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Yvette Cooper says shallow water launches and overcrowding explain why small boat arrival numbers still risingGood morning. Keir Starmer has invested a lot of effort in measures that will “smash the gangs” and today the government is announcing the start of one of his big achievements in this area – a returns agreement, of sorts, with France. It is only a pilot, and the numbers are likely to be small, but the Conservatives never negotiated a deal of this kind when they were trying to stop small boat arrivals. (In fact, as a result of Brexit, they achieved the opposite.) Here is Jessica Elgot’s story about the deal.And here is the Home Office news release.Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, has been speaking to broadcasters this morning. In media interviews, some politicians are keen to go on the offensive, by opening up new arguments or lines of attack. Cooper is the ultimate defensive player, smothering all awkward questions with splurge of officious, technocratic reasonableness. Journalists find it frustrating, because she tends to be a bit boring, but government spin doctors are happy because she never messes up.When Starmer and Emmanuel Macron announced the “one in, one out” pilot last month, details about how it would work were sketchy. In her interviews this morning, Cooper did not reveal anything new about how the scheme would operate, arguing that, if she were to release this information, that might help the people smugglers evade the new regime. It has been widely reported that the scheme will start with about 50 people being removed per week, but Cooper would not even confirm this. On numbers, she told the Today programme:
We are not putting an overall figure on this programme. Of course, it will start will lower numbers and then build, but we want to be able to expand it. We want to be able to increase the number of people returned through this programme.
But Cooper did try to counter the key charge being thrown against the government – that all the “smash the gangs” measures it is announcing are failing, because small boat arrivals are at record numbers.On the Today programme, when she was asked why arrival numbers have been soaring over the past year, Cooper cited two reasons. She said:
What we’ve seen in the course of this year has been the change in tactics by the criminal gangs, and they’ve been doing two things.
First of all, exploiting the French maritime rules, which have meant up until this summer that the French authorities just could not intervene in French waters. That’s why we’ve seen these disgraceful scenes of the loading of people into small boats in shallow waters, and then the French police unable to intervene according to their rules.
And that’s why it’s so important that, as part of this agreement with France, France is changing their maritime rules, and that will be starting later this summer.
The second reason is we’re seeing [a] big increase in the overcrowding of the boats, so far more people being crammed into the boats.
That is why we are seeking to change the law. We have the new border security bill going through parliament at the moment, bringing in the new offence of endangerment, so that people who are getting on overcrowded boats who are frankly putting other people’s lives at risks can themselves be prosecuted for getting on these overcrowded boats. Because it’s those two factors that are particularly driving this.
By citing these two factors as the explanation, and stressing that the government is addressing them, Cooper was implying that the government will be able to reduce arrival numbers.The Conservatives claim that she is wrong because only a Rwanda-style deterrent policy would work. In an overnight press notice, the party descibed the UK-France deal as the “migrant surrender treaty” (using Boris Johnson’s inflammatory Brexit rhetoric) and Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, said:
Returning just 50 illegal immigrants a week, and probably less, will make no difference whatsoever. This amounts to just 6% of illegal arrivals. Allowing 94% to stay in the UK will be no deterrent at all. This is a gimmick which won’t work.
The Rwanda removals deterrent, under which 100% of illegal arrivals would be removed, was ready to go last summer but Labour cancelled it just days before it was due to start with no proper replacement plan. As a result, this year so far has been the worst ever for illegal immigrants crossing the channel.
Only removing all illegal immigrants upon arrival will provide the necessary deterrent to stop the crossings. This is the Conservative plan, but Labour is too weak to implement it and as a result they have lost control of our borders.
It’s August, parliament is in recess, and there is almost nothing in the diary for today. This morning the Home Office will publish the text of the “one in, one out” returns treaty with France. And Kemi Badenoch is doing a visit in her North West Essex constituency, where she will be restating the Tories’ opposition to what they call Labour’s “family farm tax”.If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (normally between 10am and 3pm at the moment), or message me on social media. I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word.If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.ShareUpdated at 09.56 BSTKey eventsShow key events onlyPlease turn on JavaScript to use this featureHolyrood should do more to help people combine being MSPs with being parents, says deputy FM Kate ForbesThe Scottish parliament should make it easier for people to combine being a parent with being a politician, Kate Forbes, the deputy first minister, has said.Forbes announced yesterday that she is quitting as an MSP at the Holyrood elections next year because she wants to spend more time with her young family.In an interview with Radio Scotland today, Forbes said there were many MSPs who faced similar choices. She said:
I’m not the first and, unless anything changes, I’m unlikely to be the last.
So many parents know the pressures and the guilt of balancing all of this, and I’m totally in the same camp as them.
As PA Media reports, Forbes said that for her there was the added stress of having one of Scotland’s most northern constituencies, meaning an “eight hours return trip to my place of work” and sometimes “a minimum three to four hours drive across the constituency before the day even begins”.Holyrood should offer more help, she said.
