º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
New Articles

Labour saves Cameron from Immigration Bill defeat

Midland MPs took part in a rebellion against the Government as David Cameron avoided humiliation in the Commons thanks to Labour

Home Secretary Theresa May spoke for the Government in the Commons but failed to win over rebels

Labour came to the rescue of David Cameron after he faced the prospect of a humiliating defeat over immigration reforms at the hands of Tory rebels.

The Prime Minister was defied by backbenchers who supported laws to ensure foreign nationals who are convicted of serious crimes in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ are deported - even if they claim it would breach their human rights.

They backed amendments to the Government’s Immigration Bill which would mean that the Home Secretary rather than judges had the final say on deportations.

The aim is to stop criminals avoiding deportation by citing Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which guarantees the right to a family life.

But although the Government says it wants to toughen up the law, it also says the change is impossible to put into practice and would actually lead to more appeals in the courts rather than less.

Tory whips, the Ministers responsible for party discipline, attempted to persuade MPs to oppose the amendment, but when it became clear they had failed Mr Cameron took the extraordinary step of ordering his Ministers to abstain on the vote to avoid a damaging public split with his own backbenchers - even though Downing Street had told journalists that the measures in the amendment would probably be ruled illegal by courts.

Labour saved Mr Cameron from the prospect of a humiliating defeat by voting against the amendment, effectively backing Government policy while Tory MPs voted against it. Liberal Democrat MPs also opposed the rebel amendment, which was defeated by 97 votes to 241.

Birmingham MP Gisela Stuart (Lab Edgbaston) was one of a small number of Labour MPs to join forces with Tory rebels and back the tough new law.