Moved by Baroness Hayter of Kentish Town That
this House takes note of the impact of the United Kingdom’s
withdrawal from the European Union and potential withdrawal from
the single market on the rights of European Union citizens living
in this country and the United Kingdom’s future economic
requirements. Baroness...Request free
trial
Moved by
-
of Kentish Town
That this House takes note of the impact of the United
Kingdom’s withdrawal from the European Union and potential
withdrawal from the single market on the rights of European
Union citizens living in this country and the United
Kingdom’s future economic requirements.
-
of Kentish Town
(Lab)
My Lords, I want to cover two areas today. One concerns the
rights of EU citizens already living in the UK, come our
departure from the European Union. The other is the UK
economy, on which we depend for jobs and prosperity, and
for the tax revenues which fund our defence, education,
health and public services.
I think we all know that there is great anxiety among EU
citizens living here, to whom,
“the Government is under a moral obligation to provide …
legal clarity”,
according to our EU Justice Committee. We must resolve the
legal status of these citizens without delay. The 2004 EU
citizens’ directive is clear about freedom of movement: it
is the right to come and go, to stay here without question
for three months, to stay longer provided that citizens are
employed, a student or have the resources so as not to need
social assistance, and to have health cover. Then, after
five years, there is the right to permanent residence.
Those who have been here less than five years may have no
right to stay post Brexit under the existing rules, but
they are also unsure what criteria they would need to meet
to prove that they had been here. It would be quite a
challenge for the Government, as well—dealing with 3
million applications. Many EU nationals who have been here
well over five years may be unable to prove that they meet
the criteria for permanent residency, while others—perhaps
elderly relatives—would have no entitlement under current
rules. Indeed, proving health cover may be difficult.
Giving evidence, the noble Lord, , suggested that an
NI number might suffice as evidence, but that would not
cover everybody concerned.
We have seen the problems faced by individuals—by the
London-born Dom Wolf, whose German parents ensured that he
had a German passport but who now, despite living here all
his life, faces having to prove that he should stay,
including having to take an English test. Then there is the
Dutch lady, Monique Hawkins, who was similarly told to
prepare to leave the country, despite making her career and
family here for over 24 years. I myself, having been born
in Germany, started to fill in the 85-page application form
to prove residency. It is, I have to say, a nightmare. I
would have to produce 15 documents spread over five
years—or, if I use my husband as a sponsor, I have to set
out when I met him, when I started a relationship with him
and when I decided to marry him. I did not like to confess
that they were all on the same day.
I ask the Minister to review urgently how we will define EU
citizens already resident here and how they can demonstrate
this along with offering them the legal clarity that they
so need. While those who have been here very many years
might be protected separately under Article 8 of the ECHR,
those rights are not absolute, with each case being
determined on its particular facts, providing little
certainty for those involved. Indeed, the Government have
not even made any assessment of the number who might be
able to get such protection, which seems a little
short-sighted. There is also the “indefinite leave to
remain” route but, if that looks complicated, the other one
is even more byzantine.
Needless to say, UK nationals living elsewhere in the EU
are also worried: about pensions, health, employment,
education and their residency status and rights. Sandra
Stretton, a pensioner in Spain, describes enjoying what she
calls, “a very simple life which afforded me serenity and
peace of mind until … the Referendum … turned my world
upside down”, leaving her “extremely concerned” as to
whether she will lose pension increases, and treatment for
her health condition, which is helped not just by the
treatment in Spain by the climate that particularly helps
her condition. As she says, if she is forced to return to
the UK and ask for every benefit available, she would lose
her “independence and dignity and become a drain on
society”. She has never requested financial assistance, and
she has paid taxes and NI throughout her working life, but
now she feels very insecure.
Then there is John Owen, who moved to Spain believing that
his rights to healthcare, free movement within Europe, and
a UK state pension were guaranteed by his European
citizenship. Now, he says, “We face uncertainty with a
particular concern as guardians of our youngest grandchild
whom we have cared for since she was five months old, but
we soon face decisions concerning secondary school and
higher education. Under ‘Brexit’ scenarios it is difficult
to visualise any path that does not involve Spanish
citizenship”.
