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29th April 2018
10:52pm BST

And this afternoon it emerged that, despite her claims that she knew nothing about deportation targets, Rudd sent a four-page letter to Theresa May in January last year, in which she boasted she had set an “ambitious but deliverable” target for kicking out illegal immigrants.
Rudd telephoned Theresa May this evening to inform her of the decision following intensifying demands from Labour MPs for her to quit. A Number 10 spokesperson confirmed the news, saying: "The Prime Minister has tonight accepted the resignation of the Home Secretary."
The immigrants are referred to as the 'Windrush generation' in reference to the HMT Empire Windrush ship that first brought workers from the West Indies to Britain in 1948.
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Although immigrants were invited to come to Britain from the Commonwealth due to labour shortages, because many of the generation came to the UK on their parent's passports, a lack of official paperwork has meant they are now being informed that they are here illegally.
The 1971 Immigration Act meant that all Commonwealth citizens already living in the UK were granted indefinite leave to remain.
However, the Home Office did not keep a record or issue any paperwork following the legislation, so there are no official figures to say the number of people at risk of deportation. Estimates suggest around half a million Windrush immigrants are still living in the UK today.
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