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Keir Starmer says deporting migrants to France is better than Rwanda | Politics | News

Keir Starmer’s official spokesman insisted that the Prime Minister’s Emmanuel Macron and the immigration agreement would be more successful than Tories’s planned Rwanda program. Journalists were asked whether the deportation of immigrants to France to France was more deterrent than the threat of deporting immigrants to the developing African nation.

He insisted: “The deterrent is a system that works clearly, it is a system where you spend 700 million pounds to lift only four volunteers. This is not a deterrent. Determination is a proper asylum system that has been removed. We have seen about 30,000 people have been removed since the election, we have focused on the proper system.”

After the prime minister’s emergence, he may be far below the fire with President Macron.

The French media claimed that Mr. Macron, who was for a state visit in England, could accept an agreement for only 50 -channel immigrants to return to France every week.

This is 17 immigrants entering Britain illegally for each of the channels. The respected French newspaper Le Monde said this morning: “The number of affected people would be symbolic at the top of about 50 returns to France per week.”

The news was greeted last night, but this evening two old home secretary appeared to shift the agreement, James wisely branded Sir Keir: “Sad!”

Mr wisely added: “The French do not do good, the difficult negotiators acting in their national interests. I respect it.

“Starmer waited for good, if he had sat on him, he wouldn’t have recognized national interests, and he couldn’t negotiate the way out of a wet paper bag.”

“This is ridiculous. The rate should be 170 for every 1 inch.”

Meanwhile, Tories’s shadow house secretary Chris detonated Philp: “If this is true, it keeps only 5% of those who came last year.

This lunch time, Sir Keir’s official spokesman refused to say if the reported 50 numbers were correct, and in the afternoon, the Macron-Starmer press conference would be promising answers.

Following a bilateral meeting between the two leaders yesterday, a Downing Street spokesman said: “It is a common priority that requires common solutions to struggle with the threat of irregular migration and small boat transitions.

“The Prime Minister talked about the government’s hardening of the system to ensure that the rules are respected and implemented, including a major increase in illegal work arrests to end the wrong promise of the works used to sell places on boats.

“The two leaders agreed on the need to go further and make progress in new and innovative solutions, including a new deterrent to break the business model of these gangs.”

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