Kamis, 07 Desember 2023

Sunak faces showdown vote on Rwanda migration plan as Tory revolt grows - live - The Independent

Robert Jenrick resigns as immigration minister over Rwanda bill in huge blow to Rishi Sunak

Rishi Sunak faces a showdown vote on his flagship Rwanda plan next week, as a Tory revolt on the issue grows.

The PM’s premiership has been rocked by the resignation of immigration minister Robert Jenrick, as he failed to appease the Tory right with his emergency Rwanda bill.

There is growing speculation that Mr Sunak will have to make next week’s vote a confidence issue in the government – threatening his MPs with expulsion if they defy him and help force a general election.

A tetchy Mr Sunak denied that he was ready to make it “back me or sack me” vote at his hastily convened press conference on the growing crisis on Thursday.

However, the embattled Tory leader appeared to appeal to Labour to help him push through his bill in parliament.

“The real question, when it comes to all these votes, if for the Labour Party,” Mr Sunak said: said. “So the real question when it comes to parliament … what are the Labour Party going to do about this vote?”

1701937328

Good morning and welcome to The Independent’s live politics coverage as Rishi Sunak comes under fresh pressure over his Rwanda plan.

Robert Jenrick, the immigration minister, quit last night in protest at a bill produced by No 10 which the prime minister said would get flights taking off the African country.

But Jenrick described the proposals as a “triumph of hope over experience”. Stay tuned for all the latest updates on this story and otherwise from Westminster and elsewhere.

Matt Mathers7 December 2023 08:22
1701937708

Braverman: ‘Sorry truth’ is that new legislation ‘won’t work'

Suella Braverman, the former home secretary, has been speaking to broadcasters this morning after telling Rishi Sunak he faces “electoral oblivion” as she claimed his Rwanda plan was doomed to fail.

In an interview with the BBC Radio 4 Today programme, Ms Braverman said the “sorry truth” is that new legislation to revive the strategy to stop small boats “won’t work”.

“There are elements that should be welcomed in this new bill that the prime minister has presented,” she said.

“But taken as a whole and looking at the reality of the challenges that are involved in detaining people, removing people and getting them to Rwanda – this is a very litigious field and there are lots of legal frameworks that apply – the reality is and the sorry truth is that it won’t work and it will not stop the boats.”

<p>Suella Braverman was sacked as home secretary last month (Justin Tallis/PA)</p>

Suella Braverman was sacked as home secretary last month (Justin Tallis/PA)

Matt Mathers7 December 2023 08:28
1701938646

Recap: What was in the bill?

Rishi Sunak made a desperate bid to head off a growing revolt among right-wing Conservatives over his failed Rwanda flights plan with new emergency legislation that defies human rights law.

Home secretary James Cleverly unveiled a bill in the Commons to “disapply” the UK Human Rights Act in a bid to stop British judges blocking the deportation of asylum seekers.

In fresh turmoil, the Rwandan government immediately responded to the move by warning that it could pull out of the deal if the UK fails to comply with international law.

Matt Mathers7 December 2023 08:44
1701938896

ICYMI: Robert Jenrick’s resignation letter in full

In a scathing letter last night, Mr Jenrick described the government’s new Rwanda bill as a “triumph of hope over experience” as he quit as immigration minister.

He said he was refusing to be “yet another politician who makes promises on immigration to the British public but does not keep them.”

Read the resignation letter in full below:

Matt Mathers7 December 2023 08:48
1701939018

Downing Street insists bill will prevent future legal challenges

Emergency legislation to deem Rwanda a safe destination has been published, as the Government bids to revive the flagship asylum policy following last month’s Supreme Court defeat.

The Bill is set to be rushed through the Commons and comes after Home Secretary James Cleverly signed a new treaty in Kigali amid efforts to remedy the concerns of the UK’s highest court.

Dominic McGrath reports:

Matt Mathers7 December 2023 08:50
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Braverman denies ‘spreading poison’ to oust Sunak as she’s challenged over attack on Rwanda plan

As we’ve been reporting, Suella Braverman has been speaking to Radio 4 this morning about the Rwanda draft law.

