Rishi Sunak rows back over £1,000 bet on Rwanda deportation flights

UK prime minister says he is ‘not a betting person’ after making wager with broadcaster Piers Morgan during an interview

UK prime minister Rishi Sunak has rowed back on a £1,000 (€1,168) bet on whether deportation flights to Rwanda would take off before the general election. Photograph: EPA
UK prime minister Rishi Sunak has rowed back on a £1,000 (€1,168) bet on whether deportation flights to Rwanda would take off before the general election. Photograph: EPA

Rishi Sunak has rowed back on a £1,000 (€1,168) bet with the broadcaster Piers Morgan on whether deportation flights to Rwanda would take off before the general election, claiming he is “not a betting person”.

The prime minister said on Tuesday he had been “taken by surprise” when Mr Morgan had said to him during a TalkTV interview: “I’ll bet you £1,000 to a refugee charity you don’t get anybody on those planes before the election. Will you take that bet?”

Mr Sunak shook hands with Mr Morgan on the wager and said he was “working incredibly hard to get the people on the planes”.

The government’s attempt to send people arriving in the UK through irregular means to Rwanda for their claims to be processed has been blocked by the supreme court, which ruled the policy unlawful in November. Mr Sunak has said he can salvage the scheme.

READ MORE

However, when asked about the “bet” in an interview on BBC Radio 5 on Tuesday, Mr Sunak said: “I am not a betting person and I was taken totally by surprise in that interview.

“The point I was trying to get across – I was taken totally by surprise – was actually about the Rwanda policy and about tackling illegal migration, which is something I care deeply about.

“Obviously people have strong views on this and I was just underlining my absolute commitment to this policy, my desire to get it through parliament, up and running because I believe you need to have the deterrent.

“I believe you have got to have a deterrent, you have got to have somewhere you can send people so that if they come here illegally they won’t be able to stay,” he said.

Opposition parties criticised mr Sunak’s decision to agree to the bet. The shadow paymaster general, Jonathan Ashworth, said: “Not a lot of people facing rising mortgages, bills and food prices are casually dropping £1,000 bets. It just shows that Rishi Sunak is totally out of touch with working people.” – Guardian