Today [Tuesday 7th April 2026], the Conservatives
pledge to enact a major crackdown on unauthorised traveller
camps, backed by robust legal powers.
Far too many people are forced to tolerate the behaviour of a
small minority of travellers who set up encampments in their
communities, occupying green spaces, consuming police resources
and undermining property rights and the rule of law.
The previous Conservative Government tightened the rules, but the
laws passed by the UK Parliament were effectively blocked by the
courts from being used. The democratically elected
Government's plans to ban travellers from returning to
unauthorised sites within a year were thrown out by judges who
claimed they would be discriminatory.
The Labour Government and its Attorney General, , have capitulated to
Strasbourg's diktats, ditching the last Government's plans and
opting for just a three-month no-return period instead. This is
effectively useless, as travellers can simply rotate around a
handful of sites in any given area.
The Conservatives are therefore setting out a robust plan to
grasp the nettle of the problem, making use of the freedoms we
will gain by leaving the ECHR. We will sweep away the loopholes
that prevent concrete action and which some travellers use to
circumvent the law, ensuring all communities play by the same
rules.
The Conservative Party will:
- Back the police with the power to ban travellers from
returning to encampments indefinitely, and the power to remove
travellers if requested by the landowner - going further than was
possible under the previous Government;
- Rebuild hard deterrence by making it an offence to trespass
with a vehicle after being directed to leave; and,
- Scrap the ban on removing trespassing travellers if no
alternative site is available in the area.
We will support this work as part of our wider plan to hire
10,000 more police officers.
These measures represent the only coherent plan from any party to
deal with the problem of illegal sites. The measures will stop
the two-tier justice that so often plays out when these sites
appear, with law-abiding citizens powerless as travellers go
unpunished for crimes that other communities simply wouldn't get
away with.
Leaving the ECHR and repealing the Human Rights Act will free the
Government to act without the fear of speculative lawfare by
activist lawyers and pressure groups.
The Conservatives will bring forward further measures in due
course to tackle the related issue of unauthorised traveller
development (unauthorised traveller sites on land that travellers
own), which is a responsibility of local authorities rather than
the police.
The Conservatives are the only party with a plan to fix the
two-tier justice system, back our police with the powers and
resources they need and ensure that lawbreaking is not tolerated.
MP, Leader of the
Conservative Party, said:
“For years, towns and villages across Britain have been forced to
accept criminality in their communities, but each measure we have
used to deal with illegal traveller sites has fallen foul of the
ECHR.
“That is why I have serious plans to end the power of foreign
courts to frustrate the will of Parliament, and to back our
police with the powers and resources they need.
“The Conservatives are the only party who are doing the proper
work needed to leave the ECHR, take back our streets, and stand
up for the rule of law. We will get Britain working again.”
MP, Shadow Home Secretary,
said:
“All too often, police lack the power to act decisively against
travellers who break the law.
“By leaving the ECHR and scrapping the Human Rights Act, we will
be able to empower our police to do their job more
effectively, ensuring equality before the law for all.
“We will support these plans by hiring 10,000 more police
officers, ensuring criminality does not go unchecked and
lawbreakers to do not go unpunished. Labour want to ignore the
problem – we have the plan to fix it.”
MP, Shadow Minister for Crime
and Policing, said:
“Communities deserve swift, decisive action when the law is
broken by travellers.
“Our plan will give police the clarity and backing they need to
act to ensure that our communities and property rights are
protected backed by our wider plan to recruit 10,000 more police
officers.
“Only the Conservatives have the team, plan and leader with a
backbone to take action to protect our communities and make sure
the law is properly enforced.”
ENDS
Notes to Editors:
The previous Conservative Government tightened the
rules, but the laws passed by the UK Parliament were effectively
blocked by the courts from being used:
-
The last Conservative Government passed laws to ensure
fair play: In 2022, the Conservative Government
introduced legislation to give the police the power to ban
travellers from an area for up to 12 months. Our Police, Crime,
Sentencing and Courts amended the Criminal Justice and Public
Order Act 1994 to give the police stronger powers to (a) remove
trespassers on land, (b) seize and forfeit property and,
created, (c) a more robust offence to residing on land without
consent in or with a vehicle (House of Commons
Library, 23 August 2022, link).
