Ratcliffe says he's sorry his migration comment 'offended some people', but stresses need for 'open debate' on topic
Jim Ratcliffe has issued a statement saying he is sorry that his comment about the UK being “colonised” by migrants “offended some people”. But he defends the need for an “open debate” on the topic.
He said:
I am sorry that my choice of language has offended some people in the UK and Europe and caused concern but it is important to raise the issue of controlled and well-managed immigration that supports economic growth.
My comments were made while answering questions about UK policy at the European industry summit in Antwerp, where I was discussing the importance of economic growth, jobs, skills and manufacturing in the UK.
My intention was to stress that governments must manage migration alongside investment in skills, industry and jobs so that long-term prosperity is shared by everyone. It is critical that we maintain an open debate on the challenges facing the UK.
Key events 43m ago Rayner urges government to offer more support for hospitality, including appointing night-time economy minister 1h ago Long waits in A&E rise sharply - as overall NHS waiting list in England continues to fall 1h ago No 10 says Ratcliffe 'right' to say sorry - and sidesteps questions about whether apology should have gone further 2h ago Reeves says Ratcliffe's comment about UK being 'colonised' by migrants 'disgusting' 2h ago No 10 claims it still has cabinet secretary - but won't say who it is, and won't comment on reports Chris Wormald being sacked 2h ago FA to look at whether Ratcliffe broke football rules by saying UK ‘colonised’ by immigrants 2h ago Ratcliffe says he's sorry his migration comment 'offended some people', but stresses need for 'open debate' on topic 3h ago Government will publish humble address Mandelson documents 'as soon as we can', minister tells MPs 3h ago Badenoch criticises Starmer over way Chris Wormald being removed as cabinet secretary 3h ago Lisa Nandy says ministers should act more like they're in 'Labour government', willing to 'rebalance' power 4h ago Farage defends Ratcliffe, saying it's wrong to ignore impact of 'unprecedented mass immigration' 4h ago Lib Dems and Greens condemn Ratcliffe - while Tories offer only mild criticism, saying migration 'of great concern to millions' 4h ago Government source hits back after ex-FCO permanent secretary warns against Antonia Romeo being made cabinet secretary 5h ago UK economy grows by only 0.1% amid falling business investment 5h ago Football 'shining example of multiculturalism' and Ratcliffe's comments 'crass and insensitive', says GMB 5h ago 'Inaccurate, insulting, inflammatory' - Andy Burnham condemns Ratcliffe over UK being 'colonised' by migrants claim 6h ago Minister escalates row with ‘hypocritical’ Ratcliffe over claim UK colonised by immigrants Show key events only Please turn on JavaScript to use this feature
Max Wilkinson, the Lib Dem home affairs spokesperson, has posted this on Bluesky about Jim Ratcliffe. He put it up after Ratcliffe issued his partial apology.

The Manchester Evening News Gorton and Denton byelection debate has started. There is no live feed, but the MEN has a live blog here and the full video should be available at some point this afternoon on YouTube.
Nigel Farage, the Reform UK leader, has doubled down on his support for Jim Ratcliffe, posting a video on social media claiming that Ratcliffe was right in what he said about the impact of immigration.
1m people living in Britain don’t speak English.
Areas of our towns and cities have been completely changed.
Jim Ratcliffe is right.
Rayner urges government to offer more support for hospitality, including appointing night-time economy minister
Raphael Boyd
Raphael Boyd is a Guardian reporter.
Angela Rayner has urged the government to do more to support pubs, clubs and restaurants.
Speaking at the night-time economy summit in Liverpool this morning, the former deputy prime minister said:
Over the last few weeks, I’ve spoken candidly with businesses in my own constituency, and many beyond it, and they say it’s a huge challenge that they’re facing, and it’s a challenge just to stay afloat.
Rayner also said that “customers aren’t just there in the way they used to be, as business rates remain punishingly high, energy bills soar and costs in your supply chains and VAT bite”. She declared that the government had to “recognise that hospitality and nightlife required extended support – not handouts”.
Speaking about the challenges facing this sector in her Q&A, she said:
I think we’ve got to recognise, it’s not even a double whammy, it’s not even a triple whammy, I talk about the challenges on business rates, the challenges on VAT, the challenges of the minimum wage going up and the living wage going up.
And the cost of energy – we’ve got to start looking at the intersectionality of all these challenges and start relieving some of them.
At the event Rayner also said she supported calls from with the industry for the government to establish a ministerial position dedicated to the night-time economy, in the vein of London’s night tsar or Manchester’s night-time economy adviser, saying this was something she “pushed for” when she was in government.
The event was also attended by the mayors of Liverpool city region and Greater Manchester, Steve Rotheram and Andy Burnham, who also backed cuts to VAT rates, with Burnham calling for rates “more consistent with those found in Europe”.
Burnham also referenced a book that the pair wrote together about leaving Westminsister called Head North, and quipped that “the sequel, Head South, is currently on hold, but may be available some time in the future”.

