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UK politics live: Starmer says Tories used Brexit to run ‘open borders experiment’ in migration speech

Figures from the Office for National Statistics showed that net migration has fallen by 20 per cent this year, after reaching a record high of 906,000 in 2023

Joe Middleton,Holly Bancroft,Archie Mitchell
Thursday 28 November 2024 11:18 EST
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Sir Keir Starmer accused his predecessors of deliberately liberalising immigration policy (Stefan Rousseau/PA)
Sir Keir Starmer accused his predecessors of deliberately liberalising immigration policy (Stefan Rousseau/PA) (PA Wire)

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Sir Keir Starmer has accused the Tories of a “different order of failure” on immigration and said the previous government ran a “one nation experiment in open borders”.

In a press conference in Downing Street this afternoon, the PM said: “Time and again the Conservative Party promised they would get the numbers down. Time and again they failed, and now the chorus of excuses has begun.”

He added: “A failure on this scale isn’t just bad luck, it isn’t a global trend or taking your eye off the ball, no this is a different order of failure.

“This happened by design not accident.

“Policies were reformed deliberately to liberalise immigration, Brexit was used for that purpose to turn Britain into a one nation experiment in open borders.”

Figures released earlier today by the Office for National Statistics showed that net migration has fallen by 20 per cent this year, after reaching a record high of more than 900,000 in 2023.

It fell to 728,000 in the year to June 2024. But this came after net migration figures for the year to June 2023 were revised upwards to 906,000 from the initial estimate of 740,000, the ONS said.

‘I have had enough of being lied to by the Conservatives,’ Nigel Farage

Nigel Farage has responded furiously to the immigration figures, saying that after almost one million migrants entered the UK, net, in a single year, he has “had enough of being lied to”.

He said: “In 2023, under a Conservative government, nearly 1 million net people came into our country. “This after manifestos in 2010, 2015, 2017 and 2019 promising in the first three, they reduced the numbers to tens of thousands a year, and in the last one, a substantial reduction.

“I have had enough of being lied to by the Conservative Party. I don’t believe they’ll be forgiven at any point in the next few years for what they have done.”

Archie Mitchell28 November 2024 11:58

Nigel Farage has on Union Jack socks

Nigel Farage has been introduced at his London press conference as the most patriotic political leader in the UK.

The Reform UK leader is living up to the claim, with Union Jack socks.

(Archie Mitchell)
Joe Middleton28 November 2024 11:57

Labour accuses Tories of being the ‘open borders party'

Labour said the latest migration figures showed the government had started the “hard graft” of tackling the issue, and accused the Conservatives of being the “open borders party”

A spokesperson for the party said: “In their own words, the Tories broke the immigration system. On their watch, net migration quadrupled in four years to a record high of nearly one million, despite saying they’d lower it to 100,000.

“They are an open borders party who lied time and again to the public. This is the chaos Labour inherited and any crowing from the Tories should be seen in that light.

“Over the summer, the Government started the hard graft. We hired more caseworkers to tackle the asylum backlog and we’re now interviewing 10,000 people per month, compared to 2,000 under the Tories, so we can get people out of asylum hotels and save the taxpayers billions.

“We’ve also ramped up the removal of those with no right to be in the UK by a fifth. Without this action, thousands more would remain in the UK illegally.

“Labour is getting on with cleaning up the Conservatives’ mess. Our new Border Security Command is working with our European partners to smash the criminal gang networks driving small boat crossings.”

Joe Middleton28 November 2024 11:25

Almost 160k children living in temporary accommodation, latest figures show

Another homelessness record has been set with today’s new statistics on children living in temporary accommodation.

There are now 159,380 homeless children living in temporary accommodation - a 15 per cent increase in a year and the highest figure since records began in 2004.

The number of households living in temporary accommodation, such as hotels and B&Bs, has also hit a record 123,100 - up 16 per cent on last year.

There are 9,550 families with children stuck in B&Bs and hostels, according to government figures out today.

Polly Neate, chief executive of Shelter, said: “Year after year, we’re seeing the devastating toll the housing emergency is taking on families and communities with more than 159,000 children being subjected to the trauma of homelessness.”

