

- #TWO POINT HOSPITAL CRACK STUCK ON LOADING SCREEN FULL#
- #TWO POINT HOSPITAL CRACK STUCK ON LOADING SCREEN SERIES#
“I’m determined to end the appalling people trafficking we’re seeing,” she told the paper. According to the paper, she would increase Border Force staff levels from 9,000 to 10,800 and would also bring forward a strengthened UK Bill of Rights to provide a “sound legal basis” to tackle illegal migration. The Foreign Secretary will hope to win backing for her proposals on illegal migration, as she told the Mail on Sunday that “Britain’s borders will be protected” under her leadership. She was honest and did not believe in nonsense.”īut Ms Truss, during a visit to party members in Kent, once again defended her plans for potentially £30 billion of tax cuts, saying: “I think it is wrong to be taking money from people that we don’t need to take, when people across the country are struggling with the cost-of-living crisis.”

Mr Patten told the newspaper: “Margaret Thatcher was a fiscal Conservative who did not cut tax until we had reduced inflation. His concerns were backed up by Tory grandees Chris Patten, Norman Lamont and Malcolm Rifkind, who told The Observer that Mrs Thatcher would not have approved of cutting taxes to curb inflation. On the first weekend since Tory MPs whittled down the candidates to the final two, Mr Sunak travelled to Margaret Thatcher’s birthplace of Grantham in Lincolnshire where he stressed his “common sense” Thatcherite credentials and labelled the tax plans of Ms Truss “immoral”. Saturday also saw Mr Sunak hit out at the “forces that be” backing his rival, as he called himself the “underdog” in the contest. Illegal migration has so far played a less significant role in the campaign, with inflation and the cost-of-living dominating the clashes between the candidates. Mr Sunak made a similar pledge, with his campaign promising to do “whatever it takes” for the scheme to succeed. I’m going to increase the border force to make sure that we have the proper protection in place directly at the border.” “I’m also determined to make sure that we have the right level of forces at our border. It’s the right thing to do,” she told the Mail on Sunday.
#TWO POINT HOSPITAL CRACK STUCK ON LOADING SCREEN FULL#
“I’m determined to see it through to full implementation, as well as exploring other countries that we can work on similar partnerships with.

#TWO POINT HOSPITAL CRACK STUCK ON LOADING SCREEN SERIES#
The first deportation flight was grounded in June after a series of legal challenges, and another attempt is yet to be scheduled.Ĭalling it the “right” policy, Ms Truss also indicated that the scheme could be extended further. The campaign so far had seen both candidates re-commit to the Government’s controversial Rwanda asylum scheme, over which Britain currently stands to lose the £120 million it has paid to Rwanda if the plan to deport migrants is ruled unlawful by the courts.īoth candidates defended the policy, despite officials from the east African nation’s government confirming this week it had received the entire initial payment for the agreement signed in April and that the funds are already “committed”, with some money spent on preparations for arrivals. On a weekend in which the two rival camps traded blows over tax cuts and economic credibility, both the Foreign Secretary and the former chancellor appeared united on the need to toughen up UK policy on migrants as Ms Truss promised an expanded Border Force and Mr Sunak committed to an annual cap on the number of refugees. The UK will crack down further on illegal migration in the coming months regardless of who enters Downing Street, after both Liz Truss and Rishi Sunak pledged fresh measures to tighten British borders.
