New row with France erupts as record 853 migrants make it to Britain in small boats in just ONE day image wallpaper

A RECORD 853 migrants made it to Britain in small boats in a single day — triggering a huge new row with France.

The unwanted milestone came as Home Secretary Priti Patel handed over the first instalment of £54million for the French to stem the tide.

LNP
Record 853 migrants made it to Britain in small boats in a single day, despite Priti Patel handing over to France the first instalment of £54million[/caption]
PA
Whitehall insiders accused Paris of 'diverting political resources' away from the fight against traffickers to the fishing row[/caption]

Critics said it was shocking so many trip took place in November as Channel crossings become more dangerous.

Three migrants have died attempting to make it to the UK this week.

Government insiders claim that French officials are too busy arguing over Brexit fishing licences to stop small boats departing their coastline for England.

The Home Office yesterday confirmed 853 migrants arrived on Wednesday. Whitehall insiders accused Paris of "diverting political resources" away from the fight against traffickers to the fishing row.

A source said: "It means the French system isn't as focused on this as it should be. They seem to have lost control of their own shoreline and they can't provide rational explanations of what they are trying to do to stop it.

"It does seem now they are actively playing politics with people's lives."

'TRULY SHOCKING'

Last week France backed down over threats to disrupt our trawlers and energy supplies. British scallop trawler Cornelis Gert Jan was detained for a week accused of fishing without a licence.

This week we started paying instalments of £54million to help stem the flow of small boats. French officials last month whined they hadn't received cash.

The source added: "They moaned when we hadn't sent it, and now we have sent some they still haven't got the act together. They need to demonstrate how they are using it properly."

The landings on Wednesday smashed the previous highest daily tally of 828 migrants on August 21 this year.

The new record means 21,051 have arrived so far in 2021 — dwarfing the 8,410 who made the treacherous trip last year.

Yesterday the Home Office also said French authorities prevented 975 migrants crossing between Tuesday and Thursday.

This is not just tragic, it is wholly avoidable if the French stepped up to the plate and stopped boats leaving in the first place.

MP Natalie Elphicke

Dover and Deal MP Natalie Elphicke slammed the French for not doing more.

She said: "Month after month lives are being lost in the English Channel. This is not just tragic, it is wholly avoidable if the French stepped up to the plate and stopped boats leaving in the first place.

"Traffickers will continue to ply their disgusting trade while they are able to do so. It is the responsibility of all civilised countries to put a stop to it."

There were no crossings on Thursday or yesterday as the weather worsened. On Wednesday the Isle of Inishmore ferry heading from Dover to Calais picked up 13 desperate migrants from a sinking boat. Ms Patel is under increasing pressure to get a grip on the crisis.

In 2019 she promised to make crossings an "infrequent phenomenon" by spring 2020 and then pledged in August last year to "make this route unviable". Labour's shadow Home Secretary Nick Thomas-Symonds said: "This is a catastrophic failure by the Home Secretary. There is no time to waste on yet more empty promises."

Enver Solomon, chief executive of the Refugee Council, which supports migrants, said: "These tragic deaths are truly shocking and should make the government urgently rethink its approach."

Alamy
Channel ferry picks up boat migrants[/caption]
Chris Eades
Brit trawler is held in port of Le Havre[/caption]
LNP
Migrants come ashore at Dungeness in Kent, escorted by border officials[/caption]


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New row with France erupts as record 853 migrants make it to Britain in small boats in just ONE day

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 Tory MPs at war as blame over Owen Paterson sleaze scandal sparks tensions image wallpaper

TORY party chiefs were locked in a Bonfire Night war of words as fireworks flew over who was to blame for the disastrous Owen Paterson U-turn.

Boris Johnson and his Chief Whip Mark Spencer, as well as Commons leader Jacob Rees Mogg, were all slammed by MPs and ministers over the sleaze saga.

Alamy
Boris Johnson's Tory party has been rocked by in-fighting over the Paterson scandal[/caption]

Yesterday the disgraced MP formally quit the Commons paving the way for a testy by-election in North Shropshire.

But back in Westminster class war erupted, with the 2019 intake of Tory MPs said to be particularly angry at being ordered through the division lobbies to try to delay Mr Paterson's 30 day suspension over breaching lobbying rules.

One said: "All the toffs versus towns stuff is back. The 2019 intake is very different from the country-gent old guard, and we find it very patronising when told what to do by them."

Tensions peaked on Wednesday night with one newbie MP calling the embattled Mr Paterson a four letter word to his face.

And there were bitter blows traded at the very top of Government after allies of the ex-Cabinet Minister said the doomed amendment to re-model Commons rules was written "at the heart of No10".

In a day of claim and counterclaim, Downing Street sources rejected that and instead pointed the finger of blame at Jacob Rees Mogg for conjuring up the plan.

But the Commons leader's allies insisted he had the full support and blessing of Mr Johnson to try find a way to save Mr Paterson – saying he "served only at the Prime Minister's pleasure."

However anger boiled over, with one minister branding Mr Rees-Mogg's amendment "fatally flawed" as opposition parties immediately refused to cooperate.

They told The Sun: "Just because you can speak Latin and know your Tudor history it doesn't make you some master strategist."

And there was anger aimed at Chief Whip Mark Spencer for "overselling the level of support Paterson had in the party" and pressurising the PM to back the extraordinary effort to save the doomed ex-Cabinet Minister.

Last night Downing Street were also under-fire for refusing to formally rule out giving Mr Paterson a peerage.

However one insider said a gong was "never going to happen."



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 Boris Johnson's lead collapses over Owen Paterson scandal with Tories now just one point ahead of Labour image wallpaper

BORIS Johnson's poll lead has been cut to just one point following fury at his botched bid to save sleaze-mired MP Owen Paterson.

The Tories tanked three points to 36 per cent while Labour crept up two points to put them almost at level pegging at 35 per cent.

AP
Boris Johnson's poll lead has been cut to just one point[/caption]
PA
Owen Paterson resigned as an MP yesterday[/caption]

The YouGov survey carried out in the wake of the Paterson scandal is the clearest sign yet voters are punishing the Conservatives.

Mr Paterson resigned last night after the PM pulled the plug on a controversial plan to protect his friend the ex-environment secretary from a cash-for-access row.

Only hours before Mr Johnson was ordering Tory MPs to throw an arm round their embattled colleague, who maintained his innocence but was banged to rights by the watchdog.

The shock resignation means a byelection will now be fought in the safe Conservative seat of North Shropshire.

There were rumours of opposition parties uniting to field an independent anti-sleaze candidate – akin to ex-BBC journalist Martin Bell's ousting of Neil Hamilton in 1997 – but Labour have ruled it out.

There are also looming contests to replace Tory MPs James Brokenshire and Sir David Amess.

Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi this morning denied the whole affair brought doubt over the PM's judgement.

He said: "I think actually it says that the Prime Minister, when wanting to be following a process that makes the system fairer… wanted to do that.

"And very quickly realising that actually that's one thing that we should pursue on a cross-party basis and we'll come forward with proposals, and I hope, we can sort of set our politics aside and create a fairer system, because right of appeal, I think, is important, and your listeners will see that as important.

"Because, in any case, and I don't want to get into specifics, but in any case, there should be a right of appeal."

According to the poll the Lib Dems remain on eight points, the Greens on nine points and Reform on 5 points.

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