- Migrants will have to contribute to society and their local
communities to earn their right to live in Britain for good
- Proposed changes could see “indefinite leave to remain”
dependent on paying National Insurance, claiming no benefits,
having a clean criminal record, and volunteering in their
community. The Government will consult on these changes this
year.
- This sets a clear dividing line between the Government and
Reform – whose divisive plan for indefinite leave to remain would
force those who have lived here for decades to leave the country,
breaking up families.
- The Home Secretary will also launch a “Winter of Action” to
tackle shoplifting, following intensive police activity and a
rise in arrests during the recent “Summer of Action” – delivering
the Government's Plan for Change to make our streets safer.
Today, Monday 29th September, in her first speech
to Labour Party Conference as Home Secretary, will announce that legal
migrants must contribute to society to earn the right to stay for
good.
The Home Secretary has set out a series of conditions for gaining
“indefinite leave to remain”, including being in work, making
National Insurance contributions, not taking any benefits
payments, learning English to a high standard, having a spotless
criminal record, and giving back to your local community (e.g.
through volunteering). A consultation on these proposals will be
launched later this year.
This marks a marked shift from the situation today. Currently,
“indefinite leave to remain” is often automatic at five years
when basic conditions are met. In the Immigration White
Paper, published in May, the Government announced this would
be lifted to a baseline of ten years. Settlement must then be
earned. Some, based on their contribution or skills, could earn
earlier settlement. Others, who have made a lesser contribution,
will only earn leave to remain later, or not at all.
These measures draw a clear dividing line between the Labour
Government and Reform, whose recent announcement on “indefinite
leave to remain” would force workers, who have been contributing
to this country for decades, to leave their homes and families.
Also in today's speech, will launch a new “Winter
of Action” to tackle shoplifting and anti-social behaviour during
retailer's busiest weeks of the year. This will see forces across
the country working in partnership with local businesses, aiming
to reach hundreds of locations.
This follows on the success of the “Summer of Action”, earlier
this year, which saw a crackdown on street-level crime in 600
locations across the country. This saw more visible police
patrols, more undercover operations, more fines, protective
orders and arrests.
This announcement comes midway through Labour's annual
conference, where the government is setting out how it will
deliver a programme of national renewal, which will make working
people better off.
As the Home Secretary will set out in her speech, Labour is keen
to reject the quick fix solutions offered by Reform and the
Tories, who want to divide the country and return Britain to the
path of decline.
Mahmood will argue her toughness on secure borders, fair
migration and safe streets are essential components of an “open,
generous, tolerant” country. She will warn party members that
“you won't always like what I do”. But while she will be a “tough
home secretary”, she will also be a
“tough Labour Home Secretary, fighting for a
vision of this country that is distinctly our own.”
She will argue that the last Conservative Government lost control
of our borders, ran a failed open border experiment on migration,
and left communities feeling unsafe on their own streets.
She will talk of her fear that, as a result, many in this country
feels things are “spinning out of control”. She fears
“patriotism, a force for good, is turning into something smaller,
something more like ethno-nationalism.”
She will pitch her role as part of a fight to “keep the country
together”. And she will warn that if the Government does not
succeed, “working people will turn away from us - the party that
for over a hundred years has been their party - and seek solace
in the false promises of Farage.”
In a personal speech, she will touch on her parents' experience
arriving in this country, and why the acceptance of migrants
depends on their contribution to local communities. She will talk
about her own experiences as the victim of shoplifting, while
working behind the till of her family's corner-shop as a child,
and why that inspired her to cracking down on street-level crime.