Keir Starmer has hit back at Nigel Farage after the Reform UK leader launched major plans for mass deportations of migrants. We’ll bring you updates on this Breaking News story
Keir Starmer has hit back at Nigel Farage after the Reform UK leader launched major plans for mass deportations of migrants.
The Prime Minister posted four images of people being deported, with a single sentence: “If you come to this country illegally, you will face detention and return.”
It comes after No10 said Mr Starmer disagrees with Mr Farage that Britain is on the precipice of civil disorder over unhappiness about small boat migrants. Downing Street said the PM is “angry” about the crisis and the cost of asylum hotels but said the Government is focused on “serious” solutions to the issue, not gimmicks.
Mr Farage earlier today made a speech on migration where he said he could deport up to 600,000 asylum seekers in its first parliament if it was elected to government. But his plans to detain women and children and deport vulnerable people to war-torn countries were quickly ripped to shreds.
The Prime Minister’s official spokesman said Mr Starmer is frustrated at the small boats crisis and the pressure it is putting on Britain’s systems. He said : “It makes him angry frankly, because it’s unfair on ordinary working people who pay the price from the cost of hotels to our public services struggling under the strain.
“That’s why we’re taking the action we are, to recognise the strength of feeling about this. The pressure that it puts on public services and that’s why we’re taking serious practical action to address this issue, not just returning back to the old gimmicks, the old solutions that failed to deal with this.”
Mr Starmer’s spokesman was asked whether he agreed with Reform UK’s leader who told an event in Oxford that he believed the country was at risk of civil disorder. He said: “No, and I think what the Prime Minister is focused on is dealing with the concerns that people have. People have understandably have felt like their living standards have stagnated over the last 15 years, and that’s why growing the economy and raising living standards is the Government’s number one priority.”
IT is not often you get to play games with elected Members of Parliament.
But it is exactly what I am doing on The Mirror’s show, Party Games, which was launched last night. In the programme on the Mirror’s YouTube channel, I host familiar faces from across the political spectrum for a party like no other.
Wearing an obligatory party hat, I spin a wheel of fortune to decide which games to play – with each one having its own special ability to tease out funny stories, emotional moments and, of course, some political points from MPs. They include “Would You Rather?” where MPs have to make a painful choice out of two options, and “Never Have I Ever?”,
There is also the “Ask Me Anything” round and “Hug, Marry, Avoid”, where MPs have to choose who’d they’d hug, marry or avoid out of a given list of three people. The “30-Second Pitch” round is where the guest gets to talk for 30 seconds about an issue, cause or campaign they are passionate about.
In an age where MPs face increasingly vicious intimidation, hate and violence, The Mirror’s show hopes to allow viewers to get to know the humans behind the pomp of Westminster.
You can watch Party Games on YouTube now.
Mr Farage unveiled draconian proposals for mass deportations of asylum seekers – with plans to lock up women and children. The Reform UK leader was accused of having fantasy plans with little detail provided on the practicality of deportation flights or on the costings of the proposals. And his inflammatory language was branded “reprehensible” after he appeared sanguine about failed asylum seekers being tortured or murdered if they were sent back after entering the UK illegally.
Mr Farage indicated that some 600,000 asylum seekers could be deported in the first parliament of a Reform UK government. And he pledged to scale up detention capacity for asylum seekers to 24,000. But when asked about the details of the plans, the Clacton MP gave flippant answers – simply saying his costs are accurate because his colleague is “really good at maths”.