Suella Braverman has warned MPs she “will not be hectored by out of touch lefties” with “accusations of bigotry” over her small boats policy.
The home secretary, speaking at the second reading of the Illegal Migration Bill, hit out at those who have criticised the government’s new policy.
After being announced last week, it has come under intense criticism in a row that saw ex-footballer and BBC pundit Gary Lineker taken off air.
On Monday evening, after hours of heated debate, the second reading passed the Commons by a majority of 62 so will now go to the committee stage where a detailed examination of the proposed law will take place and amendments put forward.
Ms Braverman, whose parents emigrated to the UK from Kenya and Mauritius in the 1960s, told MPs on Monday: “I want to put something on the record, it’s perfectly respectable for a child of immigrants like me to say I’m deeply grateful to live here, to say that immigration has been overwhelmingly good for Great Britain but that we’ve had too much of it in recent years.
“And to say that uncontrolled and illegal migration is simply bad.
“Yet, despite our reasonable concerns we’ve raised on several occasions, I am subject to the most grotesque slurs for saying simple truths about the impact of unlimited and illegal immigration.
“The worst among them poisoned by the extreme ideology of identity politics suggests that a person’s skin colour should dictate their political views.”
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The home secretary added: “I will not be hectored by out of touch lefties or anyone for that matter.
“I won’t be patronised on what appropriate views for someone of my background can hold. I will not back down when faced with spurious accusations of bigotry.
“When such smears seep into the discourse of this chamber, as they did last week, accusations that this government’s policies, policies backed by the majority of the British people, are bigoted, are xenophobic, are dog whistles to racists, it is irresponsible and frankly beneath the dignity of this place.
“Politicians of all stripes should know better and they should choose their words carefully.”
Ms Braverman added there is a “moral duty to stop the boats” given the risk of life and insisted the policy “does, in fact, guarantee humanitarian protection for those who genuinely need it”.
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Suella Braverman: ‘We’re not breaking the law’
“Our policy is profoundly and at heart a humane attempt to break the incentive that sustains the business model of the smuggling gangs,” she said.
The controversial bill has been denounced by the UN’s refugee agency as an effective “asylum ban” and it was a stormy opening to the second reading.
Chris Skidmore became the second Conservative MP after Caroline Nokes to criticise the bill, saying he could not vote for it as he is “not prepared to break international law”.
Former prime minister Theresa May said: “What should be clear from this is whenever you close a route, the migrants and the people smugglers find another way, and anybody who thinks that this Bill will deal with the issue of illegal migration once and for all is wrong.
“Not least because a significant number, if not the majority, of people who are here illegally don’t come on small boats, they come legally and overstay their visas.”
Asked about her intervention on a visit to the US, Rishi Sunak said: “I’m confident that our Bill represents the best way to grip this problem.
“I’ve also always been clear that there is no overnight easy one simple solution to what is a complicated problem. It will take lots of different interventions.”
Labour’s shadow home secretary Yvette Cooper received many cheers from her side as she said her party will not back the bill.
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Labour: ‘Deeply damaging chaos’
She said the bill is effectively a “traffickers charter” that will “lock up children” and remove support from women who have been trafficked.
“It makes it easier for those gangs as well,” Ms Cooper added.
“It won’t return everyone, in fact it makes it harder to get return agreements. It won’t clear the asylum backlog, in fact it will mean tens of thousands more people in asylum accommodation and hotels.
“It won’t deliver controlled and managed safe alternatives. Instead, it will cut them back and it will rip up our long-standing commitment to international law. It will lock up children.”
Image: Demonstrators protesting in Parliament Square, London
As MPs debated the bill, hundreds of protesters gathered in Parliament Square to demonstrate against it.
Zrinka Bralo, CEO of Migrants Organise, said: “We are here to stand up for dignity and justice and speak out against this new bill, which is further dehumanising and demonising refugees and is damaging our democracy.”
France’s prime minister has failed in a last-minute bid to save his job, with the country’s National Assembly ousting him in a confidence vote.
Francois Bayrou – who entered office just nine months ago – is required to submit the resignation of his minority government after losing Monday afternoon’s vote by an overwhelming 364-194.
The outgoing prime minister is paying the price for what appeared to be a staggering political miscalculation, as he gambled that lawmakers would back his view that France should slash public spending to address its growing economic issues.
Earlier in the day, Mr Bayrou called for unity as he attempted to win support for both his premiership and his ambitious plan to curb France’s public spending.
Arguing the country’s spiralling public deficits are threatening the future of the European Union’s second-largest economy, Mr Bayrou said state debts will weigh on future generations and leave France vulnerable to foreign creditors.
“Our country works, thinks it’s getting richer, but keeps getting poorer,” he said, pausing for sips of water when hecklers tried to drown him out.
Mr Bayrou had proposed to cut a huge €44bn (£38.1bn) in spending in 2026.
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Is France’s economy in trouble?
But his plan – which included the removal of two public holidays – was heavily criticised by his political rivals, who sensed a golden opportunity to bring him down.
Addressing the confidence vote, he said: “Our country has an urgent need for lucidity, it has the most urgent need for unity. But it is division that threatens to prevail, that threatens its image and reputation.”
Mathilde Panot of the hard-left France Unbowed, told Mr Bayrou in the debate before the vote: “Today is a day of relief for millions of French people, of relief over your departure.”
Marine Le Pen said: “This moment marks the end of the agony of a phantom government.”
What happens next?
France’s President Emmanuel Macron now faces finding another government chief – the country’s fourth in 12 months – after Mr Bayrou tenders his resignation on Tuesday.