Holly Bancroft28 November 2024 11:12

Comment: Only when the assisted dying bill passes will I stop feeling angry about Terry Pratchett’s final years

As MPs prepare to vote on enabling terminally ill adults to end their own lives, Rob Wilkins – long-time friend and biographer of the ‘Discworld’ novelist – says Pratchett would be furious at our politicians’ foot-dragging

Passing the assisted dying bill would carry out Terry Pratchett’s final wish

As MPs prepare to vote on enabling terminally ill adults to end their own lives, Rob Wilkins – long-time friend and biographer of the ‘Discworld’ novelist – says Pratchett would be furious at our politicians’ foot-dragging

Joe Middleton28 November 2024 11:09

Number of asylum seekers evicted from Home Office hotels who are made homeless increases, figures show

The number of asylum seekers who have been evicted from Home Office hotels and are made homeless has continued to increase.

In the year 2023/24, 13,520 asylum seekers were made homeless this way - up from 3,850 the year before, according to new government statistics published today.

This will partly be driven by an increased speed in processing the asylum claims backlog leading to more decisions being made.

Once an asylum seeker is refused asylum or successful in their claim, they are moved on from Home Office hotels - often dependent on local councils to help them from becoming homeless.

Holly Bancroft28 November 2024 10:59

Government faces ‘tough choices’ on immigration, says top think-tank

The Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) has said the government faces tough choices on immigration and further cuts to numbers could cause recruitment issues in social care.

Responding to the migration statistics, Marley Morris, IPPR associate director for migration, trade and communities, said:  “Net migration is coming down from record highs as the previous government’s policies start to bite. We expect a further substantial fall in the next set of figures.

“But revisions to earlier estimates mean that last year’s peak in net migration is even higher than previously thought, at just over 900,000.

“The new government faces a tough set of choices on immigration. Further cuts to numbers could be challenging for recruitment in key sectors such as social care, as well as university finances. It will need a clear framework to work through these choices and manage the potential impacts.”

Joe Middleton28 November 2024 10:46

Braverman latest Tory to take credit for fall in net migration figures

Tory former home secretary Suella Braverman is the latest conservative politician to take credit for a fall in net migration.

Another former home secretary, James Cleverly, and new Tory leader Kemi Badenoch have already said changes in policy when they were in government led to the fall in net migration.

Mrs Braverman said: “A 20% drop in immigration since June 2023 is a result of the changes I fought for and introduced in May 2023 as home secretary.

“That’s when we started to turn the tide.

“But 1.2 million arrivals a year is still too high. This is unsustainable and why we need radical change.”

Joe Middleton28 November 2024 10:35

19% fall in number of people given sanctuary in the UK on humanitarian routes, data shows

In the past year there has been a 19 per cent drop in the number of people given sanctuary in the UK on humanitarian routes, largely due to the reduction in visas granted on the Ukraine schemes.

New Home Office data shows that both the Ukrainian visa scheme, and the scheme for Hongkongers, have seen a substantial drop in grants of sanctuary to the UK. Ukraine scheme visa grants have dropped 53 per cent from September 2023 to September 2024, going from 62,946 to 29,507 grants each year.

For the Hong Kong scheme, there has been a 23 per cent drop from around 40,000 to just over 30,000.The Afghan resettlement schemes and the family reunion route have however seen large increases.

The number of grants for the Afghan schemes is up 735 per cent year-on-year; from 1,083 grants up to September 2023 to 9,048 grants up to September 2024.

Family reunion visa grants, which allow people granted asylum in the UK to bring their close family to safety, are up 230 per cent year-on-year. This accounts for an increase of over 13,000 grants.

Holly Bancroft28 November 2024 10:29

Jump in asylum processing claims, latest data shows

A big jump in the processing of asylum claims is obvious in the data published by the Home Office this morning.

The number of people who have received initial decisions on their asylum claims in the year ending September 2024 was 102,305 - almost double the number made in the previous year due to an increased number of decision makers and greater productivity.

The success of asylum claims is going down, with only 52 per cent of initial decisions being grants of asylum. This is compared to 75 per cent in the previous year.

Holly Bancroft28 November 2024 10:17

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