There are some areas I think the parliament could do more and do better.
As an example, Forbes cited the Holyrood creche – a service which was seen as a sign of the more family-friendly ethos but which is only available for three hours per day, three days a week.
I don’t know anybody who only works three hours per day, so that doesn’t make sense.
I’m certainly not advocating for the job to be any less demanding or any less all-consuming, it has to be by its very nature of representing people.
But if we can’t even get some of the basic support right, then it will always be difficult for mums and dads.
In her interview, Forbes also said she was not ruling out a return to politics eventually, saying that “maybe” she would consider such a move in the next 20 years.SharePrison overcrowding crisis so severe under Tories officials thought collapse would lead to public inquiry, report saysThe criminal justice system was within days of collapse on three occasions before being bailed out by “last-minute emergency measures”, an independent review has found. Rajeev Syal has the story.Here is the report, from a review led by Dame Anne Owers, a former chief inspector of prisons. And here is an extract which reveals that the crisis was so bad under the last government that officials feared it would lead to a public inquiry into why the criminal justice system had collapsed.
In May 2024, following the announcement of a general election, an official-level COBR [or Cobra – government emergency committee] meeting was convened to discuss contingency plans in case the criminal justice system collapsed during the election campaign because prisons were unable to take in any more prisoners. This could involve invoking emergency powers under the Civil Contingencies Act 2004 to release prisoners early, in order to avert the risk of public disorder. Those meetings and discussions continued throughout the election period.
The risk was real: at one point there were fewer than 100 places in adult male prisons. However, the system had in fact been in crisis for over eighteen months. From 2023 onwards, prisons were running very close to the edge of capacity. On three occasions, this was only pulled back at the last minute by the use of early release schemes, gradually decreasing the amount of time many prisoners spent in custody, using powers designed to allow release on compassionate grounds. Senior officials were so concerned about a potential breakdown in the criminal justice system that an audit was kept of all decisionmaking and documents, in case there was a public or parliamentary inquiry.
ShareCooper defends banning Palestine ActionYvette Cooper, the home secretary, has defended her decision to ban Palestine Action as a terrorist group.The decision has been widely criticised and a demonstration against the move is planned for this weekend.Asked about the issue on LBC, Cooper said:
The proscribing process is based on very extensive security advice and security assessments to me as home secretary, which I have to take immensely seriously. That security assessment looks at the violent attacks, injuries, attacks on national security infrastructure, and also includes assessment and some really troubling information that refers to future attack planning as well. That’s the basis on which this organisation has been proscribed.
And let’s be clear, this is a narrow organisation. This is not about protesting about Palestine, which huge numbers of people lawfully do.
I understand there are people who don’t really know the details of this organisation, who may be thinking about protesting, but who don’t know [full details]. What I would say to them is more information is likely to be revealed about this organisation as various trials go through the legal system. And, really, this is not a non-violent organisation.
ShareBlair pays tribute following death of Tom Sawyer, saying former general secretary ‘instrumental’ in Labour’s 1997 victoryKeir Starmer has led tributes after the death of former Labour party general secretary Tom Sawyer.Tony Blair, who recruited Sawyer as Labour’s general secretary in 1994, said he was “instrumental” in helping the party to win in 1997. In his tribute Blair said:
Tom Sawyer was the embodiment of strong but serious trade unionism allied to a brilliant understanding of the aspirations and values of working class Britain. He was an outstanding National Union of Public Employees officer, a great member of the Labour party national executive and in 1994 upon becoming Labour leader I was able to persuade him to take on the role of general secretary of the party. He was instrumental both in making the changes which Labour desperately needed to transform itself and in the landslide 1997 election campaign.
He was loyal, tough and deeply committed to ensuring the Labour party could govern for a time long enough to change the country.
He was also one of the nicest people you could meet and stayed true to himself and humble all the way through a remarkable career.
And this is from Alastair Campbell, who was Blair’s communications chief in No 10.
Tom Sawyer RIP. Tom was a crucial part of the New Labour team from 94 through to the landslide win and beyond. It was not easy being general secretary when some in the party and many in the unions thought we were changing the party too much. But Tom never lost his nerve or his cool with anyone. He was a team player and a man whose judgement and character were strong. Really sad to hear of his passing. Love to Liz and the family.
ShareCooper declines to say how many people will be returned to France under ‘one in, one out’ treatyIn interview this morning Yvette Cooper declined to say how people arriving on small boats arriving in the UK would be removed every week under the “one in, one out” treaty with France. The government had not put numbers on this, she said. But she said she expected the numbers to “start lower and then build”.On ITV’s Good Morning Britain, the presenter, Kate Garraway, asked if Cooper if she meant the numbers would start below 50 per week, and build up to that figure, or start at 50 per week, and build from there. Cooper replied:
Start lower than where they will finally end up.