-
These laws were then struck down due to
ECHR: In 2024, the High Courts declared the UK
Parliament's democratically-passed law incompatible with
Article 14 of the ECHR, because it would disproportionately
affect travellers and was found to be discriminatory. Such
Europe-derived laws create a two-tier criminal justice system,
privileging a particular social group and leaving the police
and property owners powerless to deal with people moving onto
their land and living there without permission. It is yet
another example of how the ECHR has prevented public
authorities from acting in the interests of the British people
to enforce law and order ([2024] EWHC 1137
(Admin), link; Friends,
Families and Travellers press release, "High Court declares
parts of Police Act 2022 in breach of European Convention on
Human Rights", May 2024, link).
-
The Labour Government then watered down the
law: The incoming Labour Government resolved not to
appeal the High Court decision. And following Lord Hermer's
guidance on lavishly following international laws, the Labour
Government amended the legislation to water it down. Traveller
groups proclaimed: ‘The government's amendment will now water
down one of the most draconian forms of anti-Traveller
legislation in decades'. The law now allows trespassing
travellers to return to their illegally occupied site within 3
months, rather than the previous 12 months; this makes the law
effectively worthless, as travellers can rotate around a series
of green spaces with impunity (Hansard, 7 May 2025,
PQ48442, link; Hansard, 23
May 2025, PQ52625, link; Daily
Telegraph, “Lord Hermer gives himself ‘veto' over
government policy”, 9 July 2025, link; AGO, Attorney
General's Guidance on Legal Risk, November 2024, link; Friends,
Families and Travellers press release, “Government amendment to
revert anti-Traveller area ban accepted”, 10 March
2026, link).
-
A growing problem under
Labour: The number of unauthorised traveller sites on
other people's land has risen under the Labour Government (Not
tolerated unauthorised travellers on land not owned by
travellers, rising from 262 in July 2024 to 351 in July 2025,
MHCLG, Count of Traveller Caravans: Live Tables,
June 2024, Live Table 1, link).
The Conservative Party plan to enact a major
crackdown on unauthorised traveller camps, backed by robust legal
powers:
-
In October 2025, Conservatives set out a comprehensive
plan to leave the ECHR and scrap the Human Rights Act, advised
by legal expert, . In addition
to ensuring stronger borders, there will also be domestic
benefits from this policy (Conservative Party, The
Wolfson Report, October 2025, link).
-
After leaving the ECHR and scrapping Labour's Human
Rights Act, we will have the ability to back our police with
the powers they need to remove trespassing
travellers. After leaving the ECHR, we will make
it an offence for two or more people to trespass with a vehicle
after they have been directed to leave. Our previous attempts
to give the police more powers to stop travellers from
trespassing was thwarted by lawfare. Outside the ECHR, we can
go further than was possible under the last Conservative
Government.
-
Giving the police powers to remove travellers from a
site if requested by the landowner. Currently,
the police can only direct removal where they believe
trespassers have caused significant damage, disruption or
distress – trespassing along is not justification for removal
– all because of Article 8 of the ECHR (respect for private
and family life). We will change statutory guidance so that
an offence is being committed if two or more persons
trespassing on land with a vehicle, that have been directed
to leave by the landowner, refuse to leave.
-
Giving the police powers to block travellers from
returning to a site for 12 months, or
indefinitely. Our legislation to give the
police powers to block travellers from returning to a site
for 12 months was blocked by courts citing Article 8 and
Article 14 of the ECHR (protection from discrimination).
Labour's Crime and Policing Act reduced this to 3 months,
legalising quarterly rotation rather than restoring
deterrence. After we have left the ECHR, we will enact a
no-return period that deters.
-
We will scrap the ban on removing trespassing
travellers if no pitch is available in that local
authority. Currently, the police cannot direct
trespassing travellers off a site if no pitch is available in
the local authority area. Our legislation to overturn this
ban was blocked by courts citing Article 8 of the ECHR. After
leaving the ECHR, we will remove the requirement that a
suitable pitch is available before police can direct removal.
As there is no excuse for breaking the law.
-
We will recruit 10,000 more police officers to give
them the manpower they need to tackle trespassing
travellers. Alongside tripling the use of stop
and search, we will recruit 10,000 additional police officers
over three years, at a cost of £800 million.