Rishi Sunak’s first public words after the Supreme Court struck down his plan to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda barely reflected the scale of political crisis he was facing. A new treaty would solve the problem, the British prime minister told a packed House of Commons on Wednesday, and if it didn’t, he suggested he would look at changing UK laws to ensure the plan goes ahead.

At a sudden press conference that afternoon, his tone changed dramatically. Sunak had taken his Conservative Party’s temperature during a tour of the Commons tearoom. In Westminster meeting rooms, right-wing MPs were talking about ousting him unless he ripped up the UK’s human rights laws so that no court — domestic or international — could stop deportation flights taking off.

In those few hours, Brexit-style Tory divisions returned at full throttle to British politics, and appear once again on the verge of tearing the party apart.

“I will not allow a foreign court to block these flights,” Sunak said at the televised briefing, a line meant to reassure restless Tory populists that he would be prepared to renege on Britain’s international commitments, including the European Convention on Human Rights, if events demanded.

But it was also a line that risks giving Sunak the same nightmare that haunted his predecessors. His strategy to legislate around the Supreme Court’s ruling is likely to be held up in the House of Lords, even if Sunak’s bill doesn’t go as far as overriding the UK’s membership of the ECHR, which many MPs suspect.

It all points to months of delay and dangerous frustration in his party. Dozens of Tory lawmakers will try to force Sunak to take a more hardline position if the legislation doesn’t satisfy them, people familiar with the matter said.

A supporter of Sunak described this as his worst week in office, compounded by the opposition Labour Party extending its lead with some pollsters to over 20 points. It sets up a clash on borders policy — and more broadly the UK’s place in the world — which some Tories view as existential. It’s also left voters with a question that could define the run up to the general election: just how far is Sunak willing to push the UK’s international relationships for domestic gain?

Sunak “desperately needed something that would make wavering Conservatives — those who voted Conservative in 2019 but have not switched to Labour — sit up and listen,” said Scarlett Maguire, director at pollster JL Partners. “Instead the chaos of the past week means they have likely tuned out further.”

Behind the scenes, 10 Downing Street has been wrestling with the same fundamental question since Sunak came to power just over a year ago. The prime minister’s top team has faced disagreement and confusion on policy and strategy, according to interviews with more than a dozen senior Conservatives familiar with the government’s internal deliberations.

From the outset, there were differing views among Sunak’s closest allies on how he should approach immigration, the people said. Some confidantes on the right always wanted a nuclear option if judges blocked the Rwanda plan: a willingness to change Britain’s interaction with the ECHR and other international conventions, or even campaign to leave them at the election if necessary.

Another group of more centrist advisers agreed a tough approach was needed but thought threatening to leave the ECHR was not viable. That convention and others are integral to some of Britain’s most sensitive commitments, not least the 1998 Good Friday Agreement that brought peace to Northern Ireland.

Sunak himself has never been keen on the idea of leaving the ECHR, according to people familiar with his thinking, and prizes what he sees as his achievement in improving Britain’s international reputation since Brexit.

Yet in order to become prime minister, Sunak knew he needed the support of the right. He lost out to Liz Truss in the summer 2022 leadership campaign in large part because Tory activists blamed him for his part in the downfall of Boris Johnson. So when an unlikely Johnson comeback threatened his second chance, Sunak agreed to appoint hardliner Suella Braverman as home secretary, paving his way to power.

In January, he made the vow to “stop the boats” carrying asylum seekers across the English Channel, one of five pledges he asked voters to judge him by. It gelled with a Sunak-Braverman alliance and pleased right-wing Tories.

But in recent weeks, they’ve concluded that Sunak’s willingness to embrace right-wing, culture war rhetoric doesn’t go beyond words. As the government’s lawyers began to warn that the Supreme Court could rule against the Rwanda plan, that faction privately sought assurances that strong measures on the ECHR would be taken. They went unanswered, and the anti-ECHR group in Sunak’s team was sidelined, a person familiar with the matter said.

A frustrated Braverman dialed up her rhetoric on a range of issues, including immigration and homelessness, putting her on collision course with Sunak.

Faced with a seismic decision on whether to keep her, the premier’s aides calculated that the Tory right did not have the numbers to challenge his leadership. On Monday, the premier shifted his Cabinet to more centrist ground, firing Braverman, moving the more moderate James Cleverly to the Home Office and recalling ex-premier David Cameron as foreign secretary.

That was the moment he revealed the true direction of his government, a Tory official said. A Cabinet with Cameron in it would never leave the ECHR, George Osborne, who was Cameron’s Chancellor of the Exchequer, said on his Political Currency podcast. “I think that’s basically now off the table,” he said.

But days after a seismic move that should have defined the path to the election, the Supreme Court effectively kickstarted the battle again.

Sunak’s officials had hoped that even if the ruling went against them, it would be a nuanced verdict setting conditions that could be met without having to break the UK’s international commitments. A new treaty with Rwanda was being worked on that aides thought would answer the judges’ concerns.

Instead, the court delivered a unanimous verdict that was far more damning than expected, criticizing wide-ranging aspects of Rwanda’s asylum system and warning that Britain would be in violation of multiple domestic laws and international conventions. One official called it a punch in the face.

By mid-afternoon Wednesday, it was clear Sunak’s treaty gambit in the House of Commons hadn’t bought off the right. His hardened language in the press conference, as well as an insistence by No. 10 that Chancellor of the Exchequer Jeremy Hunt offer red meat to the Tory right in the form of a big ticket tax-cutting announcement in next week’s fiscal statement, showed just how concerned Sunak was about his position, several Tory aides and lawmakers said.

