Senior Tory says Suella Braverman wants to act like Putin w…


Senior Tory says Suella Braverman wants to act like Putin with hardline alternative Rwanda proposals

Good morning. In Politico’s London Playbook briefing this morning, Eleni Courea quotes “a Tory minister allied with [Rishi] Sunak” claiming: “All things considered this week went as well it could have gone – the Rwanda judgment could have been a moment that open warfare broke out in the party, but that didn’t happen.”

Optimism is a good trait to have in life, but this is looking premature, to put it mildly. This morning the effective leader of one faction in the Conservative party is accusing the effective leader of another – quite seriously, it seems – of wanting to act like Putin.

The row has been triggered by Suella Braverman, the former home secretary. After she was sacked her allies briefed that she was ready to unleash a “grid of shit” on Sunak (“grid” is Whitehallspeak for news announcements lined up in advance) and one element has turned up this morning in the Daily Telegraph. On Wednesday Braverman said on X the government should respond to the supreme court Rwanda judgment by passing emergency legislation allowing the UK to ignore the European convention on human rights on this policy. In the Telegraph she has explained this plan in detail, and firmed it up.

Here is the most controversial proposal.

The [new Rwanda bill promised by Sunak] must enable flights before the next general election

Legislation must therefore circumvent the lengthy process of further domestic litigation, to ensure that flights can take off as soon as the new bill becomes law. To do this, the bill must exclude all avenues of legal challenge. The entirety of the Human Rights Act and European convention on human rights, and other relevant international obligations, or legislation, including the Refugee Convention, must be disapplied by way of clear “notwithstanding” clauses.
Judicial Review, all common law challenges, and all injunctive relief, including the suspensive challenges available under the Illegal Migration Act must be expressly excluded. Individuals would, however, be given the chance to demonstrate that they had entered the country legally, were under 18, or were medically unfit to fly – but Home Office decisions on these claims could not be challenged in court.

Last night Damian Green, who was de facto deputy PM under Theresa May, said this proposal meant Braverman wanted to act like Vladimir Putin.

The second test is the most unconservative statement I have ever heard from a Conservative politician. Giving the state the explicit power to override every legal constraint is what Putin and Xi do. We absolutely cannot go there.

The second test is the most unconservative statement I have ever heard from a Conservative politician. Giving the state the explicit power to override every legal constraint is what Putin and Xi do. We absolutely cannot go there. https://t.co/vYv6PiJRWb

— Damian Green MP (@DamianGreen) November 16, 2023

This is not just a row between two backbenchers. Green is chair of the One Nation Conservative Caucus. It is not a particularly powerful group in the party now, but it does represent what many voters might still think of as traditional Conservatism. And Braverman will be the lead candidate for the right in a future leadership contest; currently she is fourth favourite to win.

Green was not the only Tory tweeting about Braverman’s article last night. Sir Simon Clarke, levelling up secretary in Liz Truss’s government, says he agrees with Braverman’s plan, and that if the Lords block it, Sunak should call an election.

Suella sets out clear and rigorous tests for new legislation on small boats. We should be crystal clear: half measures won’t work. We need the legislation that is brought forward to be truly effective, and if the Lords block it – let’s take it to the country.

Suella sets out clear and rigorous tests for new legislation on small boats. We should be crystal clear: half measures won’t work. We need the legislation that is brought forward to be truly effective, and if the Lords block it – let’s take it to the country. https://t.co/sPfd1rR7ia

— Simon Clarke MP (@SimonClarkeMP) November 16, 2023

I will post more from Braverman’s article, and from Green and Clarke, who were both on the Today programme this morning, shortly.

Here is the agenda for the day.

Morning: Rishi Sunak is on a visit in Nottinghamshire, where he is due to record a pooled TV clip.

Morning: Keir Starmer is visting a carbon capture storage facility in Aberdeen with Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, and Ed Miliband, the shadow climate change and net zero secretary. Starmer will record a pooled TV clip, and in the afternoon he is recording an interview with the News Agents podcast.

