
Rylan Clark has responded to a social media backlash he received after voicing his views on the UKâs immigration policies while hosting This Morning.
The 36-year-old TV personality told his critics you can be âpro immigration and against illegal routesâ after he said it was âabsolutely insaneâ that asylum seekers are risking their lives to come to the UK.
âStop with this putting everyone in a box and maybe have conversations instead of shouting on Twitter,â Clark wrote on Instagram hours after his opinion was condemned online.
âYou can be pro immigration and against illegal routes. You can support trans people and have the utmost respect for women. You can be heterosexual and still support gay rights. This list continues.â
Speaking on This Morning on Wednesday (27 August), Clark had noted how doctors and nurses from âother countriesâ saved his mother Lindaâs life when she fell ill earlier this year.
âTheyâre living a great life, theyâre paying into this tax system, theyâre helping this country thrive,â he said.
But he added that there is âsomething wrongâ with the way refugees are welcomed. âHereâs the iPad. Hereâs the NHS in reception of your hotel. Hereâs three meals a day. Hereâs a games room in the hotel. Have a lovely time and welcome,â he said.
Rylan continued: âHow can it be that if I turn up at Heathrow Airport as a British citizen and Iâve left my passport in Spain, Iâve got to stand at that airport and wonât be let in. But if I arrive on a boat from Calais, I get taken to a four-star hotel?â
Hours after his comments caused debate on social media, Clark urged people to acknowledge a stance can have nuance.
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Good Morning Britainâs Robert Rinder rushed to Clarkâs defence, saying he was âproudâ of the presenter for making the statement.
Meanwhile, Drag Race star and musician Bimini responded to the statement saying that ânobody is illegalâ and they âfully supportâ immigration and the right to seek asylum.
âIâll always stand with people forced to cross borders in difficult ways,â they said. âAnd I believe those conversations should be had with compassion and respect, not fear.â

Clarkâs remarks come after Reform UK leader Nigel Farage this week unveiled radical plans for the mass deportation of asylum seekers to address what he claimed was a ârising angerâ among the British public towards the UKâs small boats crisis.
At a press conference in London, he claimed the party would remove 600,000 asylum seekers under the first parliament of a Reform government, should they win power.
On Wednesday, Farage insisted at a press conference in Broxburn, West Lothian that he had been âvery, very clearâ that the party was focused on âillegal malesâ and ânot even discussing women and children at this stageâ.
Pressed on whether he now meant women and children would be âexemptâ, he said: âI didnât say exempt forever, but at this stage itâs not part of our plan for the next five years.â
Clark rose to fame on the ninth series of The X Factor in 2012. The following year, he appeared on and won the eleventh series of Celebrity Big Brother. He has gone on to present various television shows including This Morning, and Strictly Come Dancing: It Takes Two.


