
Rejected - 295 votes to 220 - majority 75.Rejected 296 votes to 220 - majority 76.Rejected - 295 votes to 228 - majority 67.Government amendment A instead of Lords amendments 73 and 74 (that were just rejected)Īmendment 90 - sought to remove a section of the bill that would bar a court or tribunal from granting interim orders that prevent or delay the removal of a person from the UK. Rejected - 297 votes to 227 - majority 70.Rejected - 285 votes to 243 - majority of 42.Īmendment 73 - aimed to lower the threshold of the level of harm required for an appeals process against being removed to a third country.Rejected - 294 votes to 228 - majority 66.Īmendment 56 - disapplies sections of the legislation to people who have been the victims of modern slavery in the UK (former PM Theresa May spoke at length about this earlier today - see post at 15.45).

Rejected - 300 votes to 229 - majority 71.Īmendment 50 - limits the powers of the Home Office to transfer a child out of the care of a local authority into the care of the central government.Government amendments A-E in lieu of Lords amendment 38 (rejected just prior)Īmendment 39 - concerns the definition of "serious and irreversible harm" that comes from the treatment of asylum seekers by UK authorities. ACCEPTED - 284 votes to 242 - majority 42.Government amendments A and O in lieu of Lords amendments 31, 35, 36 - these concern the limits of detaining children in the asylum system and how the legislation applies the Children Act 1989. Rejected - 299 votes to 227 - majority 72.13 Tories rebelled, division lists show.Īmendment 33 - would retain existing limits on the detention of children in the asylum system.Rejected - 290 votes to 242 - majority 48.Rejected - 297 votes to 231 - majority 66.Īmendment 31 - imposes limitations on the detention of unaccompanied children in the asylum system.

Rejected - 304 votes to 228 - majority of 76.Īmendment 12 - maintains existing protections against removal for potential human trafficking victimsĪmendment 23 - would have prevented the government from deporting LGBT people to a number of named countries, including Rwanda, under powers in the bill.Rejected - 303 votes to 227 - majority of 76.Īmendment eight - aimed at ensuring unaccompanied children could make asylum and human rights claims to stay in the UK.Īmendment nine - to allow an asylum claim to be considered if the person had not been removed from the UK within six months.

Rejected - no vote (the motion to reject the amendment was passed by MPs orally without opposition).Īmendment six - stop the bill applying retroactively and mean it would only apply when it receives royal assent and becomes law.