These are real cases, in the here and now, but the
Government do not seem to take them seriously. declined to meet the
Joint Committee on Human Rights, a choice the committee
labelled “unacceptable”, while the Government refused to
send a Minister to our committee on acquired rights,
looking at the impact of Brexit.
We should also consider the UK economy’s future needs. The
NHS is heavily reliant on its 160,000 EU nationals,
including 10,000 doctors and 20,000 nurses, overwhelmingly
from countries which joined the EU before 2004, with a
further 90,000 in social care. No wonder the BMA wonders
how the NHS will be staffed after Brexit if it loses 5% of
its workforce.
In one of our successful industries, tourism and
hospitality, EU nationals are essential in places such as
London. ABTA and the BHA worry that any cut in these
numbers, together with the omission of foreign language as
a skill for any points system, would make recruitment to
their industry really difficult—a challenge for the food
and drink industry, with 100,000 EU employees. Agriculture
is worried: the NFU noted that, even by September, farmers
were unable to meet the demand for seasonal workers.
Normally they would get them from Romania and Bulgaria. The
fall in the pound, added to the Brexit effect of
insecurity, is already affecting our farming areas.
The Lords EU Committee heard concerns as to whether
financial services would get the specialist labour that
they need—we hear today of more possible moves of those
services out of the UK. They are worried not only about the
numbers and whether they would be able to get them, but
whether there would be very bureaucratic and cumbersome
procedures for recruiting staff from elsewhere in the EU.
The chief executive of the British Bankers’ Association has
identified banking as probably more affected by Brexit than
any other sector, being the UK’s biggest export industry by
far. Its need for high-quality staff has an impact on all
of us because of the impact on the economy. The Benn Select
Committee on Brexit has called on the Government to take
account of the importance of EU workers in these key
sectors: health, finance and agriculture, as well as
manufacturing, where EU nationals make up 15% of workers,
and public services, with a quarter of a million EU staff.
The people have indeed spoken about Brexit, but Brexit now
needs to think about people. It needs to be managed in a
way that safeguards individuals’ rights and which helps our
economy to prosper and grow—for the sake of all our people.
I beg to move.
11.47 am
-
(Con)
My Lords, if ever we needed an illustration of how muddled
and in what a mess the is on Brexit, one has
only to read this Motion, moving:
“That this House takes note of the impact of the united
Kingdom’s withdrawal from the European Union and potential
withdrawal from the single market”.
“Potential withdrawal”—we are leaving the single market; we
are leaving the customs union. The Prime Minister could not
have made it more crystal clear. In endless debates during
the referendum campaign, representatives from the Liberal
Democrat Party, and SNP all said that
if we leave the European Union, we would not be able to be
in the single market. Now they seek to make a distinction.
-
(Lab)
Is the noble Lord implying that membership of the single
market was part of the referendum question? I do not recall
that it was. Now we have the option of a hard Brexit or a
soft Brexit, and he is implying that the government
decision is a decision that binds Parliament. That cannot
be the case, can it?
-
The noble Lord has a particular view on these matters. I do
not know what the difference is between a hard Brexit and a
soft Brexit; it seems to me that it is the same difference
between a hard pregnancy and a soft pregnancy—there is no
difference. If the noble Lord does not understand that
Brexit means Brexit, perhaps I can put it more simply:
leave means leave. That is what people voted for. The
single market, as he well knows as a great exponent of the
European Union, does not exist in the treaties of the
European Union. It is referred to as the internal market.
Perhaps the noble Lord could think about how can we be in
the internal market if we are outside the European Union?
It would then be easier for him to understand what people
voted for.
The ’s confusion is beyond
belief. I heard the Opposition spokesperson on foreign
affairs, Ms Thornberry, on “Newsnight” the other night. She
said that they agree with the Government on lots of
things—they want, for example, tariff-free access to the
single market. Well, tariff-free access to the single
market is the Government’s policy, but if you want
tariff-free access to the single market then, by
definition, you are not going to be in the single market.