Nadhim Zahawi, the former Tory cabinet minister who recently defected to Reform UK, has defended Jim Ratcliffe. In a post on social media, he says:
The scoundrels in @UKLabour in Gov & the @LibDems & @TheGreenParty trying to attack & discredit Jim Ratcliffe are either deliberately missing the point or worst colluding in the collapse of our economy. Why? Because they say he is using inappropriate language on immigration, that his own Man U players are immigrants, yes they are but the big difference is they pay huge amounts of tax to the UK. They say he got his numbers wrong, well it’s still millions who came across. The millions who have come are low skilled & therefore are a huge burden on public services & the economy, and as @DuncanBannatyne says today are they not claiming benefits? Look at the countries who do attract the best immigrants - the UAE has 10 to 1 immigrant vs local population. The locals support this wholeheartedly. Why? Because if you are an immigrant you have to have a job & pay taxes. If you don’t have work you have to leave. I call that Smart Gov. We @reformparty_uk will change this, we will tackle the tough choices and deliver. The @Conservatives (which yes I was part of) made a huge error of judgement on this issue. @Nigel_Farage is determined to fix. I predict more & more smart loyal Brits will join us. @Keir_Starmer is yet again on the wrong side of history on this.
Zahawi is claiming that migrants who have come to the UK recently to work have been “a huge burden on public services and the economy”.
But that is not what the government’s expert body, the migration advisory committee, says. At the end of last year it published a report on the lifetime economic contribution of people coming to the UK on skilled worker visas (a category that included health and care workers in the period covered by this data) and it said that overall their contribution was “clearly fiscally positive”.
Long waits in A&E rise sharply - as overall NHS waiting list in England continues to fall
The number of people waiting more than 12 hours in A&E departments for a hospital bed has risen sharply – though the overall NHS waiting list continues to drop, PA Media reports. PA says:
New data for England shows that the number of people waiting more than 12 hours for a hospital bed following a decision to admit them stood at 71,517 in January, up sharply from 50,775 in December.
This is the highest number since monthly records began in August 2010.
Meanwhile, the number waiting at least four hours from the decision to admit to admission stood at 161,141 last month, up from 137,763 in December and the second highest figure on record.
Some 72.5% of patients in England are being dealt with within four hours, against a March 2026 target of 78%.
When it comes to the overall NHS waiting list, this has fallen for the second month in a row.
An estimated 7.29 million treatments were waiting to be carried out at the end of December 2025, relating to 6.17 million patients.
This is down from 7.31 million treatments at the end of November, while the figure for patients has remained at 6.17 million.
The list hit a record high in September 2023, with 7.77 million treatments and 6.50 million patients.
Some experts have raised concerns about how the drop in the waiting list is being achieved, owing to the practice of “list cleaning”.
The Nuffield Trust has argued that the balance between referrals for treatment versus treatment delivered has not changed very much, meaning a big proportion of waiting list reductions have happened due to other reasons, such as list cleaning.
In its own news release about today’s figures, NHS England says it carried out a record number of operations and treatments last year. It says:
The NHS delivered more elective activity in 2025 than any other year in its history, helping cut the waiting list to its lowest level since February 2023.
Staff delivered a historic high of 18.4 million treatments and operations in 2025, up from 18 million in 2024, as the waiting list dropped to 7.29 million.
Today’s data shows there were 1.43 million treatments delivered in December – an increase of 91,775 on last year – despite 5 days of industrial action by resident doctors, thanks to staff maintaining almost 95% of usual activity during strikes.
The percentage of people waiting over 18 weeks for treatment slightly decreased to 61.5%, while the percentage of those waiting over 52 weeks dropped to just 1.9% – the lowest since June 2020 – as the Elective Reform Plan continues to drive NHS services to tackle the longest waits and ensure more people are seen quicker.
No 10 says Ratcliffe 'right' to say sorry - and sidesteps questions about whether apology should have gone further
Jim Ratcliffe’s statement today (see 12.10pm) does not count as a full, proper apology. Ratcliffe is not apologising for what he said; he is saying he is sorry that some people were offended – implying that whether or not his words were offensive is a matter for debate. But at least he did not say “if” people were offended.
At the Downing Street lobby briefing, asked if the Ratcliffe apology should have gone further, the PM’s spokesperson did not press this point. He just said:
The prime minister asked for an apology, and one’s been issued, and it’s absolutely right that Jim Ratcliffe has apologised for that language.
Asked again if the apology went far enough, the spokesperson said:
It’s for Mr Ratcliffe to speak to his apology … It’s not for me.
Sunder Katwala, who runs British Future, a thinktank dealing with immigration, race and identity issues, has posted on Bluesky about what he thinks Ratcliffe should have said.
Jim Ratcliffe has issued a bland and generic statement about economic policy which does not engage at all with what he got wrong, or why saying the UK has been colonised has been legitimately criticised. Nor does he seem to retract his language of colonisation in gesturing towards a semi-apology
TRY: “I regret saying that UK has been colonised by immigration, I understand that was the wrong language to use. I can see how that has detracted from what I see as the substantive issue: jobs, growth, welfare and well-managed migration for the benefit of all, which I hope to engage with better”
Reeves says Ratcliffe's comment about UK being 'colonised' by migrants 'disgusting'
Rachel Reeves, the chancellor, has said that it was “disgusting” for Jim Ratcliffe to talk about the UK being “colonised” by migrants.
On a visit to Crawley, speaking shortly before Ratcliffe issued his partial apology (see 12.10pm), Reeves said:
Investment in Grangemouth is to support jobs in Grangemouth and support vital industries in Scotland and in the UK.
But what Jim Ratcliffe said was unacceptable. It was disgusting, frankly, and he should apologise for his remarks, but I’m not going to let what Jim Ratcliffe has said determine the future of jobs in Scotland.
Ratcliffe runs the chemicals company Ineos, which has major ethylene plant in Grangemouth in Scotland. At the end of last year the government announced £120m in funding to keep it operating.

