(The Parliamentary
Under-Secretary of State for Immigration):My Rt Hon Friend
the Home Secretary is today laying before the House a Statement of
Changes to the Immigration Rules (HC 2631). Copies will be made
available in the Vote Office and on Gov.uk.
I have made a change to the Immigration Rules which will reduce
costs and bureaucracy for doctors, dentists, nurses and midwives
looking to come and work in the UK and support our NHS. This
change will ensure that these medical professionals, who have
passed a robust English Language test, which includes identity
checks, and are required to register with their regulatory body,
do not have to sit a separate, lower level immigration English
language test. This will support the Government’s desire to
continue to attract the best and brightest global talent to the
UK and to encourage migrants to integrate into society, without
compromising the safety of those using our health services.
The United Kingdom is committed to providing protection to those
who need it, in accordance with its international obligations.
Those who fear persecution should however claim asylum in the
first safe country they reach and not put their lives at risk by
making unnecessary and dangerous journeys to the UK. Illegal
migration from safe countries undermines our efforts to help
those most in need.
To support these principles, the Immigration Rules already
provide for inadmissibility processes, under which we can decline
to substantively consider the asylum claim of a claimant in the
UK and remove them to a safe third country, provided the claimant
has, or could have claimed asylum there, has refugee status
there, or has some other relevant connection to the third country
such that it would be reasonable for them to return there. This
process requires the cooperation of the safe third country.
Some of these Rules are drafted in the context of the UK’s
membership of the EU. As such, we are making minor amendments to
the Rules, to allow us to use inadmissibility processes for
broadly the same range of case types once we leave the EU.
Finally, we are also introducing wider changes through these
Immigration Rules to Appendix EU which sets out the Rules
governing the EU Settlement Scheme (EUSS). This provides the
basis for EU, EEA and Swiss citizens, and their family members,
to apply for UK immigration status which they will require to
remain here permanently after the UK’s withdrawal from the
European Union.
The changes make revised provision for access to the EUSS for the
family members of UK nationals returning with them from an EEA
Member State or Switzerland, having lived there together while
the UK national exercised their free movement rights, in line
with the announcement on such access made on 4 April 2019.
We expect the vast majority of EUSS applicants to be genuine, and
for there to be little need for status granted under the EUSS to
be cancelled at the border or curtailed in-country. However, it
is appropriate that, to safeguard the integrity of the EUSS, its
status should be covered by some of the same powers as other
forms of immigration leave, so that appropriate action can be
taken where necessary. The changes therefore amend Part 9 of the
Immigration Rules to provide additional grounds for the
cancellation and curtailment of EUSS status and leave acquired
having travelled to the UK with an EUSS family permit, e.g. on
grounds this was obtained by deception (such as where the person
had claimed to be the family member of an EEA citizen when they
were not). The changes also amend Part 9 to provide discretionary
grounds for EUSS status and leave acquired having travelled to
the UK with an EUSS family permit, to be cancelled at the border,
in a ‘no deal’ scenario, on the grounds that cancellation is
conducive to the public good, as a result of the person’s
post-exit conduct.
The changes provide a right of administrative review where status
granted under EUSS is cancelled at the border because the person
no longer meets the requirements for that status, e.g. where, as
a non-EEA citizen granted pre-settled status under the EUSS, they
have ceased to be the family member of an EEA citizen. Such
cancellation could only occur where the person no longer met any
of the bases for eligibility for status under the EUSS. The
changes also bring the time frame for applying for an
administrative review under the EUSS in line with all other
administrative reviews in cases where the applicant is detained
pending their removal from the UK, which will help ensure
detention is kept to a minimum.