logo
Social media ads for Channel crossings to be banned under new offence

Social media ads for Channel crossings to be banned under new offence

Ministers are seeking to create a new offence that would also outlaw the promise of illegal working being promoted online and could carry a large fine.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has also said she plans to introduce a fast-track scheme to tackle the asylum backlog, with the aim to turn around decisions within weeks.
The Government is under pressure to speed up asylum processing and bring down small boat crossings, with arrivals passing more than 25,000 for 2025 so far on Wednesday – a record for this point in the year.
Assisting illegal immigration to the UK is already a crime, but officials believe a new offence will give more powers to police and other agencies to disrupt criminal gangs.
Around 80% of migrants arriving to the UK by small boat told officials they used social media during their journey, including to contact agents linked to people smuggling gangs, according to analysis by the Home Office.
'Selling the false promise of a safe journey to the UK and a life in this country – whether on or offline – simply to make money, is nothing short of immoral,' the Home Secretary said.
'These criminals have no issue with leading migrants to life-threatening situations using brazen tactics on social media. We are determined to do everything we can to stop them, wherever they operate.'
She told The Sunday Times that Labour was planning a 'major overhaul' of the asylum appeal process in the hope it would help to make a significant dent in the numbers.
'We need a major overhaul of the appeal [process] and that's what we are going to do in the autumn… If we speed up the decision-making appeal system and also then keep increasing returns, we hope to be able to make quite a big reduction in the overall numbers in the asylum system, because that is the best way to actually restore order and control,' Ms Cooper said.
The aim would be to compress the process so decisions and returns could happen 'within weeks', the newspaper reported, citing a source familiar with the plans.
Ms Cooper had previously said she wanted to put a 'fast-track' system for decisions and appeals in place so that people from countries considered safe would not sit in the asylum system for a long time.
'That would mean a fast-track system alongside the main asylum system, I think that would be really important in terms of making sure that the system is fair,' she told the Home Affairs committee in June.
'That will require legislation in order to be able to do that, as well as a new system design.'
The plans to tackle the online promotion of Channel crossings would see a new offence created under the Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill already going through Parliament.
The National Crime Agency (NCA) already works with social media companies to remove posts promoting crossings, with more than 8,000 taken offline in 2024.
But the proposed new offence will give them more options of how to target gangs and their business models, NCA director general of operations Rob Jones said.
The case of a Preston-based smuggler jailed for 17 years for posting videos of migrants thanking him for his help could have been targeted under the proposed offence.
Albanian smugglers who used social media to promote £12,000 'package deals' for accommodation and a job in the UK on arrival would also be in scope.
The Conservatives said it was 'too little, too late' and that only their proposal to automatically deport people who enter Britain via unauthorised routes can tackle small boat crossings.
Shadow home secretary Chris Philp said: 'Labour still has no clear plan to deter illegal entry, no effective enforcement and no strategy to speed up removals. This is a panicked attempt to look tough after months of doing nothing.
'The only clear and enforceable plan is the Conservative Deportation Bill, a no-nonsense strategy that allows us to detain illegal arrivals immediately and remove them without delay. The British public deserve focused action, not more of Labour's dithering.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kate Forbes to quit Scottish Parliament as Deputy First Minister announces shock departure
Kate Forbes to quit Scottish Parliament as Deputy First Minister announces shock departure

Daily Record

timea minute ago

  • Daily Record

Kate Forbes to quit Scottish Parliament as Deputy First Minister announces shock departure

