PM remarks on Supreme Court Judgement: 15 November 2023
The Prime Minister Rishi Sunak's remarks on the Supreme Court Judgement

Good afternoon,
Today, the Supreme Court has judged that the Rwanda policy requires a set of changes in order to be lawful.
I do not agree with this decision 鈥� but I respect it and I accept it.
The rule of law is fundamental to our democracy.
We have prepared for all outcomes of this case.
And so we have been working on a new international Treaty with Rwanda.
This will provide a guarantee in law that鈥β�
鈥hose who are relocated from the UK to Rwanda will be protected against removal from Rwanda.
And it will make clear that we will bring anyone back if ordered to do so by a court.
We will finalise the Treaty in light of today鈥檚 judgment and ratify it without delay.
But we need to end the merry-go-round.聽
I said I was going to fundamentally change our country 鈥� and I meant it.聽
So I am also announcing today that we will take the extraordinary step of introducing emergency legislation.
This will enable Parliament to confirm that, that with our new Treaty, Rwanda is safe.
It will ensure that people cannot further delay flights by bringing systemic challenges in our domestic courts鈥�
鈥nd stop our policy being repeatedly blocked.聽
But of course, we must be honest about the fact that even once Parliament has changed the law here at home鈥�
鈥e could still face challenges from the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg.
I told the Parliament today that I am prepared to change our laws鈥�
鈥nd revisit those international relationships to remove the obstacles in our way.聽
So let me tell everyone now 鈥� I will not allow a foreign court to block these flights.聽
If the Strasbourg Court chooses to intervene against the express wishes of Parliament鈥�
鈥 am prepared to do what necessary to get flights off.
I will not take the easy way out.聽
Because I fundamentally do not believe that anyone thinks the founding aim of the European Convention on Human Rights鈥�
鈥as to stop a sovereign Parliament removing illegal migrants鈥�
鈥o a country deemed to be safe in Parliamentary statute and binding international law.
And I do not believe we are alone in that interpretation.聽
Across Europe, other governments are following our lead 鈥� Italy, Germany, Austria, are all exploring models like ours.
Indeed, the UNHCR operates its own refugee schemes in Rwanda.
And unlike the UK, they don鈥檛 have a treaty for any of this.
We are a reasonable government鈥�
鈥nd this is a reasonable country鈥�
鈥ut the British people鈥檚 patience can only be stretched so thin, and they expect the boats to be stopped.聽
That is why I made this one of my five priorities.聽
And whatever our critics might say, we are making progress.
Because the Rwanda scheme is only one part of our strategy.聽
Last December, the number entering the UK illegally in small boats had more than quadrupled in just two years.
Since then, this year聽they鈥檙e down by a third鈥�
鈥ven as the numbers entering the rest of Europe have soared鈥�
鈥ith illegal crossings of the Mediterranean up by 80 per cent.
We鈥檙e ending the farce of taxpayers footing the bill to put illegal migrants in hotels鈥�
鈥ith 50 closures announced already, returning them to local communities.聽
Illegal working raids are up by almost 70 per cent.
And have made 5,000 arrests this year.
We鈥檝e concluded returns and co-operation agreements with France, Bulgaria, Turkey, Italy, Georgia, and Albania.
We鈥檝e cut the initial asylum backlog by almost two thirds.聽
And in total, we鈥檝e returned over 20,000 illegal migrants this year.
The facts are clear: this government has done more and delivered more鈥�
鈥han any government in the last five years to tackle illegal migration.
But to fully solve this problem, the Rwanda policy is a necessary deterrent.
That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 important that the Supreme Court has today confirmed鈥�
鈥hat the principle of removing asylum seekers to a third safe country is聽lawful.聽
Because it means that when we have addressed the Supreme Court鈥檚 concerns鈥�
鈥eople will know that if they come here illegally, they will not get to stay 鈥� and so they will stop coming altogether.
And that is how we will stop the boats.聽
In recent years, many people have lost faith in politicians鈥� ability to do the things they said they would do.聽
They fear that politicians are more interested in grandstanding than delivering for the British people.聽
I鈥檝e been determined to change that.聽
To deliver on the commitments that I make.
I committed at the start of this year to halve inflation.聽
Back then, inflation was 10.7%.聽
But new figures, released this morning by the Office for National Statistics鈥�
鈥how that inflation is now 4.6%.
I am not saying the job is done.聽
Many people have struggled and continue to struggle.聽
We must stay the course until inflation returns to target.
But it shows that when I said we would halve inflation, I meant it.
When I said I would stop the boats, I meant it.聽
Today鈥檚 judgement has not weakened my resolve鈥�
鈥t has only hardened it.聽
And we will deliver that too.聽
Thank you.