On the first full day of his election campaign, British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak appears to have shelved the Tory policy proposal to send a small number of asylum seekers to Rwanda. Several members of Sunak’s government indicated the Prime Minister had confirmed he would not rush through an approval of the Rwanda plan ahead of the July 4 parliamentary elections. Following a meeting with Sunak, one Tory cabinet minister declared, “The Rwanda plan is now dead.”
The proposal’s failure is the latest — and perhaps most significant —blow against Sunak, who is struggling to shore up support for his government ahead of the election. A recent poll showed the Tories only registered 19 percent among the British electorate compared to the Labour Party’s 45 percent. The populist Reform UK came in third at 14 percent, with the Liberal Democrats and Green Party training at 12 percent and five percent, respectively. Sunak insisted the £500 million Rwanda plan would proceed if he were re-elected.
Sunak’s party is facing increasing internal strife, particularly from right-wing Tories dismayed by the Prime Minister’s admission that asylum seekers crossing the Channel in small boats will not be flown to Rwanda before July 4. Meanwhile, Keir Starmer, the leader of Labour, declared the Tory government’s legislative agenda to be “in tatters.” Starmer accused Sunak of lacking confidence in his Rwanda plan and called for an end to what he described as “Tory chaos.”
The National Pulse reported in December that the Tory proposal to send asylum seekers to the African nation had been significantly pared back in scope after the UK Supreme Court unanimously ruled the government’s original agreement with Rwanda to relocate migrants was unlawful.