Today, the
Supreme Court has judged that the Rwanda policy requires a set of
changes in order to be lawful.
I do not
agree with this decision – but I respect it and I accept
it.
The rule of
law is fundamental to our democracy.
We have
prepared for all outcomes of this case.
And so we
have been working on a new international Treaty with
Rwanda.
This will
provide a guarantee in law that…
…those who
are relocated from the UK to Rwanda will be protected against
removal from Rwanda.
And it will
make clear that we will bring anyone back if ordered to do so by
a court.
We will
finalise the Treaty in light of today’s judgment and ratify it
without delay.
But we need
to end the merry-go-round.
I said I was
going to fundamentally change our country – and I meant
it.
So I am also
announcing today that we will take the extraordinary step of
introducing emergency legislation.
This will
enable Parliament to confirm that, that with our new Treaty,
Rwanda is safe.
It will
ensure that people cannot further delay flights by bringing
systemic challenges in our domestic courts…
…and stop our
policy being repeatedly blocked.
But of
course, we must be honest about the fact that even once
Parliament has changed the law here at home…
…we could
still face challenges from the European Court of Human Rights in
Strasbourg.
I told the
Parliament today that I am prepared to change our laws…
…and revisit
those international relationships to remove the obstacles in our
way.
So let me
tell everyone now – I will not allow a foreign court to block
these flights.
If the
Strasbourg Court chooses to intervene against the express wishes
of Parliament…
…I am
prepared to do what necessary to get flights off.
I will not
take the easy way out.
Because I
fundamentally do not believe that anyone thinks the founding aim
of the European Convention on Human Rights…
…was to stop
a sovereign Parliament removing illegal migrants…
…to a country
deemed to be safe in Parliamentary statute and binding
international law.
And I do not
believe we are alone in that interpretation.
Across
Europe, other governments are following our lead – Italy,
Germany, Austria, are all exploring models like ours.
Indeed, the
UNHCR operates its own refugee schemes in Rwanda.
And unlike
the UK, they don’t have a treaty for any of this.
We are a
reasonable government…
…and this is
a reasonable country…
…but the
British people’s patience can only be stretched so thin, and they
expect the boats to be stopped.
That is why I
made this one of my five priorities.
And whatever
our critics might say, we are making progress.
Because the
Rwanda scheme is only one part of our strategy.
Last
December, the number entering the UK illegally in small boats had
more than quadrupled in just two years.
Since then,
this year they’re down by a third…
…even as the
numbers entering the rest of Europe have soared…
…with illegal
crossings of the Mediterranean up by 80 per cent.
We’re ending
the farce of taxpayers footing the bill to put illegal migrants
in hotels…
…with 50
closures announced already, returning them to local
communities.
Illegal
working raids are up by almost 70 per cent.
And have made
5,000 arrests this year.
We’ve
concluded returns and co-operation agreements with France,
Bulgaria, Turkey, Italy, Georgia, and Albania.
We’ve cut the
initial asylum backlog by almost two thirds.
And in total,
we’ve returned over 20,000 illegal migrants this year.
The facts are
clear: this government has done more and delivered more…
…than any
government in the last five years to tackle illegal
migration.
But to fully
solve this problem, the Rwanda policy is a necessary
deterrent.
That’s why
it’s important that the Supreme Court has today confirmed…
…that the
principle of removing asylum seekers to a third safe country
is lawful.
Because it
means that when we have addressed the Supreme Court’s
concerns…
…people will
know that if they come here illegally, they will not get to stay
– and so they will stop coming altogether.
And that is
how we will stop the boats.
In recent
years, many people have lost faith in politicians’ ability to do
the things they said they would do.
They fear
that politicians are more interested in grandstanding than
delivering for the British people.
I’ve been
determined to change that.
To deliver on
the commitments that I make.
I committed
at the start of this year to halve inflation.
Back then,
inflation was 10.7%.
But new
figures, released this morning by the Office for National
Statistics…
…show that
inflation is now 4.6%.
I am not
saying the job is done.
Many people
have struggled and continue to struggle.
We must stay
the course until inflation returns to target.
But it shows
that when I said we would halve inflation, I meant it.
When I said I
would stop the boats, I meant it.
Today’s
judgement has not weakened my resolve…
…it has only
hardened it.
And we will
deliver that too.