ShareGuidance on police disclosing suspects’ ethnicity should change, Cooper saysOfficial guidance should change to permit police to release the ethnicity or immigration status of criminal suspects, the home secretary, Yvette Cooper, has said. Jessica Elgot has the story.ShareYvette Cooper says shallow water launches and overcrowding explain why small boat arrival numbers still risingGood morning. Keir Starmer has invested a lot of effort in measures that will “smash the gangs” and today the government is announcing the start of one of his big achievements in this area – a returns agreement, of sorts, with France. It is only a pilot, and the numbers are likely to be small, but the Conservatives never negotiated a deal of this kind when they were trying to stop small boat arrivals. (In fact, as a result of Brexit, they achieved the opposite.) Here is Jessica Elgot’s story about the deal.And here is the Home Office news release.Yvette Cooper, the home secretary, has been speaking to broadcasters this morning. In media interviews, some politicians are keen to go on the offensive, by opening up new arguments or lines of attack. Cooper is the ultimate defensive player, smothering all awkward questions with splurge of officious, technocratic reasonableness. Journalists find it frustrating, because she tends to be a bit boring, but government spin doctors are happy because she never messes up.When Starmer and Emmanuel Macron announced the “one in, one out” pilot last month, details about how it would work were sketchy. In her interviews this morning, Cooper did not reveal anything new about how the scheme would operate, arguing that, if she were to release this information, that might help the people smugglers evade the new regime. It has been widely reported that the scheme will start with about 50 people being removed per week, but Cooper would not even confirm this. On numbers, she told the Today programme:
We are not putting an overall figure on this programme. Of course, it will start will lower numbers and then build, but we want to be able to expand it. We want to be able to increase the number of people returned through this programme.
But Cooper did try to counter the key charge being thrown against the government – that all the “smash the gangs” measures it is announcing are failing, because small boat arrivals are at record numbers.On the Today programme, when she was asked why arrival numbers have been soaring over the past year, Cooper cited two reasons. She said:
What we’ve seen in the course of this year has been the change in tactics by the criminal gangs, and they’ve been doing two things.
First of all, exploiting the French maritime rules, which have meant up until this summer that the French authorities just could not intervene in French waters. That’s why we’ve seen these disgraceful scenes of the loading of people into small boats in shallow waters, and then the French police unable to intervene according to their rules.
And that’s why it’s so important that, as part of this agreement with France, France is changing their maritime rules, and that will be starting later this summer.
The second reason is we’re seeing [a] big increase in the overcrowding of the boats, so far more people being crammed into the boats.
That is why we are seeking to change the law. We have the new border security bill going through parliament at the moment, bringing in the new offence of endangerment, so that people who are getting on overcrowded boats who are frankly putting other people’s lives at risks can themselves be prosecuted for getting on these overcrowded boats. Because it’s those two factors that are particularly driving this.
By citing these two factors as the explanation, and stressing that the government is addressing them, Cooper was implying that the government will be able to reduce arrival numbers.The Conservatives claim that she is wrong because only a Rwanda-style deterrent policy would work. In an overnight press notice, the party descibed the UK-France deal as the “migrant surrender treaty” (using Boris Johnson’s inflammatory Brexit rhetoric) and Chris Philp, the shadow home secretary, said:
Returning just 50 illegal immigrants a week, and probably less, will make no difference whatsoever. This amounts to just 6% of illegal arrivals. Allowing 94% to stay in the UK will be no deterrent at all. This is a gimmick which won’t work.
The Rwanda removals deterrent, under which 100% of illegal arrivals would be removed, was ready to go last summer but Labour cancelled it just days before it was due to start with no proper replacement plan. As a result, this year so far has been the worst ever for illegal immigrants crossing the channel.
Only removing all illegal immigrants upon arrival will provide the necessary deterrent to stop the crossings. This is the Conservative plan, but Labour is too weak to implement it and as a result they have lost control of our borders.
It’s August, parliament is in recess, and there is almost nothing in the diary for today. This morning the Home Office will publish the text of the “one in, one out” returns treaty with France. And Kemi Badenoch is doing a visit in her North West Essex constituency, where she will be restating the Tories’ opposition to what they call Labour’s “family farm tax”.If you want to contact me, please post a message below the line when comments are open (normally between 10am and 3pm at the moment), or message me on social media. I can’t read all the messages BTL, but if you put “Andrew” in a message aimed at me, I am more likely to see it because I search for posts containing that word.If you want to flag something up urgently, it is best to use social media. You can reach me on Bluesky at @andrewsparrowgdn.bsky.social. The Guardian has given up posting from its official accounts on X, but individual Guardian journalists are there, I still have my account, and if you message me there at @AndrewSparrow, I will see it and respond if necessary.I find it very helpful when readers point out mistakes, even minor typos. No error is too small to correct. And I find your questions very interesting too. I can’t promise to reply to them all, but I will try to reply to as many as I can, either BTL or sometimes in the blog.ShareUpdated at 09.56 BST
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