LONDON — The British government's plan to tighten its asylum system met sharp resistance Monday from inside its own party but was getting some support from political rivals in a sign of how divisive the immigration issue has become.
Before Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood even released details of the sweeping plan to make the U.K. less attractive to asylum-seekers and migrants easier to remove she was trying to quell a backlash from center-left Labour Party backbenchers who accused her of trying to court the far-right.
''It's shameful that a Labour government is ripping up the rights and protections of people who have endured unimaginable trauma," said Nadia Whittome, a Labour member of Parliament from Nottingham who called the proposed policies ''cruel'' and ''dystopian." ''Is this how we'd want to be treated if we were fleeing for our lives? Of course, not.''
Mahmood said her plans, which she partially released over the weekend, could fix a broken asylum system and unite a divided country over a flashpoint issue that has helped fuel the rise of the anti-immigrant Reform UK Party.
''We have a problem that it is our moral duty to fix — our asylum system is broken,'' Mahmood said in the House of Commons. "The breaking of that asylum system is causing huge division across our whole country.''
Mahmood said the new policy would deter migrants who don't stay in the first safe country where they land, but instead ''asylum shop'' across Europe for the most attractive place to settle.
The struggle to stop the boats
Halting the flow of migrants making dangerous English Channel crossings to enter the country without authorization has vexed successive governments that have tried a variety of approaches with little success.