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Lee Anderson says Rishi Sunak will not cease the boats as he leads Baked Bean Plot

Lee Anderson has warned that Rishi Sunak received’t cease the boats as he lashes out on the PM’s immigration plan.

The loudmouth Tory and his pal Brendan Clarke-Smith give up because the occasion’s Deputy Chairmen to affix a Commons rebel in his Rwanda plan.

The so-called “Baked Bean Two” humiliated themselves on TV final 12 months as Mr Anderson spoon-fed Mr Clarke-Smith chilly baked beans.

Appearing on GB News after resigning, Mr Anderson stated: “At the end of the day, small boats are coming, they’ll keep coming. I want to see a situation where anybody who arrives illegally in this country has no right at all, to claim asylum, no right to claim an appeal, and more importantly, no right to go missing and disappear into the country.”

He added: “I don’t want to see boats pulling up to Dover every 10 minutes. I want to see them not coming and I want to see a bill that delivers that.”





Tory deputy chairmen Lee Anderson and Brendan Clarke-Smith have delivered a hammer blow to the PM
Tory deputy chairmen Lee Anderson and Brendan Clarke-Smith pictured consuming beans on GB News

The Government has steered it’s going to order civil servants to disregard makes an attempt by judges to dam Rwanda deportation flights as Mr Sunak tries to manage his unruly occasion. In an effort to get rebels to again laws, the PM has given in to their calls for to clamp down on officers.

Mr Sunak is in search of to win over MPs forward of a crunch vote this night on his Rwanda plan, after he suffered the most important Conservative revolt of his management. Despite the infighting, the Safety of Rwanda Bill is anticipated to clear its ultimate Commons hurdle tonight.

Immigration Minister Michael Tomlinson confirmed ministers have been contemplating tweaking the Civil Service code to remind officers to comply with ministerial selections. Tory rebels have warned that the Rwanda laws fails to go far sufficient to dam last-minute injunctions from the European Court of Human Rights.

The minister didn’t spell out the precise particulars, however instructed BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “My expectation is that there will be further confirmation that it will be for ministers to decide and then, once those decisions are made, they will be carried out … by our excellent and efficient civil servants.”