quarta-feira, 25 de fevereiro de 2026

As of February 25, 2026, approximately 600 migrants crossed the English Channel in a single day, marking the biggest one-day surge of 2026 so far.

 


600 Small boat migrants cross Channel in BIGGEST one-day SURGE this year

As of February 25, 2026, approximately 600 migrants crossed the English Channel in a single day, marking the biggest one-day surge of 2026 so far. This increase brings the total number of arrivals for the current year to over 2,000, which is higher than the cumulative totals at this same point in both 2024 and 2025.

 

Key Details of the Surge

Daily Record: Provisional figures from GB News indicate about 590 to 600 people were brought to the port of Ramsgate by Border Force and RNLI vessels.

Previous 2026 High: Before this event, the highest daily arrival count for 2026 was 322 people on February 9.

Weather Impact: The surge followed a fortnight of poor weather that had temporarily halted crossings. The current spike coincided with the "warmest day of the year" so far, with temperatures reaching up to 18°C in southern England.

Migrant Camps: An estimated 4,500 migrants are currently waiting in makeshift camps near Calais and Dunkirk, leading maritime sources to warn of a potentially record-breaking year for arrivals.

Context from 2025

Annual Total: In 2025, a total of 41,472 migrants crossed the Channel, the second-highest annual figure on record after 2022.

2025 Daily Records: The highest single-day total recorded in 2025 was 1,195 people on June 1. Other major surges in 2025 included 1,097 arrivals on September 7 and over 800 on December 21.

Government Policy: Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has introduced a "one-in, one-out" deal with France aimed at detaining and returning arrivals, though critics have noted that only a small number of deportations have occurred relative to the total arrivals.

EXCLUSIVE: 600 Small boat migrants cross Channel in BIGGEST one-day SURGE this year

BREAKING: Hundreds of illegal migrants crossing Channel in the biggest SURGE of the year

Commons Speaker admits 'tipping-off' police about Mandelson | LBC

Commons Speaker passed 'relevant information' about Mandelson to police

 

Mandelson v the Met: what the statement issued after his arrest tells us

 


Analysis

Mandelson v the Met: what the statement issued after his arrest tells us

Ben Quinn

Political correspondent

Former Labour MP’s lawyers Mishcon de Reya issued short statement on his behalf that ended up saying an awful lot

 

Wed 25 Feb 2026 13.34 GMT

 

It didn’t take long for Peter Mandelson to go public. Only a few hours after he was pictured on Tuesday returning home after his arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public office, he hit back. His lawyers issued a short statement that said an awful lot and attempted to pack a punch – several, actually.

 

It showed that the veteran of multiple past political controversies intends to do what he has always done: work the problem.

 

Here we break down what the statement said and why it was significant.

 

Peter Mandelson was arrested yesterday despite an agreement with the police that he would attend an interview next month on a voluntary basis.

 

The first thing to note is that the statement came from his lawyers at Mishcon de Reya, a London firm widely regarded as the best and most expensive in the business.

 

The firm advises on “the full spectrum of reputation protection and crisis management issues”. It has acted for politicians and others by preparing them for appearances before select committees and public inquiries.

 

The first line sets the scene. Mandelson had agreed to speak to police voluntarily as soon as next month.

 

The arrest was prompted by a baseless suggestion that he was planning to leave the country and take up permanent residence abroad. There is absolutely no truth whatsoever in any such suggestion.

 

These are highly aggressive lines and true to form when it comes to the modus operandi of both Mishcon and Mandelson.

 

Remember the defiant speech he gave after defending his Hartlepool seat in the 2001 general election? “I’m a fighter, not a quitter,” he had exclaimed after resigning from government for a second time.

 

We have asked the MPS for the evidence relied upon to justify the arrest.

 

This is a classic legal judo manoeuvre, boldly attempting to flip the focus back on to the Metropolitan Police Service. The ball is being bounced back into the court of detectives who will be attempting to walk a politically tortuous line between proceeding with the investigation in the right way and ensuring no hostages to fortune are left that could upset a future trial.

 

“Give us the evidence you had,” Mishcon and Mandelson are demanding, as the cameras shift away from the former politician’s home and on to Scotland Yard.

 

Peter Mandelson’s overriding priority is to cooperate with the police investigation, as he has done throughout this process, and to clear his name.

 

 

This asserts that Mandelson sees himself as a law-abiding citizen who will, of course, adhere to his responsibilities.

 

It also makes clear that he is going to fight the substantive allegations. He has said repeatedly that he made no financial gain. Have his lawyers spotted possible weaknesses in any potential attempt to charge or prosecute him? Misconduct in public office is a particularly hard offence to prove.

 

True to the form of New Labour briefing, which Mandelson pioneered in the 1990s, the former MP is understood to have sent a message to friends in the early hours of Tuesday, hours after he was released from police custody. This was in parallel to the public statement and sought to continue to shape the public narrative.

 

The notion that he was about to “flee to the British Virgin Islands” was “complete fiction”, the message said.

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