I have one thing in common with the noble Baroness in that
I proposed to my wife within eight days of meeting her and
we have been together for some 40 years this year. However,
the noble Baroness needs to be more decisive on matters
which affect the national interest. She is right about the
rights of EU citizens living in our country, and that that
issue needs to be resolved quickly. The way to do so is to
get on with moving Article 50 and persuading our colleagues
in the European Union that we need a reciprocal
deal—namely, that British people living in the European
Union will be able to stay in the European Union, and
likewise people who have come here will be able to stay
here. Nobody seriously thinks that more than 3 million
people will be expelled from this country. Frankly, it is
irresponsible for members of the to create fear and
anxiety among those people while fighting the referendum
campaign at the same time as saying through the other side
of their mouths that they are committed to implementing the
wishes of the British people. I say to my noble friend the
Chief Whip that to give us four minutes each to discuss
matters of this importance makes a mockery of this House
and our ability to hold the Government to account.
I shall say a word or two about the antics of the Scottish
nationalists’ behaviour and our embarrassing First
Minister. One thing that the Liberals and the SNP have in
common is they are crying out for more referendums but at
the same time they do not accept the results of referendums
when people vote in them. We have gone from the First
Minister threatening an immediate referendum to it being
possibly an inevitable referendum. As this argument has
gone on in Scotland, it is the only part of the United
Kingdom which has seen unemployment go up and not down as
uncertainty has been created. I suggest that the First
Minister sticks to her day job and concentrates on
unemployment and the problems in the health service,
education and elsewhere, and does not get involved in
foreign affairs. She is, after all, the person whose party
made Mr Trump an ambassador for Scotland on behalf of
business in the global marketplace, then promptly withdrew
that while calling on the Government to ban him coming to
this country. Therefore, I suggest that her expertise may
not lie in that area and she should butt out of this
debate.
11.52 am
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I believe there is a strong and positive link
between the two halves of this debate: EU citizens living
and working in this country and a prosperous economy.
Therefore, it is of great concern that the Government have
chosen to make their national priority not growth, jobs and
living standards but reducing immigration, regardless of
the economic cost.
This perspective that the economic well-being of the nation
matters less than the politics of control has driven the
Prime Minister to set out the hardest possible
interpretation of Brexit. Her argument is not that this
will make Britain more prosperous, but that controlling
immigration is so important it is worth pulling Britain out
of the single market and the customs union to achieve.
Therefore, as we scrutinise this decision, it must surely
be right for us to consider what impact restricting the
rights of European Union citizens to live and work in this
country could have on our economy.
The economic benefits of immigration are clear. It
increases growth, provides more tax revenue and helps pay
for an ageing society. It creates new job opportunities,
brings skills into our economy and makes us more
competitive. There is substantial evidence that reducing
immigration would damage our economy, and, by lowering tax
receipts, put great strain on our public services. The
recent Autumn Statement showed that we would need to borrow
an additional £16 billion by 2020 to make up for the
reduced tax take from falling migration, with a further
cost of £8 billion every year thereafter. Yet, despite
these arguments, the question of controlling immigration
dominated the referendum campaign. Indeed, the Prime
Minister believes it was so central to the outcome that we
should withdraw from not just the European Union but the
single market too, despite estimates that membership could
be worth as much as 4% on GDP compared to WTO terms alone.
For this Government, the political priority of ending
freedom of movement is more important than the economic
benefits of the single market. However, by making
immigration their national priority, they are creating huge
expectations—expectations they are unlikely to meet for
three reasons.
First, there are the numbers. Through constant reference to
the burden on infrastructure and the impact on wages, the
public have been led to believe that, when we end freedom
of movement, not just immigration but the number of
immigrants already here will fall. Yet what if—as we all
hope they will—existing EU migrants are allowed to stay?
What of new trade deals, where every potential new
arrangement comes with the demand to open our labour market
to that country’s citizens? What, too, of the Government’s
record on controlling immigration from non-EU countries,
the source of the majority of our immigration, over which
we have always had control? The previous Home Secretary
tried and failed to meet a target to reduce it and now
non-EU net migration alone stands at double the
Government’s target of 100,000 per year. The reality is
that non-EU migration may have to increase to meet the
ongoing demand for skilled and unskilled labour.
The second expectation concerns the cultural impact of
immigration: the view that ending freedom of movement will
prevent the nature of our communities from changing. Yet,
where this happens, much of the impact arises as a result
of immigration from outside the EU, which, we should be
clear, will be completely unaffected by ending freedom of
movement.
