On Thursday morning Keir Starmer, Yvette Cooper and the Home Office began broadcasting the news that the first boat migrants had been detained as part of the Anglo-French one in, one out deal. It was a chest out, shoulders back moment for a beleagured government that knows it must tackle the small boats invasion or it will be swept away by Reform UK. Their electoral demise will almost certainly happen regardless of the small boats situation, as the consequences of it will be felt for many years to come, particularly by British women and girls who should never have been subjected to the unwanted advances of the Lab-Con establishment's colonists.
Unfortunately for Labour, the announcement on Thursday led to more questions than answers, as Cooper refused to confirm how many migrants had been detained. Her reluctance suggested that perhaps only a fraction of the 155 recent arrivals had been selected for detention. A video later released by the Home Office showed a handful of men being delivered to a facility in a van. The same day another 248 were taxied in by RNLI and Border Farce vessels. There was no word on how many - if any - of those were detained.
Then there is the question of processing time. The government admits it will take 'weeks' to enact the first deportations to France - in exchange for 'genuine' asylum seekers who will almost certainly never leave our shores. Let's say it takes weeks and not months, as some media outlets have speculated, what happens to all the new arrivals in the mean time? Since the initial detentions, a further 12 boats were picked up, carrying another 683 invaders. Does the Home Office have capacity, or will it simply allow the vast majority to be fast tracked to three and four star hotels at our expense?
And why exactly did another seven boats arrive on Saturday, carrying 435 migrants, if the occupants thought they were going to be 'detained'?
This problem isn't going away any time soon...
Total = 838 (down 517 from previous week)
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