Wed. Nov 6th, 2024
alert-–-tory-rebels-threaten-all-out-assault-on-rwanda-plan-in-showdown-votes-this-week-unless-rishi-sunak-agrees-to-toughen-up-legislationAlert – Tory rebels threaten all-out assault on Rwanda plan in showdown votes this week unless Rishi Sunak agrees to toughen up legislation

Tory rebels are threatening an all-out assault on the Rwanda plan this week unless Rishi Sunak agrees to toughen up the legislation.

Leaders of three right-wing Conservative blocs have made clear they are ready to defy the PM in crunch Commons votes on Tuesday and Wednesday.

Mark Francois, Sir John Hayes and Danny Kruger urged colleagues to join them in ‘standing firm’ saying the new law is ‘simply not good enough’.

Mr Sunak insists the Bill is essential for keeping his vow to ‘stop the boats’, but it is threatening to tear the Tories to shreds.

Rishi Sunak insists the Rwanda Bill is essential for keeping his vow to 'stop the boats', but it is threatening to tear the Tories to shreds. Pictured, this weekend saw the first crossing of the year

Rishi Sunak insists the Rwanda Bill is essential for keeping his vow to ‘stop the boats’, but it is threatening to tear the Tories to shreds. Pictured, this weekend saw the first crossing of the year

More than 50 MPs on the right of the party have backed amendments seeking to ignore international law and curtail asylum seekers’ rights to appeal against flights to Kigali.

Mr Francois, chair of the European Research Group; Sir John, of the Common Sense Group; and the New Conservatives’ Mr Kruger made a joint intervention in the Sunday Telegraph.

They said they were among around 30 MPs who abstained at the first vote on the Bill before Christmas because Mr Sunak promised he was prepared to see the Bill ‘tightened’, adding: ‘We took him at his word.’

Comparing themselves to the Tory ‘spartans’ who destroyed Theresa May’s Brexit deal, they said they will again ‘face criticism from colleagues that we are letting the perfect be the enemy of the good’.

‘But the point is that the Bill is simply not good enough in its current form to deliver the outcome we all seek,’ they wrote.

‘Failing to deliver for the British people carries a much greater cost than temporary discomfort in Parliament.

‘Standing firm is no more or less than our duty, for it means keeping our promise to those we serve – our constituents.’

Mr Sunak, however, has argued that moving a further ‘inch’ on the Bill would risk the Rwandans quitting the deal.

More moderate Tories in the One Nation group could also oppose any changes that threaten international law.

Labour will not back any of the right-wing amendments, meaning the Tory rebels’ are unlikely to be able to scupper the legislation entirely.

Their best chance of doing so would be at third reading stage, although there are rumours that Labour could opt to abstain.  

If they were successful, blocking the Prime Minister’s flagship Bill would trigger fresh chaos – something that may make opponents toe the line to let it pass.

Mark Francois, chair of the European Research Group, delivered the latest warning with colleagues from other senior Tories

Mark Francois, chair of the European Research Group, delivered the latest warning with colleagues from other senior Tories 

The Tory right had made a big show of unity when at the last vote, forming a self-styled faction of ‘five families’. But the letter in the Telegraph lacked signatures from two other groups: the Conservative Growth Group and the Northern Research Group.

The former home secretary and rival to Mr Sunak, Suella Braverman, has said she will this time vote against the Bill if there are ‘no improvements’ having previously abstained.

Robert Jenrick, who resigned as immigration minister over the legislation, was also making a push for Mr Sunak to bolster the Bill.

Writing in the Sun on Sunday, he compared it to ‘a bucket riddled with holes’.

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