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Some 580 asylum seekers are housed at RAF Wethersfield where radiological contamination and unexploded ordnance has been found
Insular definitions of the national past overlook the very things we should take pride in
The Conservative Party’s new leader has the potential to do a lot of damage, whether or not she wins the next general election
The favourite to succeed Rishi Sunak as Conservative party leader plans to launch an “air war” with younger voters
Home Office officials and border staff tell Byline Times that the plan to tackle small boat crossings is little more than a rebranding exercise
Labour members should organise within Constituency Labour Parties and trade union branches to pass motions in support of migrants and bring these into effect by mobilising for solidarity actions on our streets and in our workplaces
This is the real way to smash the people-smuggling gangs, writes Professor Derrick Wyatt
In July a report on the UK’s largest immigration detention centre found it was “filthy” and “dilapidated” and had drug problems
We must be honest about the fact that it is not only fringe rabble-rousers who have engaged in this damaging rhetoric, writes Adeeb Ayton
The new Labour Government should abandon all of the failed hostile approaches to migration and asylum pursued by its predecessors, argues Zoe Gardner
Rishi Sunak’s historic defeat was a direct result of a decade of ideological hard-right policies that have decimated our political and social fabric
The Reform Party is hovering around 18% of the vote, yet Farage’s and his party’s Facebook posts generated six times more reactions and shares than either Labour or the Conservatives and their leaders
The latest episode of the hit Media Storm podcast focuses on the more positive narratives around refugees that journalists could disseminate – and why they selectively choose not to
Both party leaders are promising to slash immigration numbers without being honest about the big costs it will inevitably bring to our economy and public services
Why is a party with so few elected representatives and even fewer ideas being given such an easy ride?
The Labour leader’s new six ‘first steps’ for Government reveal a lot about the kind of administration he plans to lead
One Labour MP described the decision to take Natalie Elphicke as a “disgrace” that would “come back to bite us”
Britannia Hotels profits increased to £40 million in 2023, amid reports that at least 17 of the chain’s hotels have been block-booked by the Government for asylum seekers
A new tool lets migrants in the UK know when and how they can vote – navigating the confusing patchwork of rules
Migrants risking their lives to cross the US border is a huge political issue but also a quiet, devastating human tragedy
British-Palestinian families are appealing to the Home Office to institute visa programs for relatives stranded in war torn Gaza
With the Government refusing to say how much the controversial asylum plan would cost, MPs commissioned the NAO to produce its own report
Britain’s standing on human rights is in “jeopardy” and Good Friday Agreement undermined by the Safety of Rwanda Bill
The extension of the controversial counter-extremism program into immigration and asylum processes risks embedding racism at our borders
Adam Barnett wonders why the Reform Party and its leader are treated as mainstream when they’re not
We again have some members of the Conservative Party arguing that the UK needs to abandon another European institution, writes former British diplomat Alexandra Hall Hall
A year on from the tragic drowning of four people in the English Channel, Nicola Kelly reports on how the Government’s plan to “smash” the people smugglers involves further targeting their victims
A day after the suicide of a man aboard the Bibby Stockholm exclusive data obtained by this newspaper shows migrants waiting three years or more for a decision on their future has more than trebled in the past year
The Rwanda scheme is the perfect example of the politics of ‘vice signalling’. So why isn’t it working?
AC Grayling reflects on what immigration really means, how right-wing politicians are twisting that meaning to exploit xenophobia, and what can be done to counteract their rhetoric
What the Government seems to have overlooked is that the European Convention on Human Rights isn’t merely referenced in the Good Friday Agreement – it’s threaded throughout it, writes Emma deSouza
Max Colbert delves into a new organisation arguing for ‘action on the streets’
There is no way of stopping people from trying to escape the awful conditions of their lives through the Rwanda scheme – another, sensible, solution is required, writes Brian Latham
Suella Braverman’s asylum barges are tied up with Britain’s imperial past, writes Iain Overton
The UK could show global leadership by pushing for the international community to broaden its definition of refugees, writes former British diplomat Alexandra Hall Hall
The latest sanctions stand in stark contrast to the UK Government’s often inaccurate descriptions of life in Rwanda, where it plans to send some asylum seekers
Suella Braverman plans to end inspection of this lucrative market as complaints mount about conditions
If the West really wants to end migration, there is a solution: spend more money in the countries migrants are fleeing.
Exclusive new poll finds the public is far more tolerant of diversity and cultural change than the Government appears to believe, Adam Bienkov reports
An increasingly desperate Prime Minister is resorting to false claims about his opponents in order to cling to office, writes Adam Bienkov
“Human beings do not belong in barges or camps. The correct way to house people is to house them in communities.”
The truth is that Rishi Sunak’s Government is complicit in forcing desperate people to risk their lives in order to seek refuge in this country