Options Hunt is considering include cutting inheritance tax and stamp duty, according to people familiar with the matter.

Even so, it’s clear that some members on the right of his party don’t trust him. He had promised tough action on immigration but did not want to take the steps required to follow through, one official said. Promising a new law is an attempt to tread water until the election, they suggested.

Still, one Tory lawmaker pointed out that Sunak is capable of surprises. “When I said I was going to stop the boats, I meant it,” the premier said on Friday.

The major problem, though, is that delivering the Rwanda flights could mean doing something close aides say he doesn’t want to. Writing in the Daily Telegraph newspaper on Friday, Braverman said the UK would have to “disapply” Britain’s commitments to international agreements and block “all avenues of legal challenge” if deportations to Rwanda are to go ahead.

Damian Green, a former Conservative deputy prime minister, called that “the most unconservative proposal I have ever heard,” in a post on the social media platform X. “Giving the state the explicit power to override every legal constraint is what Putin and Xi do. We absolutely cannot go there.”

Staggering poll shows how dissatisfied the UK is with Rishi Sunak’s government.

The prime minister has faced another difficult week in Downing Street.

  • 8 in 10 Britons are dissatisfied with the way the country is being run.

  • Rishi Sunak is under pressure after a turbulent week.

  • 75% of British citizens do not believe that the government's policies will improve public services.

WORKSOP, ENGLAND - NOVEMBER 17: Prime Minister Rishi Sunak takes part in a resident Q&A session at Cafe-Neo at the Priory Shopping Centre on November 17, 2023 in Worksop, England. (Photo by Peter Powell - Pool/Getty Images)
The prime minister faced another difficult week. (Getty) (Pool via Getty Images)

A staggering new poll shows 8 in 10 Britons are dissatisfied with how the country is being run by Rishi Sunak and his government.

It comes after the prime minister faced another difficult week when one of his five key pledges – to ‘stop the boats’ – was dealt a significant blow on Wednesday after the Supreme Court ruled it unlawful.

It followed a Cabinet reshuffle where Sunak sacked his outspoken home secretary Suella Braverman and made the shock move to install former Tory PM David Cameron as foreign secretary.

Sunak's approval rating has dropped by 5 points since October, with only 21% of people satisfied with the job he is doing as PM and 66% dissatisfied, resulting in a net satisfaction score of -45.

This is equal to September's record low, although it had slightly recovered to -37 last month.

Net satisfaction with government 1979-2023. (Ipsos)
Net satisfaction with government 1979-2023. (Ipsos)

Meanwhile, Sir Keir Starmer's net satisfaction score stands at -21, with 29% of people satisfied with his performance as the Labour leader (down 1 point from October) and 50% dissatisfied (down 3 points).

In terms of voter preferences, there hasn't been a significant change since October, with Labour leading by 21 points: 46% of people support Labour (+2 from October), 25% support the Conservatives (+1), 12% support the Lib Dems (-1), 6% support the Greens (-3), and 10% support other parties (-1).

Only 13% are satisfied, which gives a net score of -67, compared to the -66 recorded last month.

Ipsos’s Cameron Garrett said it was the worst performance since John Major was Conservative prime minister.

He wrote on X: “We now have a year's worth of @IpsosUK satisfaction measures for Rishi Sunak's government. They have not achieved a single rating above -60.

“The last time the public was this unwavering in their entrenched pessimism was the mid-90s.”

Britain's former Home Secretary Suella Braverman leaves her home in London on November 15, 2023. Outspoken British lawmaker Suella Braverman launched a withering attack on Prime Minister Sunak on November 15, 2023, urging him to change course to avoid election defeat and slamming his record on immigration and anti-Semitism. Braverman, a favourite of the right-wing of the ruling Conservative party, fired the broadside in a three-page letter to Sunak a day after he sacked her as interior minister. (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS / AFP) (Photo by JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP via Getty Images)
Suella Braverman was sacked as home secretary. (Getty Images) (JUSTIN TALLIS via Getty Images)

Public services

According to the latest Ipsos Political Monitor, 75% of British citizens do not believe that the government's policies will ultimately improve the country's public services.

This figure has increased by 5 points since February 2021 and is the highest level of criticism of the government's long-term policies for public services since Ipsos began this series of reports in 2001.

The poll revealed that 78% of people think the quality of public services has declined over the last five years, including 70% of Conservative supporters.

This compares to 63% who expressed the same sentiment in March 2017, ahead of that year's General Election and only 40% in November 2012.

People's expectations for the future are also generally pessimistic, with all indicators showing a decline since February 2020.

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - NOVEMBER 14: Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs David Cameron leaves 10 Downing Street after attending the weekly Cabinet meeting in London, United Kingdom on November 14, 2023. (Photo by Wiktor Szymanowicz/Anadolu via Getty Images)
David Cameron has returned as foreign secretary. (Getty Images) (Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)

The poll showed that 64% of people expect the NHS to worsen over the next few years, an increase of 18 points since February 2020 and close to the worst score achieved in March 2017 of 62%.

Only a quarter (25%) of the population agree that ‘in the long term, the government’s policies will improve the economy’.

68% disagree with this statement, which is the worst score Ipsos has recorded since they started asking the question in July 1980.

In comparison, 37% of people agree that ‘In the long term, the Labour party’s policies would improve the state of Britain’s economy’, while 50% disagree with it.

Ipsos Political Monitor conducted a survey from 1-8 November 2023 to examine attitudes towards the UK’s public services, economy, and tax and spend policies ahead of the Autumn Statement.