Current:Home > FinanceUK leader Rishi Sunak faces a Conservative crisis over his blocked plan to send migrants to Rwanda -NextFrontier Finance
UK leader Rishi Sunak faces a Conservative crisis over his blocked plan to send migrants to Rwanda
Benjamin Ashford View
Date:2025-04-08 23:14:01
LONDON (AP) — British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak was struggling to avert a leadership crisis on Thursday after his plan to revive a blocked asylum deal with Rwanda triggered turmoil in his party and the resignation of his immigration minister.
Robert Jenrick quit the government late Wednesday, saying a bill designed to override a court block on the Rwanda plan “does not go far enough” and won’t work.
He said the government had pledged to “stop the boats” bringing migrants to Britain across the English Channel and must do “whatever it takes to deliver this commitment.”
The plan to send asylum-seekers on a one-way trip to Rwanda is central to the U.K. government’s self-imposed goal of stopping unauthorized asylum-seekers crossing the Channel from France.
Britain and Rwanda agreed on a deal in April 2022 under which migrants who cross the Channel would be sent to Rwanda, where their asylum claims would be processed and, if successful, they would stay.
Last month the U.K. Supreme Court ruled the plan was illegal because Rwanda isn’t a safe country for refugees.
Britain and Rwanda have since signed a treaty pledging to strengthen protection for migrants. The U.K. government says that will allow it to pass a law declaring Rwanda a safe destination and allowing the government to ignore parts of British human rights law to send migrants there.
Home Secretary James Cleverly acknowledged the legislation may violate international human rights rules but urged lawmakers to support it anyway.
But the legislation doesn’t go far enough for some in the governing Conservative Party’s authoritarian wing, who want the U.K. to leave the European Convention on Human Rights. Almost every European country, apart from Russia and Belarus, is bound by the convention and its court.
Sunak responded to Jenrick’s resignation by arguing that the bill went as far as the government could.
“If we were to oust the courts entirely, we would collapse the entire scheme,” he wrote in a letter to Jenrick responding to his resignation.
Rwandan Foreign Minister Vincent Biruta confirmed that his country would scrap the deal unless Britain stuck to international law.
“It has always been important to both Rwanda and the U.K. that our rule of law partnership meets the highest standards of international law, and it places obligations on both the U.K. and Rwanda to act lawfully,” he said in a statement.
Sunak has struggled to keep the fractious Conservatives united since taking over as party leader and prime minister in October 2022 after the turbulent terms of Boris Johnson and Liz Truss.
He has made “stopping the boats” one of his key pledges ahead of a national election that is due next year. He hopes showing progress can help the party close a big polling gap with the opposition Labour Party.
But dissent has broken out again over the Rwanda plan. It concerns centrist Conservative lawmakers who oppose Britain breaching its human rights obligations.
The bigger danger to Sunak comes from the hard-line right wing represented by Jenrick and former Home Secretary Suella Braverman, who was fired by Sunak last month. She is seen as likely to run for party leader in a contest expected if the Conservatives lose power in an election. The contest could come even sooner if Conservative lawmakers think ditching Sunak will improve their chances.
Braverman criticized the Rwanda bill and said the law must go farther, including a ban on legal challenges to deportation and incarceration of asylum-seekers in military-style barracks.
“We have to totally exclude international law -– the Refugee Convention, other broader avenues of legal challenge,” she said.
Braverman did not answer directly when asked if she supported Sunak as prime minister.
“I want the prime minister to succeed in stopping the boats,” she said.
veryGood! (133)
Related
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- Sunday Night Football highlights: Cowboys rout Giants in NFC East showdown
- Air China jet evacuated after engine fire sends smoke into cabin in Singapore, and 9 people injured
- Laurel Peltier Took On Multi-Million Dollar Private Energy Companies Scamming Baltimore’s Low-Income Households, One Victim at a Time
- Louisiana high court temporarily removes Judge Eboni Johnson Rose from Baton Rouge bench amid probe
- He's a singer, a cop and the inspiration for a Netflix film about albinism in Africa
- Thailand’s LGBTQ+ community draws tourists from China looking to be themselves
- Operation to extract American researcher from one of the world’s deepest caves advances to 700m
- Plunge Into These Olympic Artistic Swimmers’ Hair and Makeup Secrets
- Dolphins' Tyreek Hill after 215-yard game vs. Chargers: 'I feel like nobody can guard me'
Ranking
- Audit: California risked millions in homelessness funds due to poor anti-fraud protections
- Pee-wee Herman Actor Paul Reubens' Cause of Death Revealed
- Greece’s shipping minister resigns a week after a passenger pushed off a ferry ramp drowns
- Sabotage attempts reported at polling stations in occupied Ukraine as Russia holds local elections
- Scoot flight from Singapore to Wuhan turns back after 'technical issue' detected
- College football Week 2 grades: Baylor-Utah refs flunk test, Gus Johnson is a prophet
- Australian and Indonesian forces deploy battle tanks in US-led combat drills amid Chinese concern
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly higher as investors await US inflation, China economic data
Recommendation
Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
Which NFL teams most need to get off to fast starts in 2023 season?
Michael Irvin returns to NFL Network after reportedly settling Marriott lawsuit
Protests kick off at Israeli justice minister’s home a day before major hearing on judicial overhaul
Tom Holland's New Venture Revealed
No. 10 Texas had nothing to fear from big, bad Alabama in breakthrough victory
Stranded American caver arrives at base camp 2,300 feet below ground
Islamist factions in a troubled Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon say they will honor a cease-fire