In 2016, he successfully campaigned for Brexit, arguing that it would allow the country to “take back control” of its borders, and the increasing number of arrivals along the British coastline are a visible symbol of failure to do so.
According to excerpts from his speech, released in advance by Downing Street, Mr. Johnson was expected to say that Britain “cannot sustain a parallel illegal system. Our compassion may be infinite, but our capacity to help people is not.”
Yvette Cooper, who speaks for the opposition Labour Party on home affairs issues, described the plan as “unworkable, unethical and extortionate.”
It was, she wrote on Twitter, a “desperate and truly shameful announcement,” and “an attempt to distract from Boris Johnson’s lawbreaking,” following the decision by police on Tuesday to fine the prime minister for breaking lockdown rules by attending a birthday party in Downing Street.
Ian Blackford, the leader of the Scottish National Party’s lawmakers in the British Parliament, told the BBC that the proposal was “absolutely chilling.”
There were signs that even those that supported the idea in principle were yet to be convinced.
In an editorial, The Daily Mail, which championed Brexit and has backed efforts to curb migration, was supportive, but it said that the proposal was “fraught with difficulties,” and noted that previous efforts by Britain to curb the flow of migrants across the English Channel had failed.
“From paying France to smash people-smugglers to armored jet skis turning back illegal dinghies, not one Home Office gimmick has so far succeeded,” it wrote.