Full story and audio of the exchange below:

Suella Braverman denies ‘spreading poison’ to oust Rishi Sunak
Matt Mathers7 December 2023 08:57
1701939625

Robert Jenrick’s resignation is ‘not that big a story’, Tory minister claims

A Tory minister has sought to downplay Robert Jenrick’s resignation, claiming it is “not as big a story as is being made”, Archie Mitchell reports.

Chris Heaton-Harris told LBC: “I don’t like anybody resigning from my party, but when I was Boris Johnson’s chief whip... Pretty much everyone did.

“Maybe I have a scale of proportion that others don’t have.” He added: “I don’t think it is as big a story as is being made”.

Listen to more of his interview here:

Matt Mathers7 December 2023 09:00
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Heaton-Harris: Rwanda bill will pass Commons

Rishi Sunak’s draft law to fix the Rwanda plan will pass a vote in the Commons next week, a cabinet minister has insisted.

Chris Heaton-Harris, the Northern Ireland secretary and a former Tory whip, said the government has enough support to get the bill through the lower chamber.

It comes as the prime minister attempts to shore up his position and secure support for the plan after Robert Jenrick quit amid fears of a wider rebellion and Tory rightwingers.

The bill is due before parliament today and will be voted on next week and Tory moderates have warned they will not vote for it if there is any chance that it breaks international law.

More comments from Mr Heaton-Harris below:

Matt Mathers7 December 2023 09:18
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Tory moderate suggests he may not back bill – says Rwanda ‘ripping’ party apart

Senior moderate Tobias Ellwood told Times Radio that he will not support the Rwanda bill if there is “any prospect” of breaking the international laws the UK itself helped craft, Adam Forrest reports.

Mr Ellwood said the row over Rwanda was “ripping our party in half”. He said: “Rwanda has become almost totemic, if you like, that hill that we have to die on.”

The senior Tory added: “If this infighting continues, it will not just cost us the next general election, it will see our party splinter into two between the centre right and the far right.”

Warning that some moderates may not back the bill, Mr Ellwood said: “We helped craft the ECHR. We were the ones that crafted most of the laws, international laws after the Second World War. We uphold international law. We don’t break it.”

<p>Conservative MP and chair of the defence select committee Tobias Ellwood (Dominic Lipinski/ PA)</p>

Conservative MP and chair of the defence select committee Tobias Ellwood (Dominic Lipinski/ PA)

Matt Mathers7 December 2023 09:26
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Braverman: No one is talking about leadership challenege

Some more comments now from Suella Braverman’s interview with Radio 4 earlier this morning.

The former home secretary, sacked in a cabinet reshuffle last month, insisted that none of her colleagues were talking about a leadership challenge to Rishi Sunak after she denied trying to oust him by spreading “poison” within the party.

“No one’s talking about leadership, or changing leadership,” she insisted, adding that she was fully behind Mr Sunak if he could fix the Rwanda deal.

Matt Mathers7 December 2023 09:47

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2023-12-08 06:26:42Z
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Passengers stuck for hours on Elizabeth Line after cables damaged - BBC

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Passengers were left stuck on trains for hours without power after damage to overhead cables blocked routes to and from one of London's busiest stations.

Network Rail said it had to stop all services to and from Paddington while engineers fixed overhead power cables in the Ladbroke Grove area.

The Elizabeth Line, Great Western Railway and the Heathrow Express were all affected.

People have been urged to check services before travelling on Friday.

On social media, passengers spoke of being stuck on cold trains for hours without power.

Countdown's Rachel Riley was one of those stuck on an Elizabeth Line train.

Posting a selfie on X of her and other passengers, all smiling, she said: "Nearly 4 hours after we got on, we're getting off the Elizabeth line, woohoo!"

BBC journalist Emma Bentley shared photographs of fellow passengers waiting in the darkness, writing on X: "The carriages have now lost power, and it seems we may be walking home…"

She later added that passengers on her train were being evacuated - three and a half hours after becoming stranded.

Workers on rail track between Paddington and Acton Main line
Emma Bentley

Hugh Comerford, 65, said his train out of London was evacuated around three hours after it was forced to stop.

While speaking to the BBC, he said he could see workers outside the train window who were preparing to evacuate people, and that passengers had started disembarking and walking along the tracks.

He said: "At about 6.40pm the train just suddenly stopped and we didn't really know why.

"The driver said that the train ahead of us got tangled in the overhead power cables so they had to turn the power off."

