All this talk about how "Sunak is waiting for the verdict on the Rwanda policy" before sacking Braverman isn't quite the politically astute move some seem to think. Long thread on the pointlessness of the Rwanda policy and why Sunak's best option is to fire Braverman before. 1/
First off, fairly obviously, it means this drags on until Wednesday. That's a long time in politics at the best of times. From a political perspective there are two main ways this plays out at this stage. 2/
A) The policy is ruled unlawful. We all know if Braverman is in post she will attack the judges, lawyers and charities. This means Sunak has to either support those attacks on people doing their jobs to uphold the law, or, yet again, distance himself from his Home Secretary. 3/
Either way, it is a foregone conclusion, after the scenes in London yesterday, that any verbal attack on individuals or professions by the Home Secretary carries with it a very real threat of the far right taking it as a call to action to carry out a physical attack. 4/
The second that physical attack happens it will be on Sunak as much as Braverman if he has left her in post, and, from a political perspective, that won't play with voters. The racist thug vote might be vocal, but it is actually really small. 5/
B) So we come to the second possible outcome, the policy is found lawful. Now Sunak has a serious issue, because now it looks like he is sacking a successful Home Secretary, who has just won a landmark case, and he has a policy which he knows he can't actually use anyway. 6/
You see, here's the rub. I can wax lyrical about the inhumanity and immorality of forcibly removing vulnerable people to an effective dictatorship with a track record of shooting refugees who asked for food, press ganging refugees into fighting in illegal wars, 7/
Causing those who disagree with Kagame's government to disappear, leaving refugees in destitution, denying 100% of asylum claims from countries such as Afghanistan, Syria, Yemen etc etc. It is a long and often repeated list of cruelty, and it has all already been factored in. 8/
Sunak's issue is he can't mask the reality of the policy from the public anymore. He knows that Rwanda has capacity for, at most, 200 people. Even the one judge who supported the government during the Appeals Court case warned his agreement was on that basis. 9/
He knows that he will struggle to get an airline to be able to take off, and, even then, he knows his grand statement move will be overtaken with the images of protestors and attempts to prevent the flights. It won't exactly be a photo opportunity for him or his government. 10/
He knows that, because his government, his Home Secretary, has effectively stopped processing asylum claims he still has to find accommodation for the tens of thousands of people seeking safety who have been left in limbo. 11/
He knows that means more cases as his government overrules local communities to build more internment camps across the country to place those seeking asylum indefinitely. None of this looks great with the electorate. 12/
So now he has an emboldened far right expecting all those seeking asylum to disappear overnight, a Home Secretary stoking them, and a policy which he knows will make absolutely no real difference, either to people coming to the UK or the need to support those already here. 13/
It's not a great outlook for him as he tries to limp on for another year. Every day knowing his Home Secretary is going to push out something else which he needs to distance himself, and, more to the point, knowing that he has a Home Secretary who wants to cause trouble. 14/
There has been a suggestion that Braverman thinks there should be a snap election fought on small boats policies. If anything demonstrated how out of touch the Home Secretary, and by extension the PM who hasn't fired her, it is this one suggestion. 15/
Immigration no longer has the political salience it once did. People are more concerned about personal things, like not being able to afford to eat or heat their homes. They are also not as racist and bigoted as Braverman seems to genuinely believe. 16/
A snap election would be political suicide for the @Conservatives, but, hey, who am I to try and dissuade them from taking the chance. Doing so because the MP rated most unfavourably by the public tells you to is just idiocy though. 17/
Yes, sacking Braverman gives the risk of mobilising the hard right of the Conservative party, but the actual really hardcore of those, the ones who will sacrifice personal ambition for ideology and support someone not in one of the "great offices of state", are very small. 18/
Not sacking her doesn't stop that mobilisation, it just makes it worse, as they can rally behind a senior cabinet minister, rather than a non-entity backbencher. Waiting for the Rwanda verdict makes no difference to this calculation, but could make it worse. 19/
