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2024

‘Keir Starmer fought to stop foreign criminals being deported – he will never cut migration’, ex borders minister blasts

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SIR Keir Starmer has never wanted to reduce immigration and never will, a former borders minister blasted today.

Top Tory Robert Jenrick launched a scathing attack on Labour’s new pledge to slash levels of migration to the UK.

Sir Keir Starmer has vowed to cut net migration in an exclusive interview with the Sun on Sunday
Reuters
Ex immigration minister Robert Jenrick ripped into Sir Keir’s promise
Rex

The Labour boss has announced a two-pronged bid to curb numbers: passing laws to crack down on “bad bosses” hiring foreigners and training more Brits.

He told The Sun on Sunday: “Read my lips — I will bring immigration numbers down.”

But Mr Jenrick slammed Sir Keir’s record, blasting: “Read my lips? Judge Starmer on his record: the man who said ‘there’s a racist undercurrent” to all immigration laws’.

“And fought to stop foreign criminals being deported. He doesn’t want to reduce immigration or stop the boats. Never did. Never will.”

In 2020 Sir Keir joined other Labour MPs in signing a letter demanding 50 dangerous offenders were not deported to Jamaica.

Sir Keir insisted last year’s net migration figure of 685,000 has “got to come down” as he vowed to “control our borders and make sure British businesses are helped to hire Brits first”.

While parking Labour tanks firmly on Tory lawn, Sir Keir hit out at successive Conservative governments for promising but failing to cut numbers.

Under the new plans, a Labour government would bar bosses who break employment law – for example by failing to pay workers the minimum wage – from hiring foreigners.

It would also legislate to link the immigration system to training, with businesses applying for foreign worker visas having to train Britons to do the jobs.

But Sir Keir and Shadow Home Secretary Yvette Cooper both declined to name the target level for migrant numbers, or a timeline.

Fair play, Starmer

IMMIGRATION will be one of the key issues when Sun readers go to the polls next month – so fair play to Keir Starmer for setting out some new ideas to get a grip of the issue.

Labour has too often shied away from raising immigration. Lots of people on the left scream ‘racist’ if you dare so much as raise it. 

But the question is not what his members think – it’s whether voters will trust Labour to secure our borders?

In the past, Labour’s unwillingness to talk about immigration meant the Tories had an open goal.

But even Conservatives in Parliament struggle to defend their record.

A few weeks ago, one of their whips asked me if I’d vote for their Rwanda plan to deal with people crossing the Channel. 

Of course the boats must be stopped – not least because kids are drowning on the dangerous crossings. They need to crack down hard on the evil criminal scum behind the crossings and smash their business model, but only sending a few hundred to Rwanda is hardly a deterrent.

And I told them I was more worried about the million people they allowed to come to the UK legally last year than the few hundred they want to send to Rwanda!

That is the equivalent of a city the size of Birmingham arriving to live in the UK legally last year.

It is not racist to wonder about the impact on schools and hospitals or to worry where they’ll live when we’re not building enough houses for people living here already.

And this from the party that promised to get immigration down to under 100,000!

With a record like that, it’s no wonder the Tories are struggling in the election.

So I reckon voters will be prepared to give Labour a hearing on immigration this time.

People will welcome his pledge to cut the numbers, but they need to be brought down by hundreds of thousands. Tinkering around the edges won’t do at all.

It’s obvious commonsense that companies caught not paying British workers the minimum wage or flouting health and safety laws should not be allowed to apply for visas to bring staff in from abroad. 

And it makes sense to link training and visas too. 

Most people think it is completely nuts that firms are allowed to recruit builders, plumbers and electricians from abroad when we’ve got thousands of British youngsters who should be trained up to do those jobs. 

And why are we limiting the number of training places for nurses at the same time as bringing in nurses from abroad?

Increase the number of training places, provide proper old-fashioned apprenticeships and give British kids the skills they need to build a proper career.

Keir is right to raise immigration but voters have heard these promises before so woe betide Labour if they don’t deliver.

By former Labour MP Lord Ian Austin