Did Rudd take the fall for May? Calls for PM to resign over Windrush scandal
UK Prime Minister Theresa May is once again facing calls to resign with many labeling her as ultimately responsible the Windrush scandal, despite ex-Home Secretary Amber Rudd already resigning over the matter.
Rudd resigned on Sunday night saying she had inadvertently misled the public over immigration removal targets. While many welcomed her decision to step down, others argued it does not go far enough as she is merely “carrying the can” for May’s “racist” policies towards immigrants. During her time as Home Secretary, May infamously vowed to create a ‘hostile environment’ for illegal migrants.
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Amelia Gentleman, the Guardian journalist who broke the story, said Rudd’s resignation is an "extraordinary moment" for the people caught up in the scandal. She told Radio 4's Today program that while some from the Windrush community are “extremely relieved” the government is taking the issue seriously, they expressed dismay at the fact Rudd was the one stepping down rather than the PM.
"All of them expressed a bit of puzzlement that it was Amber Rudd taking the rap for this, because they point very clearly to Theresa May who they see as the architect of the policies that caused them all of these problems,” she explained.
Theresa May knew about and/or was personally responsible for every single thing that has prompted Amber Rudd to resign.
— James O'Brien (@mrjamesob) April 29, 2018
Amber Rudd has resigned. Good. But she’s just the human shield to Theresa May who is responsible for the Windrush scandal. Theresa May must now resign, too.
— Owen Jones🌹 (@OwenJones84) April 29, 2018
Labour figures echoed the calls for May to fall on her sword. Labour MP for Kensington Emma Dent Coad tweeted: “Amber Rudd has fallen on Theresa May's sword. Now it is time that this Prime Minister - who introduced these policies at the Home Office - offered an apology and stood aside.” A sentiment echoed by Labour deputy leader Tom Watson, among others many of whom used the hashtag '#Maymustgo' on Twitter.
I see Amber Rudd is carrying the can for the person originally responsible for this scandal - Theresa May.
— Tom Watson (@tom_watson) April 29, 2018
The persistent and forensic scrutiny of @HackneyAbbott and @DavidLammy forced Amber Rudd to go.Now the PM must accept her culpability and do the decent thing.#MayMustGo
— Chris Williamson MP (@DerbyChrisW) April 29, 2018
June 2017:Amber Rudd stands in for Theresa May by taking part in the leaders debate instead of her.April 2018:Amber Rudd stands in for Theresa May by resigning over the hostile environment fiasco instead of her.
— David Schneider (@davidschneider) April 29, 2018
Amber Rudd has resigned on 29 April, which is shortly before May
— Tom (@_tom_burke_) April 29, 2018
Rudd’s resignation is set to deal a huge blow to May as the home secretary becomes the fourth cabinet minister to resign in just six months. Former Defense Secretary Michael Fallon, International Development Secretary Priti Patel and First Secretary Damian Green all stepped down, over sexual harassment allegations, porn material in office environments and secret meetings with foreign governments, respectively.
Amber Rudd quitting because she misled MPs over deportation targets isn't the end of this crisis. The Government need to be held accountable for Windrush. Both Theresa May - the architect of the hostile environment - and the policy itself, need to go
— Maya Goodfellow (@MayaGoodfellow) April 30, 2018
Good riddance. 👋🏾 But let’s not pretend that Amber Rudd was the sole responsible for the racist #HostileEnvironment, the barely legal charter flights, deportations, deaths in detention and the #WindrushScandal.She took the fall for a brutal system spearheaded by Theresa May. pic.twitter.com/4rr9KD3iJ7
— #BlackLivesMatterUK (@ukblm) April 30, 2018
Rudd’s done the decent thing. now #MayMustGo
— Paul Mason (@paulmasonnews) April 29, 2018
There are also fears the pro-EU Home Secretary’s resignation could cause an imbalance between Leavers and Remainers within Cabinet ahead of a crucial meeting on Wednesday to discuss the UK’s post-Brexit trade agreements. Senior Eurosceptics including David Davis, Boris Johnson, Liam Fox and Michael Gove are expected to call on May to abandon, what their ally MP Jacob Rees-Mogg branded, “cretinous” customs partnership plans amid concerns it would represent kowtowing to the EU climb-down. In turn, Pro-EU Tories in the cabinet are expected to vote for a non-binding amendment that would make staying in the EU customs union an “objective” of negotiations.
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