Keir Starmer’s Visit to Canada: Presenting Immigration Policy Agenda

Keir Starmer’s Visit to Canada: Presenting Immigration Policy Agenda

Keir ⁣Starmer‍ has arrived in Canada to set⁢ out his doctrine for tackling international ‌threats at a gathering of world leaders, ⁤the latest step in the⁣ Labour leader’s⁤ move ‍to flesh out policy in politically turbulent areas‍ such‍ as immigration.

Amid continued efforts by Starmer and his ​team to push back against the “nonsense” ⁢that closer cooperation with the EU ⁤would involve the UK having to accept 100,000 asylum-seekers a ⁤year, the Labour ⁣leader was in Montreal for the Global Progress⁢ Action Summit⁢ of centre-left politicians.

After expected talks with Justin⁢ Trudeau, the Canadian prime minister, among others, Starmerwill travel to Paris​ next week to meet the French ⁤president, Emmanuel Macron, with ​refugees and small boats likely to be on the agenda.

The diplomatic and ⁤media blitz for Starmer, who ⁣is joined in ⁣Canada ‌by David Lammy, ​the shadow⁣ foreign secretary, ‌will also include appearances‍ on the Sunday morning political shows.

With‌ an election ‍potentially less⁤ than a year away, Starmer is aiming to use the Montreal summit ‍to set out his proposals on ​asylum in the ⁣context of what he has termed ⁣an “axis ‌of instability”, also taking in other ‍cross-border issues ⁢like ⁣the climate emergency and terrorism.

After spending Thursday in The ‍Hague talking to officials from the EU’s law enforcement agency, Europol, about cross-border ‌cooperation on stopping people-smugglers, Starmer said he ⁤wanted an EU-wide returns deal and was willing to discuss the UK accepting a quota of people in return.

The comments​ sparked 24 hours of attacks from ‌Conservative MPs, who‌ claimed Labour’s⁣ plans could result in an‍ extra 100,000‌ people coming to Britain from the EU every year.

There was also some disquiet from a few Labour MPs about Starmer’s pugnacious language in an article for the ‍Sun,⁢ where he said those who disagreed⁤ with proposals such ⁢as treating⁤ criminals ⁢involved in cross-Channel⁤ people-smuggling as terrorists were “un-British”.

skip past newsletter​ promotion

The ‍Guardian view on Starmer’s asylum gambit: Labour is putting sense before spectacle | EditorialRead more

Yvette Cooper⁤ said on Friday that the claims about 100,000 arrivals year were “fiction”. The shadow home​ secretary said her party would not⁢ sign up to be a member ⁤of the official EU quota system, under ‌which countries have to take an agreed share of people or⁣ pay €20,000 (£17,200)​ for each person⁤ they refuse to take.

“What we​ are talking about is having a negotiation around⁣ a returns ⁤agreement where, for example, we think that should look at family reunion for children who ⁣have family in ​the UK who⁤ currently have no ⁣safe⁢ legal⁣ route to ⁤be able to​ join that family‍ in the UK,” ‌she told BBC ⁤Radio 4’s Today programme. “As a result they end ‌up on these ​boats, they end⁤ up being⁣ exploited by these criminal gangs.”

Starmer’s hope is to shrug off such ⁣criticism and ⁢present cooperation with the EU⁣ over unofficial ​Channel journeys as a more grownup​ and…

2023-09-15 16:30:12
Original from www.theguardian.com
rnrn

Exit mobile version