This is Starmer's year to prove he can deliver on small boats promise
2 January 2025, 12:37 | Updated: 2 January 2025, 14:12
"Stop the boats" was Rishi Sunak's refrain, while "smash the gangs" is Sir Keir Starmer's - both a central promise of their premierships, both proving more difficult than the three-word slogan suggests.
As the new year begins, it's the long-standing problem of illegal migration into the UK across the channel that is chipping away at this government, as it did the last.
Today, Number 10 attempted to hold back the criticism after yesterday's release of the latest stubbornly high numbers, with a new announcement aimed at disrupting the activities of people traffickers.
New interim serious crime prevention orders will give authorities quick access to powers that will prevent smugglers from travelling, stop mobile phone use and shut down bank accounts.
Shadow home secretary Chris Philp immediately dismissed the plan as "pretty laughable," despite his own government's failures on the issue.
His argument was that the Conservative's strategy of immediately deporting those arriving onto UK shores to Rwanda for processing would have eventually worked as a deterrent.
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Constant court battles and Labour's decision to scrap it as soon as they got into office means we'll never know.
What we do know is that this is Sir Keir's year to prove he can deliver on his election promise, or face the disastrous political consequences, as many others before him have.
(c) Sky News 2025: This is Starmer's year to prove he can deliver on small boats promise