Starmer and Macron to hammer out migrants deal in crunch summit

Sir Keir Starmer and Emmanuel Macron will engage in crunch talks to hammer out a migration deal, after the pair admitted a “new deterrent” was needed to stop small boats crossing the English Channel.
The Prime Minister hopes the French president will sign up to a “one in, one out” deal when they hold a Franco-British summit at Downing Street on Thursday, the last day of Mr Macron’s state visit to the UK.
Under the terms of the deal, Britain would accept migrants with links to the country in exchange for sending others back across the channel.
French newspaper Le Monde reported that some 50 migrants a week would initially be returned to France under the terms of the proposed deal, which it described as largely symbolic.
Deal
If such a deal were struck, it would only result in the return of a fraction of the 21,000 people who have made the channel crossing so far in 2025, a record for this point in a year.
But it would also represent a concession by the French that such returns are possible, after years of MPs on the right of British politics insisting France is a “safe” country where migrants can be sent back to.
The Times reported the scheme would be scaled up after an initial pilot had shown “proof of concept”, citing Government sources.
In return, Mr Macron is said to be pushing for the UK to do more to address “pull factors” which are attracting people to make the dangerous crossing to the English coast.
When Mr Macron and Sir Keir met in Downing Street on Wednesday, the small boats crisis appeared to be the mainstay of their conversations.
The pair agreed the crossings are a “shared priority that requires shared solutions”, a Downing Street spokesperson said.
They added: “The Prime Minister spoke of his Government’s toughening of the system in the past year to ensure rules are respected and enforced, including a massive surge in illegal working arrests to end the false promise of jobs that are used to sell spaces on boats.
“The two leaders agreed on the need to go further and make progress on new and innovative solutions, including a new deterrent to break the business model of these gangs.”
Progress
Both Mr Macron and Sir Keir aim for “concrete progress” on the matter at Thursday’s summit, No 10 said, as well as in other areas like support for Ukraine.
Following the French-UK summit, the two leaders will host a call with coalition of the willing partners, the proposed peacekeeping mission to deter Russia from attacking Ukraine in future.
In a sign of close alignment on defence, Britain and France have announced they will buy new supplies of Storm Shadow missiles, which both have loaned to Ukraine to strike targets deep inside Russia.
The two nations will also work closely to develop a successor to the long-range missile, the Ministry of Defence said.
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@Hammer, Out and Crunch…such language of the new romantics, so, tough love with a side order of brutality…
Migration is a difficult topic, but sometime the root causes / other factors are ignored. London celebrates ethnic diversity with events such as the Notting Hill carnival, and mature regions embrace other cultures and fully integrate – Cardiff has lots of international religious centre, but does France? https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-66071455.amp If France integrated migrants, maybe less would come to UK? In 1998 i worked in Montreal Airport – was Canada’s immigration entry point. Every November Air Canada would fly planes to Bangladesh for economic migrants, BUT all migrants only had low paid airport jobs, well paid roles were reserved for individuals who… Read more »
Bafflingly the requirement to check the local market before importing workers was eliminated by Boris Johnson.