Mr Macron is facing a narrowing set of options, and financial markets are signalling worry at France’s political and financial crisis.
He could nominate a politician from his own centrist minority ruling group for the top job, or someone from the ranks of conservatives, but that would mean doubling down on a strategy that has failed to secure stability.
Mr Macron could also nominate someone on the left, but no scenario is likely to hand the next government a majority.
The president has so far resisted calls from France’s far-right and far-left factions to call a snap election as he did in June last year – which was the root of the latest government collapse.
At least five people have been killed in a shooting in Jerusalem, authorities have confirmed.
Footage showed dozens of people fleeing from a bus stop during the morning rush hour.
Paramedics who responded to the scene said the area was chaotic and covered in broken glass, with people wounded and lying unconscious on the road and a pavement near the bus stop.
Police said two attackers were “neutralised” soon after.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu is now holding an assessment with his heads of security.
Image: A motive for the shooting has not yet been confirmed. Pic: Reuters
Around 15 people were injured – with six in a serious condition – after it appeared two attackers boarded a bus and opened fire as it reached a major intersection at the northern entrance to Jerusalem, on a road that leads to Jewish settlements in east Jerusalem.
Israeli Defense Force soldiers were dispatched and are searching the area for any other suspects. They are also searching several areas on the outskirts of Ramallah.
Image: The bus with bullet holes in the windscreen. Pic: Reuters
A spokesperson for Israeli emergency services, MDA, confirmed four deaths – a man about 50 years old and three men aged around 30.
The fifth victim, a woman about 50 years old, was confirmed at hospital.
Paramedics have evacuated from the scene other casualties in serious conditions with gunshot wounds, to hospitals in Jerusalem.
Several people with minor injuries from glass shards are being treated at the roadside.
The motive for the shooting and who carried it out, was not immediately clear.
The war in Gaza has sparked a surge of violence in both the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Israel.
An Australian mother who murdered her estranged husband’s parents and aunt by feeding them a beef wellington laced with poisonous mushrooms has been jailed for life with a minimum of 33 years.
Erin Patterson, 50, lured her former parents-in-law Don and Gail Patterson, both 70, and Gail Patterson’s sister, Heather Wilkinson, 66, to lunch at her home in Leongatha, Victoria, on 29 July 2023.
Mrs Wilkinson’s husband, Reverend Ian Wilkinson, also ate the meal, which was served alongside mashed potatoes and green beans, but survived after receiving a liver transplant and spending months in hospital.
Patterson, a mother-of-two, had made the pastry dish with deadly death cap mushrooms, also known as amanita phalloides.
At the sentencing hearing at the Supreme Court of Victoria in Melbourne, Justice Christopher Beale said the substantial planning of the murders and Patterson’s lack of remorse meant her sentence should be lengthy.
“The devastating impact of your crimes is not limited to your direct victims. Your crimes have harmed a great many people,” he said.
“Not only did you cut short three lives and cause lasting damage to Ian Wilkinson’s health, thereby devastating the extended Patterson and Wilkinson families, you inflicted untold suffering on your own children, whom you robbed of their beloved grandparents.”
Image: Pic: AP
Patterson’s trial in Morwell, southern Australia, heard that she fabricated a cancer diagnosis to use as an excuse not to invite her children, pretending to want to discuss how to break the news to them after the meal.
The four guests fell ill immediately after eating her food. Mrs Wilkinson and Mrs Patterson died on 4 August, and Mr Patterson a day later.
Reverend Wilkinson spent seven weeks in hospital but survived.
Image: Reverend Ian Wilkinson arrives at court. Pic: Reuters
In his victim impact statement, he said the poisoned food meant he had to have a liver transplant and was left feeling “half alive”.
Patterson, who maintains her innocence and that she poisoned her victims by accident, also invited the father of her children, Simon Patterson, to the fatal meal.
Image: Simon Patterson outside of court in May. Pic: AP
He declined the invitation.
In his victim impact statement, Mr Patterson said of the couple’s children: “The grim reality is they live in an irreparably broken home with only a solo parent, when almost everyone else knows their mother murdered their grandparents.”
In July, Patterson was found guilty of murdering Don and Gail Patterson, and Heather Wilkinson, and attempting to murder Ian Wilkinson.
What makes death cap mushrooms so lethal?
The death cap is one of the most toxic mushrooms on the planet and is involved in the majority of fatal mushroom poisonings worldwide.
The species contains three main groups of toxins: amatoxins, phallotoxins, and virotoxins.
From these, amatoxins are primarily responsible for the toxic effects in humans.
The alpha-amanitin amatoxin has been found to cause protein deficit and ultimately cell death, although other mechanisms are thought to be involved.
The liver is the main organ that fails due to the poison, but other organs are also affected, most notably the kidneys.
The effects usually begin after a short latent period and can include gastrointestinal disorders followed by jaundice, seizures, coma, and eventually, death.
Previous poisoning attempts left husband ill
Following the guilty verdicts, more details of the case were revealed.
Mr Patterson said he had rejected the lunch invite “out of fear” as he believed his former partner had tried to poison him three times before.
After they separated in 2015, he stopped eating any food she had prepared, having become seriously ill after meals cooked by her.
Image: Death cap mushrooms. Pic: iStock
Reverend Wilkinson also revealed he and the other three guests were served their food on large grey dinner plates, while Patterson served her portion on a smaller, tan-coloured plate.
The nine-week trial attracted intense interest in Australia – with podcasters, journalists and documentary-makers descending on the town of Morwell, around two hours east of Melbourne, where the court hearings took place.