Finally, it remains the case that the greatest hostility to
immigration is to be found in those parts of the country
where there are fewest immigrants. Despite politicians of
both main parties advocating immigration control in order
to solve the problems of these areas, their problems will
not be solved because their problems were not caused by
immigration in the first place.
These huge gaps between expectations and reality create a
great danger for our country. We risk damaging our economy
by leaving the single market only to find that the
political promise of control was itself a fiction, and we
risk stoking fears about immigration that will never be
adequately addressed simply by ending freedom of movement.
In this gap between expectations and reality, the politics
of extremism will lie in wait. We need urgently to change
the terms of debate in this country and focus not on
raising expectations that cannot be met but instead on
solving the real problems that people face.
11.56 am
-
(LD)
My Lords, perhaps we could get the record straight on one
thing. Three nation states are part of the European single
market but not members of the European Union: Norway,
Iceland and Liechtenstein. They are in the single market;
they are not in the European Union. That is how it works
and that was an alternative that we could have had.
I want to concentrate on something that the noble Baroness
mentioned in her opening speech. I admit that, when it
comes to general elections, I am not a regular Conservative
voter.
-
(LD)
You are not a regular voter.
-
I am not a regular voter at all but—if the noble Lord,
, would let me
continue—I was very taken by the 2010 Conservative
manifesto, which stated:
“Strong families are the bedrock of a strong society. They
provide the stability and love we need to flourish as human
beings, and the relationships they foster are the
foundation on which society is built”.
Absolutely—that was one of the best passages in any of the
party manifestos that I read, although, unfortunately, it
did not feature in the 2015 Conservative manifesto. It
concentrated on families, which is the issue that I want to
raise in this debate.
Unfortunately, over the last few years we have made it very
difficult for third-country spouses of UK citizens to live
in this country. They have high bars to meet on income and
other qualifications. A lot of families are split up
because one of the spouses or civil partners cannot pass
those hurdles in British legislation and so is not able to
join them. Currently, European citizens can reside in the
UK with their third-country spouses or civil partners under
European legislation and the legislation that we brought in
as part of that in, I think, 2014.
I have a simple question for the Minister. It is the only
point that I want to make. As part of the so-called great
repeal Bill, will the spouses and civil partners of
European citizens residing in the UK, who we hope will have
the right to remain and work in this country, still be able
to reside with them and their families after we leave the
European Union? The Prime Minister quite rightly said that
on Brexit day there should be a seamless movement, in
legislative terms, of conditions and rights from the
European Union when we stop being a member state. I welcome
that. My question is: will spouses of European citizens, as
well as those citizens themselves, still be able to reside
on a similar basis in the United Kingdom? This issue
concerns individuals, families, and the rights of and
respect for families into the future. I am interested to
hear in the Minister’s response an assurance in this key
area, as well as one for European citizens themselves.
12.00 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, we seem to be connected to Germany. My wife was
not quite born in Germany, but my father-in-law was working
for the Control Commission in Hamburg. My wife’s parents
had such trust in the German health system in the late
1940s that my mother-in-law was flown back to Woking to
give birth to my wife. She was almost German; I am just
glad that she is not, having heard of the antics the noble
Baroness, Lady Hayter, may have to go through.
I will talk about the role of the staff of EU agencies in
Britain. We have two EU agencies—the European Medicines
Agency and the European Banking Authority—based in the UK
with European staff working in them, as well as UK staff.
We are saying to them that not only are we leaving the EU,
but we are apparently unable to give them any undertakings,
even though they are working for the EU, as to whether they
will be able to have any continuation of employment in this
country. Indeed, we appear to be trying to chase the
agencies out of Britain. When the European Medicines Agency
goes we will have a lot of work to do in our
self-regulation of medicines. When the European Banking
Authority goes, I doubt that the City of London will be
overjoyed to see the back of an EU agency devoted to
banking.
In Britain we also have two other institutions. I am not
quite clear whether they will be thrown out. We have the
marvellously named European Centre for Medium-Range Weather
Forecasts based in Reading and Euratom in Culham. To what
extent do the Government intend to withdraw from these
agencies? At the moment it is unclear.
The point is that the people who work for these agencies
were, effectively, British public servants who went to do
the best for their country. They are feeling very let down.
