Uh oh. Chief Secretary to the Treasury Darren Jones has found himself in a tight spot after his Question Time appearance on Thursday night. The Labour MP for Bristol North West told the BBC audience on the issue of Britain’s borders that ‘the majority of the people in these boats are children, babies and women’. But it appears that data published by, er, his own government contradicts that claim…
The government’s official statistics for irregular migration to the UK state in black and white that ‘since January 2018, 70 per cent of people detected arriving irregularly have been adult males ages 18 and over’. The document notes that in the same time period, ‘just under one-fifth of(19 per cent)’ of detected arrivals were children. Yet despite this, Jones decided last night to double down on his contradictory claim. Arguing with Reform UK’s Zia Yusuf and sceptical audience members, the Treasury man added:
You’re told not to challenge the audience on Question Time, but I’m going to. So let me tell you this story. When there are babies and children put into that position by human trafficking gangs who are coming across in the channel with skin burns, from the oil from those boats mixing with the salt sea water, I would ask any of you to look at those babies and children and say ‘go back where you came from’.
But that doesn’t quite back up Jones’s rather dubious claim about the demographics of small boat occupants. As of yet, Downing Street has not corrected the Chief Secretary’s comments. Will No. 10 admit he got it wrong? Watch this space…
Watch the clip here:
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