Starmer
to rethink human rights law to tackle ‘Farage boats’
Prime
minister blames Brexit for surge in numbers of small boat crossings but defends
UK’s membership of ECHR
Eleni
Courea Political correspondent
Wed 1 Oct
2025 08.31 BST
Keir
Starmer has said he will look at how international law is being interpreted by
British courts in an effort to tackle small boats, which he labelled “Farage
boats” because of their increase in number since Brexit.
Speaking
after the Labour party conference, the prime minister signalled his unhappiness
with how the European convention on human rights was being interpreted by
judges making decisions about deportations. But he defended the UK’s membership
of the ECHR, saying that ministers “need to look again at the interpretation of
some of these provisions, not tear them down”.
Starmer
told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme that while “those genuinely fleeing
persecution should be afforded asylum … mass migration in a way that we have
not seen in previous years”.
The prime
minister blamed the impact of Brexit for the surge in the number of illegal
Channel crossings. “These are Farage boats, in many senses, that are coming
across the Channel,” he said.
Before
leaving the EU, the UK was a signatory to the Dublin convention, which states
that asylum seekers can be returned to the first member state they arrived in
before their claims are considered.
The
number of small boat crossings have risen dramatically since Brexit was
implemented in 2020, according to Home Office figures. More than 33,000 people
have arrived in the UK so far this year, a record since data was first reported
in 2018.
“I would
gently point out to Nigel Farage and others that before we left the EU, we had
a returns agreement with every country in the EU and he told the country it
would make no difference if we left. He was wrong about that,” Starmer told GB
News.
He added
that the government needed to “ramp up” its new returns agreement to send
migrants who have crossed the Channel back to France, in exchange for people
with genuine asylum cases who have not attempted to cross.
Pressed
for details about what was blocking deportations of foreign criminals, Starmer
cited articles 3 and 8 of the ECHR, which ban torture and protect the right to
private and family life respectively.
Ministers
have expressed concerns previously that both articles are being interpreted too
broadly by judges when deciding whether someone convicted of a crime can be
deported to their country of origin.
Starmer
was speaking following the conclusion of Labour’s annual conference in
Liverpool, where he made a speech criticising Farage as someone who had never
“liked or believed in Britain”.
He said
the country was facing an “era-defining choice” between Labour and the populist
right and questioned whether Reform UK loved “our beautiful, tolerant, diverse
country” or simply wanted to “stir the pot of division because that’s worked in
their interests”.
Speaking
to broadcasters afterwards, Starmer said he did not think Farage was himself
racist but reiterated that his latest immigration policy was.
Reform UK
has pledged to scrap indefinite leave to remain, which would put hundreds of
thousands of legal immigrants with that status at risk of deportation. Starmer
told Sky News that the announcement had made minorities in the UK feel a
“shiver down their throat”.
Farage
attacked Starmer following his conference speech and said he was putting Reform
UK activists at risk by accusing the party of championing a racist policy.
David
Lammy, the deputy prime minister, rowed back on his claim on Tuesday that
Farage had “flirted with Hitler Youth”, a statement apparently referring to
allegations from 2013 that the Reform leader had sung Nazi songs as a
schoolboy. Farage denied the allegations at the time.
Pat
McFadden, the work and pensions secretary, said on Wednesday morning that
Starmer had “shown real fightback” and “drawn a line” under the questions over
his leadership that had overshadowed the lead-up to the conference.
“There were plenty of them. I think it’s a different feeling at the end of
the conference compared with the beginning,” he told BBC Radio 5 Live. “We had a couple of difficult stories
and resignations in the early part of September in the run-up to the conference
and I think the prime minister with his speech yesterday has drawn a line under
that, shown real fightback and also importantly a real belief in what makes
Britain great.”
Sonya
Sceats, chief executive of the charity Freedom from Torture, said “chipping
away at Article 3 of the ECHR risks setting in train the destruction of the
absolute ban on torture – the most appalling form of abuse – which Britain
helped forge and champion over centuries.”
“This
isn’t who we are as a country. Public support for the torture ban in the UK is
strong and growing as others break with the international rule of law. Caring
people across Britain are horrified to see political parties scapegoating
refugees as a pretext for rolling back rights that keep everyone safe from
abuse.”

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