Lords inflict fresh defeat on plan as Bill set to be delayed for another MONTH – MASHAHER

ISLAM GAMAL20 March 2024Last Update :
Lords inflict fresh defeat on plan as Bill set to be delayed for another MONTH – MASHAHER


Peers have inflicted a fresh defeat against the Government’s Rwanda Bill voting by 271 to 228, a majority of 43, to press their demand that the legislation has “due regard” for domestic and international law.

This comes as the Government gears up for the legislation to be delayed for another month as a result of peers frustrating the Bill’s path through Parliament.


With lawyers expected to challenge attempts to remove a cohort of migrants who have been identified this week, it means that the first flights of migrants might not take off for Kigali until May.

Senior Government figures told GB News that whips are expecting seven of peers’ attempts to water down the legislation to be returned to the House of Commons tonight by the House of Lords.

Peers have inflicted a fresh defeat against the Government’s Rwanda Bill voting by 271 to 228, a majority of 43, to press their demand that the legislation has “due regard” for domestic and international law

PA

The Safety of Rwanda Bill will then return to the House of Commons where MPs will be able to vote to over-rule the peers for a second time, possibly early next week.

Whips privately believe there will be a third round of this ‘ping pong’ process before the Bill can become law. One senior source told GB News that the whips are planning for the final stages to be cleared in the first week after the end of MPs’ Easter holiday, starting on Monday April 15.

It means that the Rwanda plan will have taken more than two years to become law since it was first unveiled by then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson in April 2022.

The Bill returned to the Commons earlier this week, where MPs voted down 10 amendments introduced by the House of Lords.

Voting is expected to continue until 10pm this evening.

The Prime Minister clashed with Sir Keir Starmer over the Rwanda plan at Prime Minister’s Questions today, with the Labour leader saying that the deportation flights would only clear “one per cent” of the asylum backlog.

Sunak replied: “Since I became Prime Minister the number of small boat crossings are actually down by over a third.”

Earlier Home secretary James Cleverly issued a last-minute plea to the House of Lords to pass the Rwanda Bill as soon as possible in order to “save lives”.

Cleverly urged the Upper House not to block the passage of the small boats legislation, telling the Daily Express: “It has always been illogical to argue the Rwanda scheme won’t work while trying everything and anything politically to ensure it can’t.

“The more this Bill progresses, the more worried Labour get that, as we’ve always said, it will work, and the more we’ve anticipated deliberate efforts from Labour to delay, disrupt or sabotage the scheme.

“We remain focused on not letting that happen, and hope their lordships recognise it’s time to let this Bill pass so we can continue to stop the boats, and save lives.”

Additional reporting by Christopher Hope


Source Agencies

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