Amber Rudd’s Oxford University talk CANCELLED over her links to the Windrush scandal

Amber Rudd’s Oxford University talk about women in politics is CANCELLED after storm of complaints from students over her links to the Windrush scandal

  • Amber Rudd had planned to give a speech to young women at Oxford University
  • She turned up to an empty hall after student organisers were forced to cancel
  • Ms Rudd was Home Secretary when the Windrush Scandal broke in 2018
  • She called the boycott ‘outrageous and disappointing’ and ‘terrible behaviour’ 

Amber Rudd told of her disgust at being blatantly snubbed by Oxford University students last night over her links to the Windrush scandal.

Miss Rudd, who was Home Secretary when the scandal broke in 2018, had planned to deliver a speech encouraging young women to get involved in politics before International Women’s Day on Sunday.

But she arrived last night to an empty hall after Felicity Graham, president of the UNWomen Oxford society, which organised the event, was forced to cancel amid severe criticism from fellow members and students.

The UNWomen Oxford society’s 13-strong committee approved sending an invitation to Miss Rudd in Janaury.

Amber Rudd (pictured with student organiser Felicity Graham) was due to speak to young women about engaging in politics at Oxford University

But Miss Graham started to come under intense pressure on Monday from students who said the event should be scrapped because of Miss Rudd’s links to Windrush.

She told the Mail she was adamant the event should go ahead, but received a call 30 minutes before the event was due to start last night from the committee which said they no longer supported the invitation. 

Miss Graham said: ‘It was ultimately my decision but every single person on the committee was against and I was given no choice.

‘I was adamant we weren’t going to cancel because I think she was a great feminist to be platforming and because she has worked on UN campaigns, it seemed right. It was the Oxford African and Caribbean Society – who hold a lot of power – who really applied the pressure and forced us to cancel.’

The snub is the latest in a series of figures being ‘no-platformed’ – denied a chance to speak – at universities across the UK by students who deem them too controversial.

Event organisers were forced to cancel after they were inundated with complaints about the former Home Secretary's links to the 2018 Windrush Scandal (pictured, Jamaican immigrants arriving at Tibury Docks in Essex, June 1948, coming to Britain escaping unemployment)

Event organisers were forced to cancel after they were inundated with complaints about the former Home Secretary’s links to the 2018 Windrush Scandal (pictured, Jamaican immigrants arriving at Tibury Docks in Essex, June 1948, coming to Britain escaping unemployment)

Miss Rudd said: ‘It was supposed to be all about International Women’s Day, to inspire young women to get into politics. This is outrageous and so disappointing. These young women want to engage and campaign and become politicians and so they shouldn’t be hiding away, they should be talking to me and I would have taken any of the issues they raised with me very seriously.

‘But to cancel at the last minute is terrible behaviour and a terrible sign of the way they think they can engage with other political women.

‘Oxford should be a place where they explore ideas and have the highest standards. They are just damaging their own reputation and it’s disgusting that they’re behaving in this way.

She added: ‘I would have been quite content to talk to them about Windrush in terms of how it came to pass, what action I took to try to make sure it was corrected and never happens again and my deep regret it happened at all. I want to share what happened honestly and fairly.’

Miss Rudd said she gave a similar speech at the University of St Andrews in Scotland last week, and was approached by students who said it had inspired them to pursue getting into Parliament.

‘These students need to re-thinking their approach to how they handle people.’

Miss Rudd resigned as Home Secretary over the Windrush scandal, which saw those of Caribbean heritage who arrived between 1948 and 1971 wrongly detained, threatened with deportation or wrongly refused re-entry to the UK.

The Windrush Scandal: what happened, and how it unfolded 

June 22, 1948 – The Empire Windrush passenger ship docked at Tilbury from Jamaica. The 492 passengers were temporarily housed near Brixton in London. Over the following decades some 500,000 came to the UK. Many arrived on their parents’ passports and were not naturalised as British citizens.

1973 – A new immigration Act comes into force putting the onus on individuals to prove they have previously been resident in the UK.

2010 – The Home Office destroyed thousands of landing card slips recording Windrush immigrants’ arrival dates in the UK. The move came despite staff warnings that the move would make it harder to check the records of older Caribbean-born residents experiencing residency difficulties, it was claimed.

2014 – A protection that exempted Commonwealth residents from enforced removal was removed under a new law. Theresa May was Home Secretary at the time. Under a crackdown on illegals, Windrush immigrants are obliged to provide proof they were resident in the UK before 1973.

July 2016 – Theresa May becomes Prime Minister.

April 2018 – Allegations that Windrush immigrants are being threatened with deportation break. Theresa May issued a grovelling apology to Caribbean leaders after major backlash.

April 29, 2018 – Amber Rudd resigns after inadvertently misleading Parliament by wrongly claiming there were no deportation targets.

August 21, 2018 – Home Secretary Sajid Javid apologises ‘on behalf of successive governments’ over the handling of the Windrush affair.

April 3, 2019 – Compensation scheme announced