If the Rwanda policy is found lawful, it becomes harder to fire Braverman. If unlawful, she will rile up the far right again. Firing her beforehand makes anything she says after the verdict dismissible as the petty rantings of a scorned MP. It's the politically best option. 20/
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Hmmm, let's look at the claims in the @ukhomeoffice's latest video individually shall we? Because they aren't exactly giving the full picture, by which I mean that while some are accurate in a very technical sense, all are disingenuous in the dictionary, and real world, sense. 1/
The Bibby Stockholm was undeniably used by oil rig workers. Couple of key points, firstly the "decades" bit. This is a nearly fifty year old barge, which has had the capacity doubled. It has also been criticized by former oil rig workers who used it. 2/
. pressandjournal.co.uk/fp/news/uk/603…
Yes the Dutch have used vessels like this, Scotland uses cruise ships which I think most of us would agree are somewhat different to a barge. In fact the Dutch used this exact vessel, before decommissioning it due to massive safety and welfare concerns. 3/ euronews.com/2023/08/07/bib…
This is all too common, even among MPs and Lords. They really don't seem to understand the fundamentals of the Rwanda plan. People will be forcibly shipped to a country which routinely violates human rights, and permanently barred from ever coming to the UK. 1/
Their claims will not be heard under UK asylum law, and instead under the Rwandan system, which has accepted ZERO, applications from the likes of Afghanistan and Yemen. They and their children will be denied asylum in the UK in the future. 2/
The Rwanda policy is not about "providing a safe route to Rwanda". It's an effective dictatorship with a track record of shooting refugees or press ganging them to fight in an illegal war, and which has just been sanctioned for the use of child soldiers. 3/
Long thread: A common refrain in the media and from @Conservatives is that there are "no alternatives" to their inhumane and odious anti-asylum policies. Sadly this appears to be a narrative which to some extent @UKLabour have bought into. It is not reality though. 1/25
Let's do a little scene setting though, because to understand what works you have to actually look at the evidence behind not only why people come to the UK seeking safety, bust also refugee movements in general. 2/25
First off we know, categorically, that "deterrents" do not work. They have never worked and never will. What happens in reality is when you close one route another, often longer and more dangerous one opens up. Even the @ukhomeoffice recognises this. 3/25 freemovement.org.uk/wp-content/upl…
Let's just clear this up, the Ukraine scheme is not a resettlement route. It does not provide asylum. It is a highly limited three year visa, many of which will be running out without this government having anything in place to ensure those on them can still find safety here. 1/
It also demonstrates exactly why claiming making it safer and simpler for people to reach the UK will lead to substantially more people seeking asylum here is nonsense. Majority of Ukrainians have remained closer to Ukraine, just as majority of refugees do globally. 2/
So not only does the Ukraine scheme, and the fact that people are still waiting on visas, not count as a resettlement route for asylum, it shows how this government avoids providing routes to asylum even when those needing it are on our doorstep. 3/
https://t.co/gW8kAAGDvpmigrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk/resources/brie…
THREAD: One of the common "gotchas" from those opposed to providing people with asylum has always been "why don't you put them up then". They tend to think it is highly clever, yet ignore how fatuous and ridiculous it is on a number of levels. 1/
First and foremost, those seeking asylum need to be able to rebuild their lives. They have often left behind everything they know, everyone they love. It is imperative that they have agency in their own lives to recover from that, and proper support to do so. 2/
Barring a very, very, small number of people globally, the average person does not have the means and resources of a nation state to provide that. One person housing someone helps in the short term, but it isn't a long term strategy. 3/
This is an important threat by Lord Dubs, however, if I may raise one issue. Asylum seekers are migrants. A migrant is by definition anyone who moves. Now we have taken it to mean across borders, but migration happens internally as well. 1/
I agree entirely with @AlfDubs that the immigration system and the asylum system are being conflated, despite being two different things, and that this is where the differentiation of the terms becomes both useful, and problematic. 2/
I have in the past argued myself that we should use the term "asylum seeker" separately from "migrant" to reflect the very individualised circumstances facing both, but I have rethought this over time. 3/