Mr Comerford said not only did it start getting colder and there was no light, the driver was unable to make further announcements over the tannoy system.

He said his fellow passengers remained calm and were in quite good spirits "all things considered" - despite several "clearly missing flights".

"We are fortunate there do not appear to be any young children," he added.

Another passenger described how fellow passengers were being let off their train "one by one to urinate".

Transport for London told BBC News that four Elizabeth Line trains were left stranded after "another rail operator's train has caused significant disruption to our Elizabeth line customers".

A spokesperson for Network Rail apologised for the "disruption and difficulties passengers endured this evening after a fault with overhead cables powering trains in the Ladbroke Grove area".

Passengers evacuate from a stranded train in the darkness
Hugh Comerford
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Has your journey been affected by the train delays? Share your experiences by emailing haveyoursay@bbc.co.uk.

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If you are reading this page and can't see the form you will need to visit the mobile version of the BBC website to submit your question or comment or you can email us at HaveYourSay@bbc.co.uk. Please include your name, age and location with any submission.

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2023-12-08 03:17:35Z
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Rishi Sunak hits back at Suella Braverman: We can't go any further on Rwanda plan - Evening Standard

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  1. Rishi Sunak hits back at Suella Braverman: We can't go any further on Rwanda plan  Evening Standard
  2. Newspaper headlines: Tories 'imploding' and 'Rwanda plan risks failing'  BBC
  3. Anatomy of a party in turmoil: the Conservative factions in the spotlight  The Guardian
  4. Yet another leadership election is not the Christmas present the nation deserves  The Independent
  5. Rishi Sunak should stop trying to solve problems and start managing them instead  Evening Standard

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2023-12-08 05:52:56Z
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UK paid Rwanda an extra £100m for asylum deal - BBC

Sunak at podium at press conferencePA Media

The UK has given Rwanda a further £100m this year as part of its deal to relocate asylum seekers there.

The payment was made in April, the Home Office's top civil servant said in a letter to MPs, after £140m had already been sent to the African nation.

Sir Matthew Rycroft said another payment of £50m was expected next year.

The revelation came hours after Rishi Sunak vowed to "finish the job" of reviving the plan after the resignation of his immigration minister this week.

The scheme to send some asylum seekers to Rwanda for processing, in order to deter people from crossing the English Channel in small boats, was first announced by then-Prime Minister Boris Johnson in April 2022.

But it has been repeatedly delayed by legal challenges and no asylum seekers have been sent from the UK so far.

Until now it was known that the government had spent at least £140m on the policy. Sir Matthew had previously refused to disclose updated figures, saying ministers had decided to set out the costs annually.

But in a letter published on Thursday to Dame Diana Johnson, chairwoman of the Home Affairs Committee, and Dame Meg Hillier, chairwoman of the Public Accounts Committee, he disclosed the full cost of the policy so far.

Sir Matthew stressed that the extra payments were not linked to the new treaty signed this week between UK and Rwanda as part of the government's attempt to amend the policy, which was ruled unlawful by the Supreme Court last month.

A Home Office spokesperson would not go into specifics on what the money would be spent on but said it was going towards the economic development and growth of Rwanda.

The payment was made when Suella Braverman was home secretary, though allies of hers say it was signed off by the prime minister.

Labour branded the revelation of the extra costs "incredible", with shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper adding: "How many more blank cheques will Rishi Sunak write before the Tories come clean about this scheme being a total farce?" she said.

'This Bill will fail'

Earlier on Thursday, Mr Sunak held a press conference on Thursday where he urged Tory MPs to back his plan.

The prime minister was speaking a day after immigration minister Robert Jenrick resigned over the government's revised policy, saying he believed it was destined for failure.

Mr Sunak insisted the new emergency legislation set out by the government would end the "merry-go-round of legal challenges" over the flights of some asylum seekers to Rwanda.

The bill compels judges to treat Rwanda as a safe country and gives ministers the powers to disregard sections of the Human Rights Act. But it does not go as far as allowing them to dismiss the European Convention on Human Rights, as some on the right of the Conservative Party have called for.

The bill faces opposition from MPs in different factions of the Conservative Party when it returns to Parliament next week.

Earlier on Thursday, former Home Secretary Suella Braverman reiterated that it would fail to "stop the boats" and called on the government to fully exclude international law.