11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

If you want to contact me, do try the “send us a message” feature. You’ll see it just below the byline – on the left of the screen, if you are reading on a laptop or a desktop. This is for people who want to message me directly. I find it very useful when people message to point out errors (even typos – no mistake is too small to correct). Often 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 in the comments below the line; privately (if you leave an email address and that seems more appropriate); or in the main blog, if I think it is a topic of wide interest.

Key events

Rishi Sunak has been taking part in a Q&A in Worksop. Pictures have arrived on the wires, but no words yet. As soon as we hear what he said, I’ll post his comments.

Rishi Sunak has been taking part in a Q&A session at Cafe-Neo at the Priory Shopping Centre in Worksop.
Rishi Sunak has been taking part in a Q&A session at Cafe-Neo at the Priory Shopping Centre in Worksop. Photograph: Peter Powell/PA

Braverman questions value of ‘vague, unaccountable concept of international law’

Here is a summary of the main points from Suella Braverman’s Telegraph article attacking Rishi Sunak’s revised Rwanda plan.

  • Braverman, the former home secretary, criticises the government for not legislating in a way that might have stopped the supreme court ruling the Rwanda deportation policy unlawful. Given that Braverman was in government until Monday, this is a brave argument to make, but Braverman is restating the argument she made in her departure letter on Tuesday, in which she claimed Rishi Sunak repeatedly blocked her ideas. In the Telegraph Braverman says:

The fault lies with the politicians who have failed to introduce legislation that would guarantee delivery of our Rwanda partnership.

And Braverman restates the claim in she made in her letter on Tuesday that Sunak is guilty of “magical thinking”. She says:

What matters for those of us who believe in effective immigration control is how to move forward. This requires honesty.

Above all, it demands of the government an end to self-deception and spin. There must be no more magical thinking. Tinkering with a failed plan will not stop the boats.

Amending our agreement with Rwanda and converting it into a treaty, even with explicit obligations on non-refoulement, will not solve the fundamental issue …

To try and deliver flights to Rwanda under any new treaty would still require going back through the courts, a process that would likely take at least another year.

That process could culminate in yet another defeat, on new grounds, or on similar grounds to Wednesday: principally, that judges can’t be certain Rwanda will abide by the terms of any new treaty.

That is why the plan outlined by the PM will not yield flights to Rwanda before an election if Plan B is simply a tweaked version of the failed Plan A.

  • She proposes a new, five-point plan to enable deportations to Rwanda to start quickly. I have quoted the key element in full already. (See 9.23am.) Here are the other four proposals in full.

The Bill must address the Supreme Court’s concerns regarding Rwanda

Parliament is entitled to assert that Rwanda is safe without making any changes to our Rwanda partnership.
However, for substantive and presentational reasons, it would be preferable to amend that agreement to address issues identified by the judges. This could include embedding UK observers and independent reviewers of asylum decisions.
It is less important whether these commitments are embodied in an amended memorandum or a new treaty.
What is crucial is that they are practical steps to improve Rwanda’s asylum system. On the basis of these new commitments, Rwanda’s safety could be credibly confirmed on the face of the Bill.

Swift removal must mean swift removal
Those arriving illegally must be removed in a matter of days rather than months as under the Illegal Migration Act. This means amending the act to ensure that removals to Rwanda are mandated under the duty to remove, with strict time limits. This will streamline the Home Office process as much as possible, so that the only Home Office decision is to determine whether an individual falls within the scheme or not.

Those arriving here illegally must be detained
Legal challenges to detention must be excluded to avoid burdening the courts, making it clear that detention is mandated until removal.

This must be treated as an emergency
The bill should be introduced by Christmas recess and Parliament should be recalled to sit and debate it over the holiday period.

  • She questions the value of international law, referring at one point to the “vague, shifting, and unaccountable concept of “international law’”. She says:

The more fundamental question is where does ultimate authority in the United Kingdom sit? Is it with the British people and their elected representatives in Parliament? Or is it with the vague, shifting, and unaccountable concept of “international law”?

In a post last week, in response to a question from a reader, I explained why Braverman could be described as far right. This article makes the case for using the label even stronger.

Senior Tory says Suella Braverman wants to act like Putin with hardline alternative Rwanda proposals

Good morning. In Politico’s London Playbook briefing this morning, Eleni Courea quotes “a Tory minister allied with [Rishi] Sunak” claiming: “All things considered this week went as well it could have gone – the Rwanda judgment could have been a moment that open warfare broke out in the party, but that didn’t happen.”

