The prime minister yesterday urged peers to pass his asylum bill as soon as possible after its approval by the Commons on Wednesday night, telling them that it reflected the “will of the people”.
Members of the Lords called his remarks “bizarre”, “vacuous” and “weird” and then approved a two-month timetable to scrutinise the bill.
Angela Smith , Labour’s leader in the Lords, said: “Sunak’s press conference was bizarre. I don’t think he has a clue how the Lords works. We will stick to our normal processes for approving this bill.”
Alex Carlile , a cross-bench peer and lawyer, said: “The prime minister’s press conference was vacuous and banal, and he repeated the same statement around 20 times. It has caused some annoyance in the Lords.” Jonathan Marland , a Conservative peer, suggested there would be a protracted debate in the Lords over the details of the bill.
“What are the protections [the Rwandans] have in the courts there?” he said on GB News . “What is the legal procedure when they get there, what rights of appeal do they have? All those sorts of things, which the government has volunteered already that are going to be fundamental to this bill, but have done nothing about it.”
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 19, 2024-Ausgabe von The Guardian.
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Diese Geschichte stammt aus der January 19, 2024-Ausgabe von The Guardian.
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