In reply to Gabriella:
None of the above covers that the govt have been using tge ibcreased backlog as an indication of increased numbers not their functional failure, i.e. lying.
I thought Braverman said the asylum system is broken - was that not an admission of failures in the Home Office? The numbers crossing the Channel have increased as well. But yes, no doubt there was lying and no full disclosure going on as well. Given the history of lying in politics, I suspect not many people take what they hear from politicians at face value.
As to whether other parties might have done better, who knows but that's irrelevant to the position you suggested that that govts other than the Tories were also to be blame for where we are in 2022. Add in the inflamnatory rhetoric, tge breaking of the law as regards the conditions in Manston, and the vacuous costly posturing about Zimbabwe, and you have an inept incompetent law breaking lying govt
I was referring to all the criticisms of the asylum system under Labour
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/2807893.stm - some quotes below from this article:
But by April 2001, Mr Straw felt able to declare that he felt the UK was "getting on top of the problem".
He said then that the backlog of cases waiting to be handled had fallen dramatically - but a few months later David Blunkett, having taken over at the home office, had to admit that the number of asylum seekers waiting for decisions had been hugely underestimated.
Throughout Labour's period in office, meanwhile, the press has been snapping at the government's heels over asylum, while a stream of court judgements have gone against first Jack Straw and then David Blunkett.
At times the debate has gone right to the heart of British life, with talk of "Britishness" tests and concern over the rise of far-right groups fuelled by anger over asylum.
Mr Blunkett, like Jack Straw before him, has been criticised for many of the measures introduced - and also for his language: talk of asylum seekers' children "swamping" schools caused a big political row.
In September last year, for instance, Mr Blunkett admitted that the government's manifesto commitment to remove 30,000 failed asylum seekers a year was "massively over-ambitious".