Ann Widdecombe, the former Tory minister turned Reform UK spokesperson, has said the party would house illegal immigrants in “secure reception centres” instead of hotels so they would know they would be “sent back” quickly.
Reform’s conference kicked off on Friday with a range of speakers, including Ms Widdecombe and TV personality Ant Middleton.
Ms Widdecombe, the party’s immigration spokeswoman, told the audience in Birmingham people who arrive “unlawfully” in the UK on small boats would be housed “in secure reception centres” if Reform was in government.
“We are not going to house the people who come in on those boats in hotels, at the cost of billions a day to the British taxpayer,” Ms Widdecombe said.
“We will instead house them in secure reception centres.
“And then the message goes out if you arrive unlawfully in this country from a perfectly safe country then you will be refused, you will be dealt with quickly and you will be sent back.”
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Reform MP accuses PM of hypocrisy
A long-time Eurosceptic, Ms Widdecombe was prisons minister under Conservative prime minister John Major before stepping down as an MP in 2010 and appearing on several TV programmes, including Strictly Come Dancing and Celebrity Big Brother.
She re-entered politics in 2019 as an MEP for the Brexit Party for a year before it became Reform UK.
Also speaking at Reform’s conference was Ant Middleton, known for Channel 4 show SAS: Who Dares Wins, who said the UK is on the brink of “civil unrest” unless action is taken to strengthen British culture and identity
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He said “we haven’t got a secure camp”, adding that British identity is British culture, and British culture is British history.
“So why is that being eradicated? Why is that being trampled all over? Why aren’t we allowed to be the umbrella culture of this country?” Mr Middleton said.
Mr Middleton, highlighting the role of Christianity in the UK’s history, said the moment “we lose our identity” we lose “our purpose, our focus, our direction”.
“What happens when we don’t have an identity? We get confused,” he added.
And he said when people are confused they get frustrated, which turns to “anger, violence”.
He continued: “We are at a very, very important and crucial stage before it teeters into civil unrest, which we want to avoid at all costs, but it’s coming. We’re on that edge where violence has hit the streets, we’ve all seen it.”
Ms Widdecombe also spoke about overcrowded prisons and said when she was prisons minister in the 1990s she suggested taking over a “disused holiday camp”.
She said it would just need a secure perimeter and “lo, you’ve got a low-security prison”.
“Of course, you do take away the cinema and the swimming pool before you do that,” she added.
The UK will play its “full part” in peacekeeping in Ukraine, Sir Keir Starmer has said.
The prime minister told Sky News’ political editor Beth Rigby that the conflict with Russia was not just about “sovereignty in Ukraine” but about the impact it also had on the UK, including the cost of living crisis.
Sir Keir was speaking to Sky News while on a surprise visit to Ukraine on Thursday – his first since his party’s landslide election win six months ago.
The purpose of the trip was to discuss the next steps for Ukraine, with the situation now more uncertain following Donald Trump’s election victory in November.
Mr Trump, whose inauguration takes place on 20 January, has said he wants a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine within 100 days.
But some European leaders fear pushing Kyiv into a deal could lead to Ukraine ceding some of its territory to Vladimir Putin.
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Sir Keir said he did not want “to get ahead of ourselves” but that the UK would play its “full part” in any peace negotiations – including by deploying British troops for peacekeeping.
Asked if he would be prepared to do that, the prime minister replied: “Well, I don’t want to get ahead of ourselves, but I do have indicated that we will play our full part – because this isn’t just about sovereignty in Ukraine.
“It’s about what the impact is back in the United Kingdom and our values, our freedom, our democracy. Because if Russia succeeds in this aggression, it will impact all of us for a very, very long time.”
Sir Keir said the drone threat was “a reminder of what Ukraine is facing every day” and that the war was brought about by “Russian aggression”.
Elsewhere in the interview, Sir Keir was asked about his views on Ukraine’s longstanding desire to join NATO – something President Putin strongly opposes.
At a NATO summit in Washington last summer, the alliance’s members announced that Ukraine was on an “irreversible” path to NATO membership.
“We fully support Ukraine’s right to choose its own security arrangements and decide its own future, free from outside interference. Ukraine’s future is in NATO,” the declaration said.
However, Mr Zelenskyy has somewhat tempered his language around NATO membership, telling Sky News in an exclusive interview in November that a ceasefire deal could be struck if Ukrainian territory he controlled falls “under the NATO umbrella” – allowing him to negotiate the return of the rest later “in a diplomatic way”.
However, Mr Trump has acknowledged Moscow’s opposition to Ukraine joining NATO, saying: “Russia has somebody right on their doorstep, and I can understand their feeling about that.”
Watch the full interview with Beth Rigby and Sir Keir Starmer on the Politics Hub with Sophy Ridge at 7pm.
The president-elect cannot officially nominate anyone until after he is inaugurated on Jan. 20, but the US Senate has been holding hearings to question his potential picks.