Forbes was viewed by many in the SNP as a future leader of the party. Kate Forbes has announced she will quit the Scottish Parliament next year instead of seeking re-election. ‌ The MSP for Skye and Lochaber was appointed Deputy First Minister by John Swinney last year and was viewed by many in the SNP as a future leader of the party. ‌ Forbes, 35, previously quit the Scottish Government Cabinet in 2023 following the election of Humza Yousaf as First Minister following a bitter leadership contest which saw her personal religious views become a major talking point. ‌ But she returned to the front bench in April last year after Swinney succeeded Yousaf as party leader and First Minister. In a statement, Forbes said: "I have informed my Constituency Association today that I do not intend to seek re-election in May 2026. It has been a great honour to serve Highland communities for almost a decade. I am grateful to every voter who re-elected me at the last election with the biggest majority in Scotland. 'I have also been privileged to serve in Government, first as Minister for Public Finance, then as Cabinet Secretary for Finance and most recently as Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Economy and Gaelic. ‌ 'As I reflected over recess, I have concluded that I do not wish to seek re-election for another five year term in the Scottish Parliament. 'All politicians face a choice at every election to stay on the same path or not. Quite simply, I've decided on the latter. I remain wholly supportive of the First Minister just as when I backed him to be leader of the SNP and I look forward to campaigning for the SNP at the next election – to lead Scotland to independence. 'I was first elected in my mid-twenties, dedicating my most formative adult years to public service. In that time, I presented multiple Budgets, supported thousands of businesses and workers during Covid-19 and launched Scotland's most ambitious business start up network TechScaler. I now wish to step back from my public duties and focus on new opportunities to serve people. 'I have grown up in the public eye, getting married, having a baby and raising a young family. I have consistently put the public's needs ahead of my family's during that time. I am grateful to them for accommodating the heavy demands of being a political figure. Looking ahead to the future, I do not want to miss any more of the precious early years of family life – which can never be rewound. 'I am very grateful to everybody I've worked with - in my constituency office, the party and Government. It's not an easy environment and I will leave public office with the highest respect for the journalists who hold us accountable, MSPs across the chamber and hard working volunteers in every community.'

Hotel protests must not be used to ‘have a pop at the police'
Hotel protests must not be used to ‘have a pop at the police'

Glasgow Times

timea minute ago

  • Glasgow Times

Hotel protests must not be used to ‘have a pop at the police'

Dame Angela Eagle promised that the Government was 'doing the detailed work' to crack down on small boat crossings, after the Home Office unveiled its plan to pump an extra £100 million into tackling people smuggling. Some of the money will support the 'one in, one out' returns agreement pilot with France, and some will go towards funding extended police powers to seize digital devices. Protesters have gathered outside hotels over recent weeks throughout the country, including in London, Newcastle and Epping in Essex, calling for their closure. (PA Graphics) Conservative shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick has warned that 'the public's patience with the asylum hotels and with the whole issue of illegal migration has snapped', after small boat crossings topped 25,000 for the year so far, a record for this point in the year. Asked on Sky News what her message was to protesters, Dame Angela said: 'Anger doesn't get you anywhere. 'What we have to do is recognise the values we have in this country, the rule of law we have in this country, the work we're doing with the police to protect people. 'We will close asylum hotels by the end of the Parliament. 'We'll do it faster if we can.' Dame Angela also said: 'We are doing all we can to deal with the challenges that the police are facing on the streets to make sure that women and girls are safe, and in fact, that everybody is safe on our streets.' She had earlier told Times Radio: 'Those who are worried and demonstrating have an absolute right to do that, so long as they do it peacefully. 'People don't have a right to then have a pop at the police, which has been happening in some isolated cases outside hotels.' Dame Angela Eagle (Lauren Hurley/PA) Referring to plans to let police seize devices from people suspected of facilitating people smuggling, Dame Angela said the Government does not 'want absolutely every phone'. She told Times Radio: 'But we do want the phones of the people that we think are organising and facilitating, and this extra money will enable us to do much quicker analytics of the phones that we seize. 'But of course, we've got to get the Border Security Bill on the statute book to give us those extra powers.' The Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill has cleared the Commons but must undergo further scrutiny in the Lords before it becomes law. Turning to social media creators who advertise illegal routes into the UK, Dame Angela said: 'We will stop anyone who comes to the UK where we've got evidence, and what happens is that the people smugglers are getting people to say how safe the journeys were and do adverts once they're in the UK. 'We will stop that, and we will also deal with other jurisdictions and ask them to help us deal with this as well, we could certainly do that in the EU with our colleagues in Germany, in France.' Where there is 'evidence that legal routes to visas are being misused', the Government will 'tighten up the rules to stop that abuse happening', the minister added. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper has previously said the money, which will also help pay for surveillance capabilities and data analysis tools, will 'turbo-charge the ability of our law enforcement agencies to track the gangs and bring them down, working with our partners overseas, and using state-of-the-art technology and equipment'. She added: 'Alongside our new agreements with France, this will help us drive forward our plan for change commitments to protect the UK's border security and restore order to our immigration system.' The National Crime Agency has 91 ongoing investigations into people smuggling networks affecting the UK, the agency's director general of operations Rob Jones said. Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Today programme, Mr Jenrick said: 'The public's patience with the asylum hotels and with the whole issue of illegal migration has snapped. 'This is an issue that is beyond party politics. 'It is causing immense harm to communities, and people's lives are being wrecked as a result of it, and we simply have to fix it. 'I respect those people who are peacefully protesting outside hotels this weekend, I understand why they feel so concerned. 'They're seeing their communities damaged, and I'm afraid there is increasing evidence of a serious link between illegal migration, migration generally, and crime, particularly sexual crime, against women and girls.'