No 10 claims it still has cabinet secretary - but won't say who it is, and won't comment on reports Chris Wormald being sacked
The Downing Street lobby briefing has just finished but, on the issue of the fate of Chris Wormald (see 10.07am), reporters emerged no wiser than when they went in.
The PM’s spokesperson refused to say what is happening to Wormald and refused to say whether or not he is still cabinet secretary.
At one point the spokesperson said that the Cabinet Office was '“still being supervised by the cabinet secretary” – implying that someone is actually doing the job. But, when reporters asked who this mysterious individual was, the spokeperson refused to say.
He repeatedly said he would not comment on the “ongoing speculation”.
Asked about the claims that Antonia Romeo is being lined up to replace Wormald, the spokesperson said those were “speculative reports”.
FA to look at whether Ratcliffe broke football rules by saying UK ‘colonised’ by immigrants
The Football Association will look at whether Jim Ratcliffe brought the game into disrepute through his claims that the UK has been “colonised” by immigrants, Nick Ames reports.
Ratcliffe says he's sorry his migration comment 'offended some people', but stresses need for 'open debate' on topic
Jim Ratcliffe has issued a statement saying he is sorry that his comment about the UK being “colonised” by migrants “offended some people”. But he defends the need for an “open debate” on the topic.
He said:
I am sorry that my choice of language has offended some people in the UK and Europe and caused concern but it is important to raise the issue of controlled and well-managed immigration that supports economic growth.
My comments were made while answering questions about UK policy at the European industry summit in Antwerp, where I was discussing the importance of economic growth, jobs, skills and manufacturing in the UK.
My intention was to stress that governments must manage migration alongside investment in skills, industry and jobs so that long-term prosperity is shared by everyone. It is critical that we maintain an open debate on the challenges facing the UK.
Keir Starmer’s approval ratings are dire. Last week the polling firm Ipsos published this chart showing how he compares to other Labour and Tory leaders over the past two decades.

But Starmer’s ratings are improving. YouGov has published figures showing that his net favourability rating is up 10 points since January – although, at -47 – it is still very poor.

The fieldwork for the YouGov polling was carried out on Tuesday and Wednesday, after Starmer faced down a threat to his leadership from his party. He may have got some credit for that, but it is also possible that he impressed people by standing up to Donald Trump, over Greenland and over the president’s comments about the record of British troops in Afghanistan in late January.
Government will publish humble address Mandelson documents 'as soon as we can', minister tells MPs

Alexandra Topping
Alexandra Topping is a Guardian political correspondent.
Chris Ward, a Cabinet Office minister, has told MPs that the government will comply with last week’s humble address requiring the release of government papers relating to Peter Mandelson’s time as ambassador to the US “as soon as possible”.
Responding to an urgent question tabled by the Conservatives, Ward said:
The government will comply fully and publish documents as soon as possible.
As I said in this house last week, we welcome both the principle and content of that motion, and we will deliver on it as soon as we can.
As such, government departments have been instructed to retain any material which may be relevant, and work is under way to identify documents which fall in scope of the motion.
We will do [this] as soon as possible when the house returns from recess, in line with the motion passed by this house.
Where the government considers documents may be prejudicial to UK national security or international relations, the Cabinet Office will refer this material to the independent intelligence and security committee.
The Commons starts a half-term recess this afternoon, and will return on Monday week.

3 hours ago