The European civil servants are similarly feeling let down.
Many of them wanted to come to work in Britain. They were
pleased that there were international agencies spread
around the European Union making Europe a reality. Now,
they are suddenly told—they are not all married to
nationals of the same nationality as themselves—that they
are to be uprooted, that their children are to be pulled
out of schools, and that there are no guarantees being
given at all. I put it to the Minister that it would be
very simple to give some comfort to these people, either by
saying, “You can stay”, or by saying, “If you have to
leave, we will at least make it as easy as possible”, and
that we will not carry on with what seems to me to be an
unreasonable approach to the whole business.
I hope the situation of British nationals working in and
for Europe will be fully taken into account. I know people
keep saying it is, but the fact is a number of these civil
servants do not feel that the Government are yet on side. I
hope the Minister will reassure us today that the
Government realise the human dimensions of this problem
that we have set ourselves—because we voted for it—and will
do everything they can to make as easy and humane as
possible the lives of these civil servants, their pensions
and their future responsibilities. I ask the Minister to
take this into account in his reply.
12.05 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I welcome the chance given to the House by the
initiative of my noble friend Lady Hayter to debate these
hugely important subjects. Like my noble friend, I urge the
Government to take the lead by unilaterally guaranteeing
the rights of EU citizens currently residing in the UK. It
is neither morally nor economically attractive to attempt
to use their position as a negotiating ploy; nor is it even
a good negotiating tactic. In all circumstances—and
particularly when it is the UK that has initiated the
change in the relationship with the EU—careful judgment has
to be exercised in choosing negotiating positions.
The Prime Minister, on her way to meet President Trump,
has, perhaps in preparation, been reading Trump: The Art of
the Deal, popularly attributed to the President, even if
its co-author and publisher both downplay his contribution.
“Use your leverage”, the book advises. Its putative
co-author certainly used financial leverage in his business
life, and the Prime Minister will find out tomorrow and
thereafter how he uses negotiating leverage. But the very
inconceivability of not protecting the rights of EU
citizens already resident in the UK, as acknowledged by the
Chancellor of the Exchequer in Davos, makes the issue poor
or non-existent negotiating leverage. It only draws
attention to what the Minister—perhaps
inadvertently—referred to last week as the weaknesses in
our negotiating position. I therefore urge the Government
again to give clear and unequivocal guarantees to EU
citizens resident in the UK.
For the future, we need to restore widespread public
confidence in government control of immigration—I recognise
that—including from the EU, while at the same time, at the
very least, not handicapping our long-term economic
prospects. I commend to your Lordships’ House the report
prepared for techUK by Frontier Economics and published on
Tuesday. If its analysis and recommendations are
specifically for the digitally intensive sectors of the
economy, the principles and model are widely applicable. It
recommends, inter alia, as well as the immediate
confirmation of the rights of EU citizens currently
resident here, a low-friction, smart immigration unit and
recognition of the importance of UK firms being able to
locate UK nationals to work in EU member states.
That said, and notwithstanding the intemperate remarks of
the noble Lord, Lord Forsyth, I still believe that a more
structured solution, such as the Bruegel think tank’s
continental partnership, to which I have previously
referred—retaining membership of the single market without
being subject to the freedom of movement of people—is both
desirable and achievable.
On the same day that the Prime Minister made her Lancaster
House speech, Rachel Sylvester wrote in the Times:
“Mrs May is missing the EU’s shift on free movement … Her
inflexible negotiating position risks ignoring European
politicians’ significant changes of attitude to migration”.
I hope that the Minister and the Prime Minister will
reflect on this as they finalise the Government’s White
Paper.
12.09 pm
-
The Lord
My Lords, I thank the noble Baroness, Lady Hayter, for
introducing this debate. At the outset, I will take the
opportunity to thank the Minister, the noble Lord,
, for his
participation in ongoing conversations with the Church of
England around these issues and for the time he has taken
in hearing our concerns.