Optimism is a good trait to have in life, but this is looking premature, to put it mildly. This morning the effective leader of one faction in the Conservative party is accusing the effective leader of another – quite seriously, it seems – of wanting to act like Putin.

The row has been triggered by Suella Braverman, the former home secretary. After she was sacked her allies briefed that she was ready to unleash a “grid of shit” on Sunak (“grid” is Whitehallspeak for news announcements lined up in advance) and one element has turned up this morning in the Daily Telegraph. On Wednesday Braverman said on X the government should respond to the supreme court Rwanda judgment by passing emergency legislation allowing the UK to ignore the European convention on human rights on this policy. In the Telegraph she has explained this plan in detail, and firmed it up.

Here is the most controversial proposal.

The [new Rwanda bill promised by Sunak] must enable flights before the next general election

Legislation must therefore circumvent the lengthy process of further domestic litigation, to ensure that flights can take off as soon as the new bill becomes law. To do this, the bill must exclude all avenues of legal challenge. The entirety of the Human Rights Act and European convention on human rights, and other relevant international obligations, or legislation, including the Refugee Convention, must be disapplied by way of clear “notwithstanding” clauses.
Judicial Review, all common law challenges, and all injunctive relief, including the suspensive challenges available under the Illegal Migration Act must be expressly excluded. Individuals would, however, be given the chance to demonstrate that they had entered the country legally, were under 18, or were medically unfit to fly – but Home Office decisions on these claims could not be challenged in court.

Last night Damian Green, who was de facto deputy PM under Theresa May, said this proposal meant Braverman wanted to act like Vladimir Putin.

The second test is the most unconservative statement I have ever heard from a Conservative politician. Giving the state the explicit power to override every legal constraint is what Putin and Xi do. We absolutely cannot go there.

The second test is the most unconservative statement I have ever heard from a Conservative politician. Giving the state the explicit power to override every legal constraint is what Putin and Xi do. We absolutely cannot go there. https://t.co/vYv6PiJRWb

— Damian Green MP (@DamianGreen) November 16, 2023

This is not just a row between two backbenchers. Green is chair of the One Nation Conservative Caucus. It is not a particularly powerful group in the party now, but it does represent what many voters might still think of as traditional Conservatism. And Braverman will be the lead candidate for the right in a future leadership contest; currently she is fourth favourite to win.

Green was not the only Tory tweeting about Braverman’s article last night. Sir Simon Clarke, levelling up secretary in Liz Truss’s government, says he agrees with Braverman’s plan, and that if the Lords block it, Sunak should call an election.

Suella sets out clear and rigorous tests for new legislation on small boats. We should be crystal clear: half measures won’t work. We need the legislation that is brought forward to be truly effective, and if the Lords block it – let’s take it to the country.

Suella sets out clear and rigorous tests for new legislation on small boats. We should be crystal clear: half measures won’t work. We need the legislation that is brought forward to be truly effective, and if the Lords block it – let’s take it to the country. https://t.co/sPfd1rR7ia

— Simon Clarke MP (@SimonClarkeMP) November 16, 2023

I will post more from Braverman’s article, and from Green and Clarke, who were both on the Today programme this morning, shortly.

Here is the agenda for the day.

Morning: Rishi Sunak is on a visit in Nottinghamshire, where he is due to record a pooled TV clip.

Morning: Keir Starmer is visting a carbon capture storage facility in Aberdeen with Anas Sarwar, the Scottish Labour leader, and Ed Miliband, the shadow climate change and net zero secretary. Starmer will record a pooled TV clip, and in the afternoon he is recording an interview with the News Agents podcast.

11.30am: Downing Street holds a lobby briefing.

If you want to contact me, do try the “send us a message” feature. You’ll see it just below the byline – on the left of the screen, if you are reading on a laptop or a desktop. This is for people who want to message me directly. I find it very useful when people message to point out errors (even typos – no mistake is too small to correct). Often 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 in the comments below the line; privately (if you leave an email address and that seems more appropriate); or in the main blog, if I think it is a topic of wide interest.





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