Rishi Sunak has no purpose. It’s time to call an election  

He is an unelected prime minister with no mandate, no coherent agenda and no answer to the profound challenges facing the country, from sluggish productivity and poor growth, to the dire state of social care, to the climate crisis. Devoid of substance, and fearful of the country’s likely verdict on his party’s increasingly wretched period in office, he is determined to make reducing migration a key election battleground.

Observer editorial www.theguardian.com 

Another week, another crisis in the Conservative party. This time, it was prompted by the resignation of the immigration minister, Robert Jenrick, who claimed that Rishi Sunak’s emergency legislation to enact his plan to fly asylum seekers to Rwanda was a “triumph of hope over experience”. Rival Tory factions reportedly spent the rest of the week plotting opposing amendments to the bill for when it is introduced to the Commons on Tuesday. It is the latest manifestation of the weakness of a government riven by internal division, led by a prime minister with no strategic purpose save holding his party and his premiership together.

This is a crisis of Sunak’s own making. He is an unelected prime minister with no mandate, no coherent agenda and no answer to the profound challenges facing the country, from sluggish productivity and poor growth, to the dire state of social care, to the climate crisis. Devoid of substance, and fearful of the country’s likely verdict on his party’s increasingly wretched period in office, he is determined to make reducing migration a key election battleground.

There are two aspects to this: first, record net migration levels are the product of Sunak’s own policies. Migration is high mainly because after Brexit, the government significantly liberalised the migration regime for people coming to work in the UK on skilled worker visas, reducing salary thresholds and skill requirements, particularly for shortage jobs such as care work. Four in 10 skilled worker visas now go to care workers; six in 10 to workers in the health sector more broadly.

Instead of investing in the skills, qualification levels and pay of the domestic health and social care workforce to reduce staff shortages, the government is simply looking to reverse its own policy and make it harder for people to come here to fill those gaps; last week, the home secretary James Cleverly announced the government will significantly increase the minimum salary threshold for skilled worker visas, with the exemption of those for health and social care, prevent people coming to the UK to work in health and social care from bringing their children with them, and also, significantly, double the minimum income that British citizens need to earn in order to sponsor their spouses or children for family visas. These policies will depress net migration, but at what human cost? None of this gets to the heart of the British economy’s fundamental problems: medium-term skill shortages but also an ageing population that, in the long run, creates a choice between higher tax rates for working-age citizens or expanding the working population through migration.

The second thrust of Sunak’s migration agenda addresses asylum seekers: Sunak has pledged to “stop” the small boats carrying people across the Channel to claim refuge in the UK. These movements are notoriously difficult to prevent; if he was really interested in reducing the tragic loss of life in the Channel, he could try to negotiate a returns agreement with France in exchange for taking an agreed number of their asylum seekers.

Instead, he has inexplicably hitched his fortunes to a scheme to detain every asylum seeker on arrival in the UK, and deport them to a third safe country in an attempt to deter people from making the crossing in the first place, despite evidence suggesting any deterrent effect would be minimal. The only country the government struck a deal with was Rwanda; but last month, the supreme court ruled it would be unlawful to deport asylum seekers there because there would be a danger of them being returned to their home countries where they would face persecution or inhumane treatment.

Sunak’s hare-brained plan to get round the supreme court is an emergency bill that designates Rwanda as safe despite the judgment of the British courts, and disapplies the Human Rights Act for the purposes of the legislation. Legal experts still think it would be in breach of international law, and so subject to challenge in the European Court of Human Rights. But the bill allows ministers to ignore any interim measures issued by the EHCR as a matter of domestic law.

This is a dishonest fudge, which not only undermines the separation of powers between parliament and the courts, but is contingent on the UK breaching its obligations under international law. All for a scheme that even if it came off, and it seems highly unlikely the bill will survive passage through the Lords before an election, would lead to at most a handful of vulnerable people being deported even as the government has to permanently detain tens of thousands of asylum seekers at great expense to the taxpayer.

It beggars belief that Sunak has made this a defining pledge of his premiership. It has divided his party, between those like Jenrick and former home secretary Suella Braverman who want the bill to go even further in closing off any form of challenge to deportation, and those on its more moderate wing rightly appalled at its disregard for the UK’s international obligations. It is a manufactured row over something that will make no substantive difference to the UK, or the wellbeing of its citizens: political posturing by the same old Conservative party that imploded over a hard Brexit, which has permanently damaged Britain’s economic potential. This is a rotten government led by a prime minister incapable of governing and wholly unsuited to confronting the huge challenges we face. The country can ill afford to wait any longer for a general election.

Tories shelve pledge for everyone in UK to live 15 minutes from a green space

The broken pledge: “I am particularly pleased by our pledge in this plan to bring access to a green or blue space within 15 minutes’ walk of everyone’s homes – whether that be through parks, canals, rivers, countryside or coast,” Thérèse Coffey.

Helena Horton www.theguardian.com 

The UK government has no plans to meet its target for everyone to live within a 15-minute walk of a green space, the Guardian can reveal.

Ministers have also scrapped an idea to make the target for access to nature legally binding, a freedom of information request submitted by the Right to Roam campaign shows.

