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The government has managed to fight off the latest challenge from the House of Lords seeking to change its Illegal Migration Bill.

In a vote in the Commons, MPs voted to reject all nine amendments peers had put forward to change the legislation.

That was despite some high-profile rebels from the Tory benches supporting the amendments suggested in the Lords – including former party leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith and ex-justice secretary Sir Robert Buckland.

After the vote by MPs, immigration minister Robert Jenrick urged the other House to now drop its amendments to the bill, which aims for the “swift detention and removal” of people arriving in the UK illegally, particularly via Channel crossings.

But Sky News understand peers will push forward with at least four of their proposals when the legislation returns to them later tonight.

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The government has insisted throughout that its proposed new law, including its Rwanda deportation plan, is the best way to “stop the boats” – one of Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s five priorities.

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But the House of Lords has a number of issues with it, especially around the treatment of women, children, people from the LGBT+ community, and victims of modern slavery.

The government offered some concessions last week, such as cutting the length of time lone children and pregnant women could be detained for.

Proposals put forward by peers to change the bill were then largely vetoed during a mammoth voting session.

But the Lords sent nine tweaked versions back to the Commons for another debate and vote – including restrictions on removing LGBT+ people to certain countries and demands for safe and legal routes to be established – which took place this afternoon.

Immigration minister Robert Jenrick called the move “disappointing”, claiming many of the peers’ suggestions “simply drive a coach and horses through the fabric of the legislation”.

He told MPs: “There is simply no point in passing [a law] that does not deliver a credible deterrent and provide the means to back it up with effective and swift powers.

“It is time for the clear view of the elected house to prevail… uphold the will of the democratically elected Commons… and to get on with securing our borders and stopping the boats.”

But as the debate rolled on, it was clear the government would face some rebellions from its own backbenchers, as well as opposition MPs.

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What is in the new ‘small boats bill’?

Former Conservative leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith focused on the impact of the Illegal Migration Bill on victims of modern slavery – something he and former prime minister Theresa May have been highlighting throughout.

The senior backbencher said: “We want to prosecute those who have been the traffickers – that way we may stop them trafficking people further on the boats.

“My worry here still remains this [bill] will put off many people from giving evidence and cooperating with the police for fear of the fact they may… be sent abroad while doing it.”

The government has refused to budge, saying an amendment to tackle the problem would allow people to claim they were trafficked to the UK the moment they got off a small boat.

But Sir Iain said victims would “live under the fear” they could be booted out of the country if they talked to the police.

Fellow Tory backbencher Tim Loughton also supported the Lords’ amendment, saying “protecting victims and prosecuting traffickers is not undermining the bill… it strengthens the bill”.

But Mr Jenrick said it “only serves to create another loophole which renders the swift removal we seek impossible or impractical”.

MPs voted to reject the proposed amendment from the Lords with a majority of 55, but 13 Tories rebelled: Sir Iain, Mr Loughton, Peter Bone, Sir Peter Bottomley, Sir Robert Buckland, Rehman Chishti, Tracey Crouch, Jackie Doyle-Price, Damian Green, Alicia Kearns, Caroline Nokes, Julian Sturdy and William Wragg.

Separately, 12 Conservatives also rebelled to support the Lords’ call for safe and legal routes for migrants, 11 on unaccompanied children, and five on added protections for LGBT+ people.

‘Performative cruelty’

Labour’s shadow immigration minister Stephen Kinnock said the government’s response to the latest proposals from peers was “typically arrogant and tin-eared” and “ministers are refusing to listen”.

He added: “They are once again closing their eyes and ears to the reality of what is happening around them and continuing to drive the car straight into a brick wall.”

Mr Kinnock urged the government to “come to its senses” in its proposed treatment of asylum seekers and end its “performative cruelty”.

Liberal Democrat MP Alistair Carmichael also appealed to the Lords to “stick to its guns” when the bill bounces back to the other House as early as tonight, with only days of parliament left before it goes on its summer break, meaning the bill would fall.

But Tory stalwart Sir John Hayes defended the government, saying: “This bill is about fairness, about affirming the integrity of our nation by defending our borders from those who seek to arrive here illegally.”

He added the legislation was “just and fair” and both MPs and peers opposing it were “denying and detached [from] the popular bill”.

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CFTC chair’s final message includes a call for crypto guardrails

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CFTC chair’s final message includes a call for crypto guardrails

In what he said would be his last remarks as CFTC chair, Rostin Behnam said he intended to advocate for the commission to address regulatory challenges over digital assets.

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MPs vote against new national inquiry into grooming gangs

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MPs vote against new national inquiry into grooming gangs

A Tory bid to launch a new national inquiry into the grooming gangs scandal has been voted down by MPs amid criticism of “political game playing”.

MPs rejected the amendment to the Children’s Wellbeing Bill by 364 to 111, a majority of 253.

However, even if the Commons had supported the measure, it wouldn’t have actually forced the government to open the desired inquiry, due to parliamentary procedure.

Instead, it would have killed the government’s legislation, the aim of which is to reform things like the children’s care system and raise educational standards in schools.

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Tonight’s vote was largely symbolic – aimed at putting pressure on Labour following days of headlines after comments by Elon Musk brought grooming gangs back into the spotlight.

The world’s richest man has hit out at Sir Keir Starmer and safeguarding minister Jess Phillips, after she rejected a new national inquiry into child sexual exploitation in Oldham, saying this should be done at a local level instead.

The Tories also previously said an Oldham inquiry should be done locally and in 2015 commissioned a seven-year national inquiry into child sex abuse, led by Professor Alexis Jay, which looked at grooming gangs.

However, they didn’t implement any of its recommendations while in office – and Sir Keir has vowed to do so instead of launching a fresh investigation into the subject.

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The division list showed no Labour MPs voted in favour of the Conservative amendment.

Those who backed the proposal include all of Reform’s five MPs and 101 Tory MPs – though some senior figures, including former prime minister Rishi Sunak and former home secretaries James Cleverly and Suella Braverman, were recorded as not voting.

The Liberal Democrats abstained.

Speaking to Sophy Ridge on the Politics Hub before the vote, education minister Stephen Morgan condemned “political game playing”.

“What we’re seeing from the Conservatives is a wrecking amendment which would basically allow this bill not to go any further,” he said.

“That’s political game playing and not what I think victims want. Victims want to see meaningful change.”

As well as the Jay review, a number of local inquiries were also carried out, including in Telford and Rotherham.

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Grooming gangs: What happened?

Speaking earlier in the day at PMQs, Sir Keir Starmer accused Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch of “jumping on the bandwagon” after Mr Musk’s intervention and spreading “lies and misinformation”.

Referring to her time in government as children’s and equalities minister, the prime minister said: “I can’t recall her once raising this issue in the House, once calling for a national inquiry.”

He also said having spoken to victims of grooming gangs this morning, “they were clear they want action now, not the delay of a further inquiry”.

Ms Badenoch has argued that the public will start to “worry about a cover-up” if the prime minister resists calls for a national inquiry, and said no one has yet “joined up the dots” on grooming.

Girls as young as 11 were groomed and raped across a number of towns in England – including Oldham, Rochdale, Rotherham and Telford – over a decade ago in a national scandal that was exposed in 2013.

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We should hone ‘responsible AI’ before Copilot goes autopilot

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