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Tory leadership hopeful Jenrick says party must act to end mass migration

30 Jul 2024 4 minute read
Robert Jenrick. Photo Jonathan Brady PA Images

Tory leadership hopeful Robert Jenrick said his party has been “unable or unwilling” to do what is required to cut the number of people coming to the UK.

The former immigration minister said hundreds of thousands of people “we didn’t need” had arrived legally while “dangerous” immigrants could not be deported.

Mr Jenrick, who backs pulling out of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) to tackle issues around small boat crossings, said “our people and Parliament must be sovereign”.

In a video to launch his leadership campaign, he said: “When I was minister for immigration, I saw dangerous people coming into our country. I saw us unable to deport them. I saw hundreds of thousands of people we frankly didn’t need coming in legally.

“But our politics was unable or unwilling to deliver what was needed.

“The new government aren’t going to fix things. They have too many delusions.

“Our party is our country’s best hope.

“But we have a mountain to climb and real choices to make. We won’t regain people’s trust with platitudes.”

Rwanda

Mr Jenrick resigned from Rishi Sunak’s government in 2023, claiming that the plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda did not go far enough.

In his pitch to replace Mr Sunak, he said: “I believe that anyone who comes here illegally must be deported within days. I believe that ending mass migration won’t be plain sailing. But we must do it.

“I believe we can and must get our economy to grow much faster. By building more homes in our cities. Producing more reliably cheap energy. And getting our people real skills, not low-value degrees. I believe in a safety net but far too many people are on welfare right now.

“I want a small state that works. Not a big one that fails.”

He said the Tory party needs to change “a lot” in the wake of its worst election defeat but it must maintain values including respect for institutions and a “desire for national unity, not division”.

“We lost support in part because we stopped upholding these values,” he said.

Mr Jenrick, who bookmakers have as second favourite in the race behind Kemi Badenoch, said: “I will unite us around the actual solutions to the challenges we face.”

Outsider

Shadow work and pensions secretary Mel Stride, an outsider in the leadership race, insisted that he was the one who stood the best chance of bringing the party together.

He told LBC Radio: “I think most parliamentarians on our side would say that I’m respected across the party, my political positioning, being pretty much on the centre-right, I think is good for that.”

Mr Stride said the party had “spent too much time fighting each other” but he could “bring our parliamentary party back together as one united force”.

He suggested Mr Jenrick’s stance on the ECHR could put him at odds with some of his own MPs.

“I think it’s really important to understand that whatever position is taken will have to be one that’s a universal position held by the parliamentary Conservative Party and that putting stakes in the ground very early now – I see the attraction of doing it – but putting stakes in the ground actually is a pretty tricky thing to do.

“Because what you don’t want to do is win this contest and go back to your parliamentary crew back at the ranch and say ‘here I am, let’s all get together’ and half of them say ‘hold on a minute, you’ve committed to this, this and this and I don’t like that and I’m not going to play ball’.”

Six candidates are challenging for the leadership – Mr Jenrick, Mrs Badenoch, Mr Stride, Tom Tugendhat, James Cleverly and Dame Priti Patel – with the winner announced on November 2.

The field will be narrowed to four in time for the Tory conference in the autumn before MPs vote for a final two who will face a ballot of Conservative members.


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S Duggan
S Duggan
4 months ago

The party still hasn’t learnt that this fixation on immigration and tax cuts are not foremost in people’s minds. Tackling the cost of living crisis and making the country fairer and more equal are more of a concern. If the party wants to attain power again in the near future it has to move away from this far right ideology. In Wales – the ‘Welsh’ Conservatives need to separate themselves from the ideologically driven UK party and put Wales first or find itself increasingly alienated.

Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
4 months ago

If Jenrick said we should reduce immigration, that would be ok. However, this scrap all human rights for everybody extremist uses the term ‘mass migration’ to push the false narrative that all humans on the planet are upping sticks and heading for Dover.

hdavies15
hdavies15
4 months ago
Reply to  Fi yn unig

Migration on such scale will continue to be a major issue as long as governments like that of UK and others in EU, USA, Russia, China wealthy Gulf States etc continue to provide supplies and support to warring states and factions particularly in Africa, Asia and Middle East. USA also has the same problem in Latin/South America. Aggressive economic “colonialism” is a big driver of instability as most of the beneficiaries are elites in those countries being “developed”. So there’s a lot of changes to be made in the conduct of international relations before all this migration eases.

Fi yn unig
Fi yn unig
4 months ago
Reply to  hdavies15

I entirely agree with your points. The trouble is (dis) honest Bob, who likes to tell the uninformed that people are preferring to leave their beautiful utopias which have never been interfered with by the British Empire are strangely choosing to come to Britain only, does not.

Cymro Penperllenni
Cymro Penperllenni
4 months ago

Who cares what he thinks

Llyn
Llyn
4 months ago

The opposition will have a field day if Jenrick becomes their leader -https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2020/jun/24/robert-jenrick-planning-row-the-key-questions-answered

Rhufawn Jones
Rhufawn Jones
4 months ago

Including mass migration of English nationalist Tory voters into the Welsh heartlands?

hdavies15
hdavies15
4 months ago
Reply to  Rhufawn Jones

Yet another sort of “migrant” problem. Generally not displaced by war, famine or seeking work but shifting westwards to cash in on relative property values and crashing our substandard NHS and care systems. New generation of invasive colonialism.

Karl
Karl
4 months ago

Leave themselves vulnerable as they carry on with their far right tactics. Now it worked in government as they did little for 14 yrs, robbed us all and blamed people in boats. But finally people seen through the lies and thefts. This stance will not win them anything and that’s great.

Erisian
Erisian
4 months ago

Same old Tory One-Note-Samba, played on a dog-whistle by the tone-deaf.

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