The new British Prime Minister Keir Starmer has affirmed that his newly formed government will not pursue the policy of his predecessor with respect to deporting asylum seekers to Rwanda, which terminates this plan even before any flights take off.

"The Rwanda scheme was dead and buried before it started," Starmer said in his first news conference. He added: "It's never acted as a deterrent. Almost the opposite.".

The government of former Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has encountered several judicial, parliamentary, and procedural obstacles in implementing the agreement, while the daily flow of illegal immigrants through the Channel continues, with the Labour Party promising before winning the elections to abandon the policy of deporting immigrants to Rwanda.

In November 2023, the UK government signed a new agreement with the government of Rwanda to send asylum seekers and deported immigrants to Rwanda.

Newly elected UK prime minister Keir Starmer on Saturday began his first full day in charge declaring himself "restless for change" and pledging that growth would be his Labour government's "number one mission".

The party on Friday won a landslide election victory, bringing to a close 14 years of Conservative rule.

The Labour leader told his top team, including Britain's first woman finance minister Rachel Reeves and new foreign minister David Lammy, it had been "the honour and the privilege of my life" to be invited by King Charles III to form the government.

"We have a huge amount of work to do, so now we get on with our work," he said to applause and smiles around the cabinet table.

Starmer spent his first hours in Downing Street on Friday appointing his ministerial team, hours after securing his centre-left party's return to power with a whopping 174-seat majority in the UK parliament.

Notable lower-ranking appointments included Patrick Vallance, chief scientific government adviser during the Covid-19 pandemic, who has been made a science minister.

James Timpson, whose shoe repair company employs ex-offenders, was also made a prisons minister.

Both would be given seats in the upper house of parliament in order to join the government as neither is an elected lawmaker.

Starmer said both new ministers were people "associated with change" and illustrated his determination to deliver concrete improvements to people's lives.

"I'm restless for change, and I think and hope that what you've already seen demonstrates that," he told reporters.

Flag-waving crowds of cheering Labour activists on Friday had welcomed Starmer to Downing Street.
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