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Cooper defends Starmer as migration speech likened to ‘rivers of blood’ language

13 May 2025 4 minute read
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper. Photo Lucy North/PA Wire

Yvette Cooper has defended Sir Keir Starmer amid criticism that his language as he set out plans to crack down on migration echoed Enoch Powell’s infamous “rivers of blood” speech.

The Home Secretary insisted the tone of the Prime Minister’s migration plan was “completely different” from the 1968 anti-immigration speech.

The plans, which are expected to reduce the number of people coming to the UK by up to 100,000 per year, include reforming work and study visas and requiring a higher level of English across all immigration routes.

Labour backbenchers were among those who attacked Sir Keir for the language he used to announce the plans on Monday, including his claim that the UK risks becoming an “island of strangers” if ministers do not act on migration.

Migration

In his 1968 speech, Mr Powell said people could find themselves “strangers in their own country” as a result of migration.

Mr Powell was sacked from the Conservative frontbench as a result of making the speech, because it outraged senior Tories at the time.

Asked about the comparison, Ms Cooper told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I don’t think it’s right to make those comparisons. It’s completely different.

“And the Prime Minister said yesterday, I think almost in the same breath… talked about the diverse country that we are, and that being part of our strength.”

Asked if Sir Keir’s speech-writers had been aware of the similarity in language, the Home Secretary replied: “I don’t know.”

She also insisted that critics should focus of the substance of the migration plans, telling Today: “I think we do actually have to be able to have a serious conversation about the policies.

“You’re right. Everybody always gets caught up in focusing on different phrases, but we do have to be talking about the policies.”

Ms Cooper had earlier suggested to BBC Breakfast that the Prime Minister values the contribution of migrants to the UK.

Controlled

She said: “I think part of the point that he (Sir Keir) is making is that we have to recognise people have come to the UK through generations to do really important jobs in our NHS, founding our biggest businesses, doing some of the most difficult jobs, but it’s because that’s important the system has to be controlled and managed, and it just hasn’t been.”

The Home Secretary also refused to put a number on the amount by which she wants to see net migration reduced because, she said, targets used by the Tories in government had been “meaningless”.

Elsewhere, shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick claimed the UK “already” is an island of strangers in some places.

“Aggressive levels of mass migration have made us more divided,” he told Times Radio.

In the Commons, the Prime Minister’s announcement on Monday drew criticism from across the political spectrum.

Former shadow chancellor John McDonnell, who lost the Labour whip last year, was chief among those who accused Sir Keir of “reflecting the language” of Mr Powell’s infamous speech.

Labour backbencher Olivia Blake (Sheffield Hallam) suggested the phrase could “risk legitimising the same far-right violence we saw in last year’s summer riots”.

Nigel Farage, whose Reform UK party has focused heavily on immigration in its campaigns, said the Government “will not do what it takes to control our borders”.

The proposals also sparked concern from employers, particularly in the care sector, following the announcement that care worker visas will be scrapped.

GMB national officer Will Dalton said the decision would be “potentially catastrophic” because the care sector is “utterly reliant on migrant workers” and still has more than 130,000 vacancies across the country.

The Home Office believes there are 40,000 potential members of staff originally brought over by “rogue” providers who could work in the sector while UK staff are trained up.

CBI chief executive Rain Newton-Smith warned that labour shortages across different sectors “can’t be solved by training alone” in the context of a shrinking workforce and an ageing population.


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Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
7 months ago

On the same page, how to whip up the ‘silent majority’ Morgan O’Cork thinks there is a Moseley in every little Englander…

Mab Meirion
Mab Meirion
7 months ago
Reply to  Mab Meirion

Stranger…Morgan O’Cork pulling the modelling balloon Prime Minister’s strings.

The PM is so compromised, in Law he should have to recuse himself…

The level of hypocrisy we are subjected to is beyond belief…

Jeff
Jeff
7 months ago

But he did.
Come on Labour politicians, get the message in at number 10, trying to out race hate farage is a loser.

Evan Aled Bayton
Evan Aled Bayton
7 months ago

Sadly some aspects of what Enoch Powell predicted have happened. Whatever his motives for making that speech it is a fact that mass immigration has as he predicted altered the nature of the UK for good. A lot of this is for the better. However there are as both Starmer and Powell indicated some groups who do not integrate and basically live here in ghettoes. It is not unreasonable for a host country to expect immigrants to sign up to basic values and to maximise their participation in society by learning the main language. It is in fact to the… Read more »

Alan Jones
Alan Jones
7 months ago

At this rate Farage could sit in the pub all day & let Starmer do his work for him, it would seem that farage is now driving the uk’s immigration policy just by spouting off his drivel to anyone who will listen, the Labour party will do the rest. No doubt the mutton headed hard right haters in the land will have perked up over the “an island of strangers” remark & take it that Starmer is on their side as no doubt those same blockheads will ignore the rest of the speech & the context. Wasn’t it the vindictive… Read more »

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