What's next for the Rwanda bill?published at 22:10 Greenwich Mean Time 17 January
Harry Farley
Political correspondent
This is not the end of the story.
Now the bill will go to the House of Lords where, unlike in the House of Commons, the government does not have a majority. Other recent immigration legislation the government has sent to the House of Lords has been heavily criticised. So it is likely peers will try to change the bill to address the concerns from some that it will breach international law.
Those changes from the Lords will then be returned to the Commons for their approval.
Assuming the House of Lords does table amendments – which seems likely – right-wing Conservative MPs have vowed to oppose them.
“It is not the case that tonight’s vote is the end of matters,” one rebel source said tonight. “If the House of Lords chooses – as I suspect they will – to send back amendments that weaken the bill, the response of those [right-wing Conservative MPs] will be to table amendments in lieu that toughen the bill.”
So more amendments, more debates, more votes.
As one rebel Conservative said tonight: “The prime minister is by no means out of the woods.”