Launching the plans earlier this year, the then-environment secretary, Thérèse Coffey, congratulated herself for the idea: “I am particularly pleased by our pledge in this plan to bring access to a green or blue space within 15 minutes’ walk of everyone’s homes – whether that be through parks, canals, rivers, countryside or coast,” she said.

But in response to a freedom of information request, the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said: “No assessment has yet gone to ministers on options for how to progress towards the commitment.”

At the moment, according to government data, 38% of the country live more than a 15-minute walk from a green or blue space. The data provided to ministers also states that “in the 200 most disadvantaged lower super output areas in urban settings with the lowest levels of green space, 97% have no access to green space within 15 minutes’ walk from home”.

The documents reveal that the government rejected the idea of making the target legally binding, meaning it does not have to fulfil its promise.

Notes show that the former environment secretary George Eustice “queried the idea of a top-down target”, while Defra officials noted there were “challenges associated with setting a legally binding target”.

Guy Shrubsole, from the Right to Roam campaign, said: “A year after making their access commitment, ministers still have no idea how on earth to meet it. And having rejected setting a legal target for increasing access, the government is clearly only interested in spinning good headlines rather than improving the nation’s health and wellbeing.

“The next government needs to be bold and give the public a default right of responsible access with sensible exceptions. Without this, meeting the 15 minutes goal will prove impossible.”

A Defra spokesperson said: “We are increasing access to nature and just last week we announced an ambitious package of measures, including a search for a new national park and funding to help more children get outdoors and into the countryside, making our green spaces accessible for all communities.

“Work is ongoing to develop an approach to monitoring and evaluating our vital commitment that every household should be within a 15-minute walk of a green space or water.”

£5m toilet upgrades in East Devon

And it will cost you 40p a pee

Questions have been raised at East Devon District Council over why it is spending £5 million upgrading 15 of its public toilets.

[Because the Tories didn’t invest in maintenance/upgrades – Owl]

Will Goddard, local democracy reporter www.radioexe.co.uk

That’s an average of £333,333 per loo; about the same as an average semi-detached house in the area

Councillors have voted to start a new group to look at the plans and estimated costs of the improvements. 

In 2021, the council divided its WCs into three categories: A, B and C.   

Category A conveniences, of which there are 15, will be refurbished or rebuilt at an estimated cost of £5 million. Previously this amount was £3.4 million, but building inflation has added an extra £1.6 million to the bill. It will cost users 40p each time, which has to be met with a contactless payment card or phone.

Category B and C toilets, of which there are 12, have been offered for commercial operators to repurpose them into cafes, takeaways or community hubs – although the public must still be able to go to the loo there – and also to town and parish councils to run in place of East Devon District Council, which can no longer afford them. 

Cllr Ian Barlow (Independent, Sidmouth Town) pointed out that more money was being spent on upgrading the council’s category A loos than planned maintenance for its more than 4,000 social homes, although he did realise the funds came from different places.  

Cllr Paul Hayward (Independent, Axminster) said in response: “This council recognises that spending on the maintenance of our housing stock can only come forward via the ring-fenced housing revenue account, whereas targeted spending on… the modernisation of our no-longer-fit-for-purpose WC assets is proposed to come from our revenue budgets and capital expenditure allocations, a wholly different and legally distinct pot of money.” 

Cllr Barlow also questioned whether the council was getting good prices for the loo upgrades.  “Refurbishment of Seaton toilets is going to cost £30,000. To put up new toilets in Exmouth is going to cost £408,000,” he said.

“I’m not into cutting toilets. I really am not. I want more toilets. 

“But at the end of the day, the amount we’re spending is not value for money.” 

Cllr Eleanor Rylance (Lib Dem, Broadclyst) responded: “I really very much trust our officers to do due diligence on any contracts that they commission.  

“I don’t think we can judge in this chamber whether or not something is value for money in that respect. We’ve had several examples though of how procurement at the lowest possible price can go very badly wrong.”  

East Devon’s public toilets are ranked as follows:  

Category A  

West Street Car Park, Axminster 
Cliff Path (West End/Steamer), Budleigh Salterton 
East End (Lime Kiln), Budleigh Salterton 
Jubilee Gardens, Beer 
Foxholes Car Park, Exmouth 
Magnolia Centre (London Inn), Exmouth  
Manor Gardens, Exmouth 
Phear Park, Exmouth 
Queens Drive, Exmouth 
Lace Walk, Honiton 
West Walk, Seaton 
Connaught Gardens, Sidmouth 
Triangle, Sidmouth 
Market Place, Sidmouth 
Ham car park (new site), Sidmouth 
Categories B and C  

Orcombe Point, Exmouth 
The Maer, Exmouth 
Imperial Road, Exmouth 
Jarvis Close, Exmouth 
Seaton Hole, Seaton 
Harbour Road, Seaton 
Marsh Road, Seaton 
Brook Road, Budleigh Salterton 
Station Road, Budleigh Salterton 
Dolphin Street, Colyton 
King Street, Honiton 
Port Royal, Sidmouth