Reform vows to scrap migrants' indefinite leave to remain

4 hours ago 1

Sam FrancisPolitical reporter

Reform UK has announced plans to abolish the right of migrants to qualify for permanent settlement in the UK after five years if the party wins the next general election.

Under the plans all migrants with Indefinite Leave to Remain (ILR) - a permanent status which grants migrants rights and access to benefits - will be asked to reapply for new visas.

Reform will also unveil plans to bar anyone other than British citizens from accessing welfare. Taken together the party claims their plans would save £234bn over several decades, though this figure is contested.

A government spokesperson dismissed the plans as a "gimmick", adding they were consulting on restricting migrants' access to welfare.

Under the current system, migrants can apply for indefinite leave to remain after five years, giving the right to live and work in the UK permanently.

It is a key route to gaining British citizenship and allows people to claim benefits.

Reform said it would replace ILR with visas that force migrants to reapply every five years.

The announcement launches Reform's fresh assault on what they brand the "Boriswave" - 3.8 million people who entered the UK after Brexit under looser rules brought in by Boris Johnson's administration.

Hundreds of thousands of these migrants, who have come to the UK since 2021, will soon qualify for permanent residence under the ILR scheme.

Reform say the policy is designed to bring Britain into line with other countries such as the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and save the UK more than £234bn over what it calls the "lifetime of the average migrant".

Labour has noted the figure came from a report by the Centre for Policy Studies, a Thatcher-founded think tank, which later said the cost estimates "should no longer be used" after a challenge by the Office for Budget Responsibility.

The government spokesperson added: "People here illegally rightly do not get anything from our benefits system.

"Foreign nationals usually have to wait five years to claim Universal Credit and we're looking at increasing this to 10 years.

"We inherited a broken welfare system and spiralling benefits bill. That's why we're taking action and reforming the system and have seen the proportion of Universal Credit payments to foreign nationals fall since last July."

Writing in The Telegraph newspaper, Reform's policy chief Zia Yusuf said "We are putting business on notice: the era of cheap foreign labour is over."

Yusuf said the changes would lead to "hundreds of thousands of people having to apply and ultimately losing their settled status in the UK".

"Many of those who will lose their leave to remain are entirely dependent on the welfare state and will leave voluntarily upon losing access to benefits," he said.

"Those that don't will be subject to immigration enforcement as part of our mass deportation programme."

World Bank Data shows the UAE has one of the highest proportions of international migrants globally, with migrants making up about 90% of its total labour force.

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