Labour might not make it to 2029. Here's why
Labour might not make it to 2029. Here's why

Telegraph

time2 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Labour might not make it to 2029. Here's why

Will the Government make it all the way to 2029? In theory this is a simple question to answer. Keir Starmer has a huge majority so there is no prospect of a successful vote of no confidence – in fact the worse his political position becomes the safer he is, as his MPs will not want an election. He has no need to call an election until 2029 and can wait until then, hoping that something will turn up. We should still bet against the Government unravelling before 2029 – but only just. We are getting close to even money territory as it is. There are three reasons for a gloomy prognosis for the current government. The first is the collapse in trust in not just this particular government but the institutions of the state in general. There is a loss of faith in both the competence and capability of the state and in its truthfulness. This is most marked over the question of immigration, with the spread of spontaneous protests, and a reaction against their policing. This could lead very swiftly to a more general collapse in the authority of government in general. It is not only immigration however, there is growing public anger over the state of public services and the collective realm in general, not least a perceived breakdown in the policing of low-level crime. The second reason is the critical state of the public finances and the lack of room for manoeuvre. Most of the money borrowed by the Government is going to pay the mounting interest costs of the national debt – merely to service it, not repay it. Enormous off-the-books liabilities, which successive governments have concealed, are steadily falling due. In the absence of growth there are only tough and tougher choices, such as raising taxes on the majority, making major cuts to entitlement spending (particularly on the elderly and on welfare), or monetising the debt and having high inflation. Any of these is going to trigger a political crisis, not least within Parliament. The third, is the fragile state of the world economic order and, particularly, global finance. Donald Trump's aggressive efforts to get major firms to relocate their supply chains within the US have accelerated the unravelling of global integration that got under way during the pandemic. This will inevitably reduce growth, not least because of greater uncertainty. The point is the mountains of private debt all over the world that need continuing growth if they are not to be written off in another global financial crisis, this one accompanied by a big fall in asset values. The chances of a major recession or a full blown financial crisis are rising. The final part of this picture is the growing public support for radical anti-systemic forces. On the Right is Reform and behind it a consolidating movement of genuine ethnonationalism. On the Left are Islamic communalism and a mobilised radical Left, in Jeremy Corbyn's new party and some of the Green Party. These are both currently sidelined by their lack of representation in Parliament but if the wider situation continues to deteriorate or a genuine crisis happens, many MPs who see support for these movements growing will decide to abandon ship and join them. The big majority may prove more fragile than it looks. We are in the last stages of Britain's ancien regime, with Rachel Reeves in the role of Monsieur de Calonne, Louis XVI's hapless minister of finance. The system may hold, just, but it will require decisive action and, above all, brutal honesty if it is to do so.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store