UK : People planning to migrate to the UK may have to reconsider as
British Prime Minister KeirStarmer on Monday unveiled a tough new set of policy
measures, including doubling the wait time for migrants seeking citizenship
from five to 10 years, to ensure immigration figures fall significantly over
the next five years.
Addressing a press conference from Downing Street ahead of the Labour
Party government’s much-anticipated Immigration White Paper being tabled in
Parliament, Starmer blamed the previous Conservative Party administration for
leaving behind a “mess” of an "open borders experiment".
He went on
to pledge that his government's tighter measures will create an immigration
system that is “controlled, selective and fair”.
“Make no mistake, this plan means migration will fall. That is a
promise,” said Starmer.
“Every area of the immigration system – work, family and study – will be
tightened up so we have more control. Fair rules must be followed,” he said,
with reference to the White Paper. "We’re taking back control of our
borders through our Plan for Change. Lower net migration. Higher skills.
Backing British workers," his office posted on X.
The new system will end the current mechanism of automatic settlement and
citizenship for anyone, including Indians, living in the UK for five years.
Instead, all migrants must spend a decade in the UK before applying for
permanent residency, unless they can show a “real and lasting contribution to
the economy and society”.
Under this new framework to be rolled out, “high-skilled and
high-contributing” individuals, such as “nurses, doctors, engineers and AI
leaders”, who contribute to the UK economy, will be fast-tracked.
The new rules will also toughen language requirements across every
immigration route to ensure a higher standard of English. For the first time,
this will also extend to all adult dependents of foreigners, by requiring them
to demonstrate a basic understanding of English – "helping individuals
integrate into their local community, find employment and reducing the risk of
exploitation and abuse", Downing Street said.
"If you want to live in the UK, you should speak English. That’s
common sense. So we’re raising English language requirements across every main
immigration route," Starmer said on X.
The full package of the White Paper reforms will be laid out by UK Home
Secretary Yvette Cooper in the House of Commons and is also expected to include
a crackdown on overseas care worker numbers.
“Public services were stretched, housing costs soared, and employers
swapped skills investment for cheap overseas labour. In sectors like
engineering, apprenticeships almost halved while work visas doubled and
communities were asked to absorb record numbers,” Downing Street said.
“Backdoor routes to settlement will be closed, enforcement will be stepped up
as we end abuse of the system,” the statement added.
Starmer has been under considerable pressure to cut migrant numbers after
the anti-immigration Reform party’s recent surge in local polls.
However, he
was firm on not setting an annual cap on numbers allowed into the country.
“I don’t think it is sensible to put a hard-edged cap on it. That has
been done in one form or another for the best part of 10 years by different
prime ministers. The only thing that links those prime ministers and the
various caps or quotas or limits they put in place is every single one of them
failed,” he said.