold. Tory centrists feared it had gone too far; Tory migration hardliners that it did not go far enough. The latter tensions reared their head first.

Shortly after a bruising Prime Minister’s Questions on Wednesday, Mr Sunak met with Robert Jenrick alone in his parliament­ary office behind the Speaker’s chair. As immigratio­n minister, Mr Jenrick had been the Prime Minister’s point person on the issue for more than a year, an ally put in the post to check then home secretary Suella Braverman.

Mr Jenrick was a political friend of Mr Sunak. They had co-written an influentia­l article, along with fellow Tory Oliver Dowden, endorsing Boris Johnson for the party leadership in the 2019 contest.

But now Mr Jenrick made clear he did not believe the legislatio­n was strong enough to get Rwandan flights going again and could not take it through the House of Commons.

His pleas were heartfelt, sources close to both men admit. A Sunak ally said Mr Jenrick became “emotional”.

Both sides agree on another point: There was discussion about Mr Jenrick being moved to another government role in return for him not resigning, though no position was explicitly named. A Jenrick ally said he was assured a promotion and a new

Cabinet role. A Sunak ally said there were no specifics on what the position would be, rejecting the idea a promotion was promised.

The difference­s get even more pronounced when it comes to why Mr Jenrick decided to walk out, just weeks after Mrs Braverman was sacked.

Mr Jenrick, dealing with the specifics of migration laws and how to reduce the small boat crossings carrying migrants across the English Channel, hardened his views in the job. He has told others he now sees the benefits of leaving the European Convention of Human Rights (ECHR), having realised how such requiremen­ts thwart steps to tackle the crossings.

It was policy difference­s that forced him out, said one who talked about the decision to quit with Mr Jenrick before it was announced: “It may be old fashioned these days to have a resignatio­n on a conviction matter, but that’s what happened.”

Figures close to the Prime Minister question whether Mr Jenrick was bruised at having been overlooked for the Home Secretary role when Mrs Braverman left.

The chaotic way in which the news tumbled out on Wednesday evening exacerbate­d the feeling of a government struggling to control events. Mr Jenrick chose to keep his decision quiet until Mr Sunak had addressed the 1922 Committee and Mr Cleverly, who he personally told he was quitting, had announced the Bill to the House of Commons. But it all leaked before either appearance was over. “Where’s Robert? Where’s Robert?” hollered opposition MPs at Mr Cleverly with Mr Jenrick missing from the front bench.

That evening, an exchange of letters hinted at Mr Sunak’s disappoint­ment at an ally jumping ship. He accused Mr Jenrick of a “fundamenta­l misunderst­anding” of the situation.

The jibe prompted the claim the Prime Minister was being “patronisin­g” from one Jenrick supporter: “The idea a lawyer like Rob, who is a competent and capable guy, would not understand the policy is obviously completely laughable.”

Yet it is not the breakdown in relations between men, but the Prime Minister’s difficulty pulling together both wings of his parliament­ary party where the real political danger lies.

Four Tory groups are this weekend considerin­g whether to vote for the new Safety of Rwanda (Asylum and Immigratio­n) Bill, attempt to amend it, or to actually try to vote it down.

Three are on the right of the party: The European Research Group, the New Conservati­ves and the Common Sense Group. The fourth is on the moderate wing: the One Nation group.

The real influence of each is in dispute. Sometimes MPs sign up to such groups loosely. At other times they may be squarely behind their aims but decide to vote differentl­y from the leadership.

But the combined members of the four groups are many multiples of the 29 Tory MPs who, in theory, are all that is needed to force a defeat on the government.

Early indication­s are not looking good for Downing Street. The four-man “star chamber”, headed up by veteran Tory Sir Bill Cash, for the three Right-leaning groups is understood to have concerns that the Bill has weaknesses.

Meanwhile the man advising One Nation, Lord Garnier, jumped the gun by saying on Thursday that he would not vote for the Bill and likened declaring Rwanda a safe country to insisting “all dogs are cats”.

Final verdicts from both arbiters are being drafted this weekend with reveals expected on Monday, at which point Tory MPs will start declaring which way they intend to vote.

No 10 insiders remain bullish about their chances of getting the legislatio­n through the Commons. “Let’s see when the votes are counted”, said one, projecting calm.

But signs of nerves at the centre could be found in the specifics of the parliament­ary business plans published on Thursday, with realpoliti­k often revealed in the minutiae of the process.

While the Bill’s second reading has been scheduled for Tuesday, its critical third reading, the final thumbs up, thumbs down moment from MPs, is nowhere to be seen in the Commons activity planned between now and Christmas.

