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World / Europe

UK govt toughens immigration plans as hard-right gains

Published: 12 May 2025 - 08:26 pm | Last Updated: 12 May 2025 - 08:29 pm
Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer delivers a speech during a press conference at the media briefing room of 9 Downing Street, central London, on May 12, 2025 ahead of the publication of the Government's Immigration White Paper. (Photo by Ian Vogler / POOL / AFP)

Britain's Prime Minister Keir Starmer delivers a speech during a press conference at the media briefing room of 9 Downing Street, central London, on May 12, 2025 ahead of the publication of the Government's Immigration White Paper. (Photo by Ian Vogler / POOL / AFP)

AFP

London: UK Prime Minister Keir Starmer vowed Monday to "finally take back control" of Britain's borders as his government unveiled policies designed to reduce legal immigration and fend off rising support for the hard right.

Labour leader Starmer announced he was ending an "experiment in open borders" that saw net migration rise to nearly one million people under the previous Conservative government, which lost last year's general election.

The government's Immigration White Paper policy document includes plans to cut overseas care workers and increase from five to 10 years the length of time people will have to live in UK before qualifying for settlement and citizenship.

English language rules will also be strengthened, with all adult dependents required to demonstrate a basic understanding, while the length of time students can stay in the UK after completing their studies will be reduced.

Starmer said the policies would "finally take back control of our borders", recalling the pro-Brexit slogan used at the height of the campaign to leave the European Union in 2016.

Labour vowed in its general election manifesto last year to significantly reduce net migration, which stood at 728,000 in the 12 months to last June.
It had peaked at 906,000 in 2023 after averaging 200,000 for most of the 2010s.

Starmer, a former human rights lawyer who voted for the UK to remain part of the EU, is under renewed pressure to tackle immigration following the anti-immigration Reform party's gains in recent local elections.

Arch-Eurosceptic Nigel Farage's party won more than 670 local council seats as well as its first two mayoral posts. It is also riding high in national polls, while Labour is struggling.

However, Starmer's tack to the right on immigration risks alienating Labour's large base of liberal supporters, with the Liberal Democrats and the Greens picking up votes on the left.

The premier said that migrants "make a massive contribution" to Britain but alleged the country risks becoming an "island of strangers" without more controls.
He added that he wanted net migration to have fallen "significantly" by the next election, likely in 2029, but refused say by how much.