The task of steering the bill through Parliament falls to Michael Tomlinson, who was appointed illegal migration minister on Thursday.

He will work alongside Tom Pursglove, the minister for legal migration, after the prime minister split Mr Jenrick's vacant role in two.

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2023-12-08 01:52:18Z
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Don't jail TV licence fee defaulters, Culture Secretary says - The Telegraph

Culture Secretary Lucy Frazer warned on Thursday night that sending TV licence defaulters to jail is “morally indefensible”.

She made the comments in the wake of the £10.50 rise in the licence fee - lower than the BBC had requested.

In an article in the Daily Mail, she wrote that a review into its funding model will “specifically look at the issue of criminal prosecution of the licence fee.”

Findings show nearly 1,000 people are prosecuted every week for failing to pay their licence fee, with 70 per cent of women getting fined.

The offence is now one of the most common crimes in Britain, excluding motoring offences.

The BBC licence fee will rise by more than £10 next year, the Culture Secretary announced on Thursday.

The payments, which have been frozen for two years, will rise in 2024 from £159 to £169.50, Lucy Frazer confirmed.

The BBC had expected the increase to be around £15 in line with nine per cent inflation, presenting the corporation with an unexpected budget shortfall.

But Ms Frazer said the Government had acted to prevent such a steep increase, and would seek to reform the “anachronistic” funding model and reduce the financial burden on the public.

Ms Frazer stated that continued hikes could not continue “indefinitely” and announced a review to explore alternatives to the licence fee.

Speaking in the House of Commons, the Culture Secretary announced that “next year’s licence fee increase will be kept as low as possible”.  

She said: “In April the licence fee will rise by 6.7 per cent to £169.50 annually. This will minimise the rise for households, keeping it to £10.50 over the year.”

The number of licence fee-paying households fell by 400,000 last year, according to Ms Frazer, as many viewers turn to subscription-based competitor services such as Netflix.

She suggested the “increasingly anachronistic” levy required reform, announcing that a Government review of the licence fee model would examine a “range of options for funding the BBC”.

She added: “The review will include looking at how the BBC will increase its commercial revenues to reduce the burden of licence fee payers.”

BBC funding concerns

It is understood that all options will be on the table ahead of a report being completed in autumn 2024, with a subscription-based model likely to be considered.

Tory MP Sir Peter Bottomley, the head of the all-party Parliamentary group for the BBC, has suggested that reforming the licence fee into a means-tested tax could be an option.

BBC insiders have suggested an advertising-based model would likely result in the corporation taking the advertising revenue currently going to other broadcasters.

They also fear that a subscription model might risk the BBC dominating commercial TV in the UK, and attracting subscribers who might otherwise have gone elsewhere.

The corporation is reportedly concerned that any shift to a purely commercial footing would narrow its offering and appeal.

A statement from the BBC Board said:  “We note that the Government has restored a link to inflation on the licence fee after two years of no increases during a time of high inflation.

“The BBC is focussed on providing great value, as well as programmes and services that audiences love. However, this outcome will still require further changes on top of the major savings that we are already delivering.

“Our content budgets are now impacted, which in turn will have a significant impact on the wider creative sector across the UK. We will confirm the consequences of this as we work through our budgets in the coming months.”

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2023-12-07 23:25:00Z
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Rabu, 06 Desember 2023

Boris Johnson Covid Inquiry LIVE: Ex-PM to face second day's grilling - The Independent

Boris Johnson denies deleting Whatsapp messages ahead of Covid inquiry

Boris Johnson is to face a second day of grilling at the covid inquiry on Thursday.

The former prime minister will return to the hearing having been booed by crowds of bereaved families on Wednesday.

During his first day of testimony, Mr Johnson’s apology to the nation was interrupted by four people who staged a protest in the hearing room.

Mr Johnson arrived three hours early on Wednesday morning to dodge the protesters waiting outside. During the day he admitted the pandemic’s impact on the NHS had “bewildered” him. He also acknowledged the government’s policy appeared “incoherent” on the timing of actions in light of the graph in March 2020 suggesting the NHS could be overwhelmed.

Mr Johnson stumbled over his words as the inquiry heard he lost 5,000 WhatsApp messages between January 2020 and June 2020.

