Extracts from Commons
statement on Future Immigration
The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Sajid
Javid):...I very much welcome the right hon. Lady’s
support for the principle at the heart of the new system, which is
that it is about an individual’s skills and what they have to
contribute, not their nationality. There will be no preference to
any particular nationality. To take her example, if a doctor or an
engineer is coming to the UK it should not matter to us if that
doctor or engineer is from India or France. What matters
is what they have to contribute. That is at the heart of the
proposals and she is right to highlight that
principle...
(Rhondda) (Lab): I
find it terribly depressing that the Prime Minister is still
sticking with this language of “tens of thousands”. It is
completely undeliverable in relation to outside the EU let alone
within the EU. In particular I am conscious that the Rhondda
would never have been built if it had not been for miners coming
from Ireland; we would never have had frothy coffee and ice cream
if it had not been for the Italians who came to work in the
mines; we would not have doctors keeping us healthy if it had not
been for the Indian subcontinent; and today we would not have
enough careworkers if it were not for people coming from Poland,
Latvia, Estonia and Spain. So I hope the Home Secretary will
manage to change the whole rhetoric and tone behind the
Government’s approach to this, and can he also just tell us where
exactly we have got to on tier 1 investor visas, which the
Government announced they were going to suspend two weeks ago and
then announced they were suspending the suspension six days
later?
: First, I am
disappointed that the hon. Gentleman did not mention in his list
pakoras and samosas from India and Pakistan; I would have thought
that would have been at the top of his list.
: I am not a fan.
: Well, I am.
[Interruption.] And so are those on the Labour Front Bench. The
hon. Gentleman makes an important point, however, and I hope that
as he has the time to look at the White Paper on the new
immigration system he will see that it is still a demonstration
of how this country is open to talent from across the world but
with more control than we have had before, and of how we can do
that in a way that brings net migration down to a more
sustainable level, which is good for all our communities. It is
important to have public confidence in the level of immigration.
The hon. Gentleman also asked about tier 1 visas. They are still
available as we speak, but we have set out a number of reforms
that we need to put in place to make them more effective.
(Harrow East) (Con):
It is absolutely right that the people of this country want to
see a firm but fair immigration position, so what will my right
hon. Friend do to ensure that the rules are operated fairly not
only for people coming from the EU, but, more importantly, for
our Commonwealth partners, in particular from the Indian
subcontinent?
: My hon. Friend raises
the important issue of fairness based on what someone has to
contribute, rather than their nationality. During the referendum
campaign many British citizens were concerned that family and
friends in the Indian subcontinent and other parts of the British
Commonwealth might not be getting the same treatment or access
that others were getting because of the preference that existed
through the freedom of movement system. That is changing under
this new system, and, when all is taken into account, this system
is much fairer in its approach by focusing on skills rather than
nationality.
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Extract from Lords
debate on Sport, Recreation and the Arts
(Lab):...Noble
Lords will know that the noble Lord, , once said that to test
an Indian immigrant’s loyalty you should
ask what team he supports in cricket: the Indian team or the English team. By
saying that, he was politicising cricket. He was looking at one’s
politics—which team one supports—as a badge of one’s patriotic
identity, and that is a dangerous way to go. Likewise, art and
culture can be seen in an extremely nationalistic way: art must
promote patriotism and an individual’s loyalty to the state. That
is not the way in which sport and art should be
conducted...
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