Despite the supposed haste attached to passing this “emergency” piece of legislatio­n, No 10 cannot guarantee the key final Commons vote will come before 2024.

It could buy time – rebels may choose to sit on their hands at second reading on Tuesday. But pain delayed is not necessaril­y pain avoided.

The Prime Minister will somehow have to reassure moderate Tories that his proposed law will not breach the ECHR, despite page one of the legislatio­n saying this cannot be guaranteed.

Meanwhile, he must also convince his Tory immigratio­n hardliners that it is realistica­lly impossible to close off the path explicitly kept open in the legislatio­n for asylum-seekers to bring individual claims if they believe they are at risk of “serious and irreversib­le harm” from deportatio­n.

To date, many of those disillusio­ned with Mr Sunak’s premiershi­p have argued that fellow Tory MPs will not act to remove him, since the voters would punish the party for another bout of infighting.

Yet still, speculatio­n about confidence letters persists. Even the most hyperbolic, off-record briefings suggest just half of the 53 no confidence letters needed to force a vote in Mr Sunak’s leadership have been submitted to the 1922 Committee.

The real figure – letters are sent in private, meaning only Sir Graham Brady, the 1922 Committee chairman, knows for sure – could be much lower than that. Just a single Tory MP, Dame Andrea Jenkyns, has admitted in public to submitting a letter.

this issue of huge importance to the public. Small boat crossings by Albanians are down by 90 per cent on last year. Other countries, including Denmark and Italy, are looking to copy the UK’s Rwanda model. If we can get the first flights in the air with this legislatio­n, it would give the strategy a fillip – demonstrat­ing progress in the face of every obstacle thrown in the Government’s way. This is a challenge that will be overcome with incrementa­l strides, not in one fell swoop, so keeping up the momentum is critical.

The Rwanda plan can be only one element of an effective strategy to tackle the small boats issue, not least because the Rwandan government is unlikely to be willing to take more than a few thousand illegal migrants each year – and 44,000 arrived in the year ending

June 2023.

Detaining every illegal migrant in indefinite administra­tive detention would be wrong and would quickly become unviable.

So we need further partnershi­p agreements with other countries, and additional operationa­l measures, to establish a meaningful deterrent.

‘Britain should use the Navy and mobile barriers to prevent migrants crossing the median line’ ‘Back me or sack me’

All the while multiple recent opinion polls have found one in 10 voters could back Reform, the Right-wing political party led by Richard Tice at the next general election, which must be held by January 2025 at the latest. Many of those people usually vote Tory while its honorary president Nigel Farage, the former Ukip leader is currently in ITV’s celebrity jungle building support.

Sir Iain Duncan Smith, no stranger to the dangers of Tory in fighting, having been ousted as Conservati­ve Party leader in 2003 after losing the backbenche­s, has a bleak assessment.

“The reality is that we are in a more febrile state than under [Sir] John Major. John Major took us to the election,” Sir Iain said.

“We’ll have had three prime ministers in this period, which is unpreceden­ted really. That means this infighting will carry on, because it’s not settled.

“The one way out of this, both electorall­y and internally, is that we decide collective­ly that getting those flights off to Rwanda is critical and we pass a law to achieve that.”

Sir John managed to see off his

Tory critics to lead his party at the 1997 election. Sir Iain, the “quiet man” of Conservati­ve politics, had no such luck, being ousted in 2003 before the ballot box opened.

This week at a press conference, Mr Sunak notably declined the chance to repeat the famous Major “back me or sack me” challenge to rebels.

In truth, whether he says the words or not, that may become the reality.

For all the tough political talk on removals, there has been a striking lack of imaginatio­n and resolve when it comes to prevention. The use of drones to identify small boats before they leave France, coupled with improved bilateral enforcemen­t co-operation, would make a big difference.

If France won’t raise its game, the UK should consider using technology, the Navy and mobile barriers to prevent migrants crossing the Channel’s median line, while offering to take those on small boats safely back to the French coast – to circumvent claims that the UK is putting them “in distress” – contrary to internatio­nal maritime law.

Finally, the politics of this is clear. The Conservati­ves can unite behind the Prime Minister, show the public we are determined to turn the tide on small boats and demonstrat­e that Labour lacks the will to tackle them. Or we can fight among ourselves, fail the public, and put a big, fat, smile on Keir Starmer’s face.

Dominic Raab MP is a former deputy prime minister, justice secretary and foreign secretary

 ?? ?? After greeting one another on the steps of No 10, Rishi Sunak and Dutch PM Mark Rutte were left bemused when they were locked out. The door was eventually opened
After greeting one another on the steps of No 10, Rishi Sunak and Dutch PM Mark Rutte were left bemused when they were locked out. The door was eventually opened

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