He also implied the mad cow disease crisis in Britain made him sceptical of the threat of coronavirus as it “wasn’t nearly as fatal as people had originally believed”.

1701932400

Johnson to return to inquiry for second day

Boris Johnson is set to return to the covid inquiry for a second and final day of evidence on Thursday.

Mr Johnson spent a full day addressing his handling of the pandemic on Wednesday.

During his testimony he admitted ‘underestimating’ threat of Covid in early days of pandemic.

The former prime minister is the most senior politician to address the inquiry to date, following an appearance by former health secretary Matt Hancock last week.

Sam Rkaina7 December 2023 07:00
1701928800

Boris Johnson was the wrong prime minister at the wrong time

Read our editorial after the first day of Boris Johnson’s evidence at the inquiry: The words of Lee Cain, Boris Johnson’s former director of communications, hung over his old boss’s evidence to the Covid inquiry. “Covid,” he said, “was the wrong crisis for this prime minister’s skillset.”

He can say that again. But he does not need to, because so many other people are saying it, too – including, by implication, Mr Johnson himself, whose wavering and inconsistent evidence today confirmed the impression of him as someone incapable of making up his mind.

The inquiry heard from the politician who wrote an article arguing one side of a case and then another article arguing the other side. There are great advantages in intellectual openness, and in testing the strengths of different arguments from different viewpoints, and Mr Johnson always displays a great deal of pluralism. Unfortunately, he neither seems to have focused sufficiently on the detail, nor to have decided a broad approach and stuck to it.

Even now, more than three years after the events being inquired into, he seems unable to decide what he thought. He started with a patently insincere apology, saying how sorry he was that people had died. He then admitted that he had made mistakes (unspecified), without actually apologising for them. He then veered between cautious defiance in defence of his record and a show of contrition, at one point holding his head and appearing to be close to tears.

Sam Rkaina7 December 2023 06:00
1701925200

Pictures of protesters that met Boris Johnson outside inquiry

Sam Rkaina7 December 2023 05:00
1701921600

‘No guarantee’ sacking Hancock would have led to better replacement

Boris Johnson considered removing Matt Hancock from his job as health secretary at the height of the pandemic but there was no guarantee he would be “trading up” if he put someone else in.

The former prime minister backed Mr Hancock at the UK Covid-19 Inquiry, saying he had done a “good job in very difficult circumstances” as the Government struggled to get to grips with Covid-19 in 2020.

The former health secretary has been criticised by a number of witnesses at the Covid-19 inquiry, including Dominic Cummings and former civil service chief Lord Sedwill.

The inquiry heard that in one WhatsApp exchange with the permanent secretary at No 10, Simon Case, who is the current Cabinet Secretary, Lord Sedwill joked it was necessary to remove Mr Hancock to “save lives and protect the NHS”.

WhatsApp messages shared with the inquiry also revealed that former top Number 10 adviser Mr Cummings repeatedly pushed Mr Johnson to sack Mr Hancock.

At one stage, Mr Cummings claimed Mr Hancock had “lied his way through this and killed people and dozens and dozens of people have seen it”.

<p>Boris Johnson and Matt Hancock previously found to have broken rules around post-ministerial jobs</p>

Boris Johnson and Matt Hancock previously found to have broken rules around post-ministerial jobs

Sam Rkaina7 December 2023 04:00
1701918000

‘He only apologised because he got found out'

Commenting on the remarks, Sammie McFarland, chief executive of Long Covid Kids, said: “Boris Johnson didn’t apologise for using the language because it was wrong; he only apologised because he got found out and his actions have caused years of bullying and stigma for people suffering from Long Covid.

“We need a sincere apology.

“But more than that we need action and the inquiry to create meaningful and impactful recommendations going forward.

“Johnson also said that people think they are unwell. He needs to recognise that this is a real disease and a consequence of the pandemic alongside the unfortunate deaths and hospitalisations.”

<p>Former prime minister Boris Johnson said he ‘regretted’ his remarks about long Covid  </p>

Former prime minister Boris Johnson said he ‘regretted’ his remarks about long Covid

Sam Rkaina7 December 2023 03:00
1701914400

Mr Johnson ‘meant no disrespect’ with Gulf War comments

Mr Johnson told the inquiry that he only got a “proper” paper on long Covid in the summer of 2021.

