But leaving laws in place for independent agencies means they do have to apply them, or make a political choice not too.
Having the option to deport people to Rwanda doesn't mean you have to do it. The problem with an opposition suggesting that you will specifically repeal this piece of legislation or that piece of legislation is that you become defined be reactivity to the previous government. It is much better to propose a positive plan which would necessarily negate those earlier legislative instruments, without isolated repealing.
Right now we are seeing the issue that a government can get into if it defines itself by what it plans to repeal rather than what it plans to actually do - in this case the nonsense of suggesting wholesale repealing of EU laws for nothing other than idealogical reasons, rather than focus on what might replace them.
If you are happy with a govt politicising the police then you are part of the problem.
Where on earth did I say I was in favour of that.
And you also seem happy with political parties lying about what they are going to do.
In what way is it lying - a government in waiting could say it was specifically going to repeal law X and law Y, or it could say it is going to bring in law Z which over-riders law X or law Y. I'm struggling to see why they would be lying if they say the latter, bring in law Z and in doing so make laws X and Y redundant.
It is all about being pro-active in your agenda, not reactive, being about what you are for, not what you are against. A successful opposition can define itself by what it is against, but will likely only ever be that - an opposition. A successful government in waiting (i.e. one that actually becomes a government) needs to define itself by what it is for.