Mr Keith told the inquiry that Mr Johnson “continued to make disparaging references to whether or not this is Gulf War syndrome stuff” in February 2021, and again in June 2021.

The inquiry has also previously been shown a WhatsApp message from February 2021, where Mr Johnson said: “Do we really believe in long Covid? Why can’t we hedge it more? I bet it’s complete Gulf War Syndrome stuff.”

Mr Johnson told the hearing: “It’s no disrespect to long Covid patients and I saw in the victim impact videos are some of the victims of long Covid, I can imagine what a dreadful thing is.

“But there are also, with Gulf War syndrome, many people who have terrible symptoms for a very long time.

“There are also people who think they may be suffering, I think this is the now accepted, from something associated with the Gulf War, but who are not in fact suffering from something associated with the Gulf War.

“So what I was trying to say was ‘where is the, where is the line’? And ‘please can someone explain to me what this is?’

“Because I was getting anecdotal accounts of people who were suffering from it, and I wanted to be able to say what we understood it to be and what we were doing about it.

“And what we were doing about it is fighting Covid, because the way to stop long Covid is to, is to stop Covid.”

Sam Rkaina7 December 2023 02:00
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Boris Johnson ‘regrets’ long Covid remarks

Boris Johnson has said he “regrets” describing long Covid as “bollocks”.

But charities representing people with the condition said the former prime minister “only apologised because he got found out”.

The UK Covid-19 Inquiry heard that Mr Johnson made a number of “disparaging” remarks about the condition during his time in office.

A document from October 2020 described symptoms of the condition, beside which he wrote “bollocks” and “this is Gulf War Syndrome”.

Counsel to the inquiry, Hugo Keith KC, said: “You were I think less sympathetic to the needs of those persons suffering from long-term sequela, that is to say, suffering from the condition (known) as long Covid.

“You questioned for quite some time whether or not that condition truly existed and you equated it to Gulf War syndrome repeatedly, is that fair?”

Mr Johnson replied: “Not really, no.

“The words that I scribbled in the margins of submissions about long Covid have obviously been now publicised and I’m sure that they have caused hurt and offence to the huge numbers of people who do indeed suffer from that syndrome.

“And I regret very much using that language and I should have thought about the possibility of future publication.”

<p>Boris Johnson during a visit to a hospital during the pandemic   </p>

Boris Johnson during a visit to a hospital during the pandemic

Sam Rkaina7 December 2023 01:00
1701907192

Families demand answers from former PM

Mert Dogus, 21, whose father died of Covid, said Mr Johnson “should be giving answers for some of his actions” at the Covid inquiry.

His father, cab driver Haci Ali Dogus, 49, died in March 2020, leaving behind his wife and two sons.

In response to Mr Johnson’s apology for the “suffering of the Covid victims”, Mr Dogus, a student at Brunel University London, said “I’m not surprised, he kind of owes it.

“Obviously, he was in control of the country at the time, so naturally, he should be apologising for those who are lost.”

Mr Dogus said Mr Johnson “should be giving answers for some of his actions” and it is “good for us to see his reasoning behind” decisions that Mr Johnson’s government took during the Covid pandemic.

In response Mr Johnson said at the inquiry that he was “not sure” whether Government decision-making had led to “materially” a larger number of excess deaths as a result of the pandemic, Mr Dogus said: “He can’t really say that.”

He said: “Boris waited, and he waited and waited and then obviously it spread a lot more and then it turned into this huge thing.”

“If you caught it whilst it was early, I think it wouldn’t have been as bad.”

Mr Dogus added that prohibited gatherings by Mr Johnson and government and Conservative Party staff during the Covid-19 pandemic was “a slap in the face to all of us, who have obviously lost members of our families”.

Sam Rkaina6 December 2023 23:59
1701903652

Bereaved family members call Johnson’s apology at Covid inquiry ‘meaningless’

Family members of people who died during the pandemic have criticised Boris Johnson after he admitted his government “underestimated” the threat of coronavirus.

Appearing at the Covid-19 Inquiry in London on Wednesday, Mr Johnson apologised for “the pain and the loss and the suffering of the Covid victims” but said he was “not sure” whether Government decision-making had led to “materially” a larger number of excess deaths.

Jane Basham, 61, whose sister Sandra died in January 2021 after contracting coronavirus, branded Mr Johnson’s apology “meaningless”, adding she held him responsible for her sibling’s death aged 61.

Sandra Basham had been caring for older people in their homes near Dartford, Kent, during the pandemic before she was admitted to hospital, with Ms Basham adding her family did not see her because they were taking the virus seriously.

Ms Basham, of Ipswich, Suffolk, said: “His apology is meaningless to me, and many of us who are bereaved.

“If Boris Johnson was truly sorry then he would have delivered a public inquiry when it was first requested and not forced a group of traumatised bereaved relatives to have to fight for it.

“He would have shown humility and met the bereaved families who stand outside the inquiry every day rather than scuttling in before dawn.”

<p>Jane Basham with sister Sandra</p>

Jane Basham with sister Sandra

Sam Rkaina6 December 2023 23:00
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In pictures: Protesters outside Covid inquiry on first day of Johnson’s evidence

<p>People hold placards as they protest outside the Covid Inquiry during the testimony by Boris Johnson on Wednesday </p>

People hold placards as they protest outside the Covid Inquiry during the testimony by Boris Johnson on Wednesday

<p>A van displaying a protest banner is parked outside the Covid-19 Inquiry in London on Wednesday</p>

A van displaying a protest banner is parked outside the Covid-19 Inquiry in London on Wednesday

<p>People hold banners as they protest after the arrival of Boris Johnson at the Covid Inquiry on Wednesday </p>

People hold banners as they protest after the arrival of Boris Johnson at the Covid Inquiry on Wednesday

Tara Cobham6 December 2023 22:00

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2023-12-07 07:00:00Z
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Chris Mason: Mood in Conservative Party bleak after Jenrick's resignation - BBC

Rishi SunakGetty Images

Rishi Sunak is seeking a route to Rwanda for migrants that is legally, practically and politically navigable.

Legally, because he has to find a way to address the concerns of the Supreme Court, who said his earlier plan was unlawful.

Practically, because he wants migrants on planes to Rwanda before the general election.

And politically because he has to simultaneously persuade those broadly on the left of his party who fret about any ideas they might regard as extreme and those on the right who fret he doesn't have the stomach to go far enough.

And the blunt truth is we now know his now former immigration minister, Robert Jenrick, thinks he's destined to fail, again. He had been talking to the prime minister for around a week about his concerns - and now he has resigned.

This matters because cutting illegal immigration matters to hundreds of Conservative MPs and millions of voters.

It matters, too, because having been a cork on Conservative chaos for much of his year and a bit as prime minister - in contrast to what came immediately before under Liz Truss and Boris Johnson - a moment like this has the potential to send that cork whizzing over the No10 garden wall.

Senior figures are musing privately that they wouldn't be surprised if Mr Sunak ended up facing a confidence vote from his own MPs.

"Lots of MPs are concerned about their seats and the polls, and they're rapidly forming the view the current management is not performing and will not deliver an election win," one senior Tory MP said.

"The danger is we get a confidence vote by accident because if one MP says 'I'm putting my letter in' others do too'."

The MP added: "I just want him to do better and listen to us. I actually want him to win the next general election, but frankly to please both wings of the party on an issue like this is impossible, and that's where leadership is important."

Another told me: "Rishi wouldn't lose a confidence vote. But I wouldn't be surprised if he faced one."

Robert Jenrick
EPA

A recurring theme from many Conservative MPs in private is a fear the leadership lacks a coherent strategy.

And all this in the very week the government was trying to make the case it was making progress on migration.

Sources would whisper that gone were the fireworks of Suella Braverman - the former home secretary - and now came the action.

And yet at the very moment the current Home Secretary James Cleverly was in Kigali, rebooting the government's plan to send some migrants to Rwanda, Mr Jenrick was telling the prime minister why it wouldn't work.

So, what happens next? Does Mr Jenrick's resignation galvanise a wider revolt that spins away into something perilous for the prime minister? After all, he was the in-house expert on immigration who has left because he reckons the new Rwanda plan is hopeless.

Or do Conservative MPs conclude yet another blast of the collywobbles would be unforgivably indulgent?

Excitable chatter is the currency of exchange at Westminster and the chatter about confidence votes and the like might not come to anything.

But the chatter is a measure of the mood among many Conservatives.

And the mood is bleak.

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2023-12-07 01:22:43Z
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