The last few weeks have brought some clarity to the process
for the triggering of Article 50 and to the Government’s
priorities in their negotiations. Although that clarity is
to be welcomed, it stands in contrast to the continuing
uncertainty hanging over families across the UK. I have
received a lot of correspondence on this issue, and what
many who have been in touch have sought to emphasise is
that EU citizens in the UK cannot be abstracted from wider
society. The people we are discussing today are mothers,
fathers, partners—and, in some cases, priests. For example,
I know of cases where an EU citizen is married to a British
resident and yet is unable to claim permanent residence,
although they are a spouse and primary carer of two young
children.
An unwillingness to commit to protecting EU citizens living
in this country in many cases appears to be an
unwillingness to protect the family life of British
citizens. Imagine, as a young child, the amount of worry
that the slightest possibility of your parent not being
able to stay with you would cause. Similarly, imagine the
strain that such a possibility is already placing on
marriages.
The shape of the UK post Brexit will be formed by the
process of our exit—and by this I mean not just how
successful the Government are in the negotiation. Also
important is the manner in which we go about it and the
language we use, as the most reverend Primate the reminded the
House on Tuesday. This uncertainty and the resultant stress
and strain on family life and children should not have a
place in our negotiating strategy. It does not speak to the
type of Brexit that we should aspire to—one that supports
families and the common good. In her speech last week, the
Prime Minister committed to using,
“this moment of change to build a stronger economy and a
fairer society”.
Let us start as we mean to go on and commit to keeping
families together.
Finally, we should recognise that protecting the rights of
EU citizens in the UK is in our national interest. We are
talking about people for whom no database exists and who
contribute a great deal to our country. For example, I know
that in the north-east, where I am based, many of our
universities, world leading as they are, draw many of their
academics from the EU. Durham University and Newcastle
University, for example, have world-class faculties in many
subjects. They are world class because of the expertise
within them, and some of those experts are EU citizens.
Already there are concerns about the loss of these experts.
Failure to give them permanent residence will break up the
very world-leading research teams that we as a nation need
in order to stay as a world leader in academia.
Quite rightly, the Prime Minister recognised the importance
of research to a post-Brexit UK, including it as point 10
in her 12-point plan for Brexit. It is vital that, whatever
arrangement we reach, these academics know now that they
are welcome and valued. I suggest that this is a perfect
opportunity to let them know. Whether they are friends,
family, faith leaders or workers, the people whom we are
discussing today are not bargaining chips; they are a
valued part of society, and in these uncertain times they
need to know that.
12.13 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, I expect that most of your Lordships will
remember that about six months ago we had many experts
predicting that the UK was soon to become a fog-bound
basket case—a kind of incipient North Korea but with added
drizzle. It has not quite turned out like that. Just this
week we see government borrowing exactly on target for the
year end, stock markets booming and 40-year UK government
debt with a very low coupon being fought over by foreign
investors, who were desperate when the Debt Management
Office put it up for sale a couple of days ago. Of course,
as we have heard this morning, the United Kingdom’s GDP in
the most recent quarter puts us right at the very top of
the G7 leader board. It has not quite turned out as most
experts predicted. I have to say that I did not predict it,
either—I do not count myself as an expert in very much. But
no wonder people from abroad want to stay here and no
wonder people abroad want to come here, as they will.
It is entirely reasonable that the noble Baroness, Lady
Hayter, in opening her debate, concentrated both on the
rights of EU citizens here and the rights of the very large
number of UK citizens living in the EU. But equivalence
will have to rule in any sensible negotiation. Her
Excellency the extremely sensible ambassador to the Court
of St James from France said in interviews on the record—it
was published in the Evening Standard, so it must be
true—that we need equivalence and recognition of the rights
of citizens in the EU and in the UK. She was right, and I
hope she has squared President Hollande and the negotiators
on all this. We are just at the beginning of negotiations,
when reciprocal and reasonable rights will be one of the
issues to be finally resolved.
Most EU citizens are very well settled in and integrated
here. One part of my life is down in the West Country,
where there is a well-settled European Union
community—Polish, as it happens. Opposite the local Roman
Catholic church is a delightful shop called Little Poland.
I know of no incidents of any sort of anti-Polish
sentiment. Problems always come when people feel that
immigration has tipped the balance; that is what we see in
East Anglia, Lincolnshire and elsewhere. That is why
control of our borders is so important.
We also have to recognise that the balance can change quite
quickly in the other direction. I am told that a fair
number of EU immigrants to this country have left or are
now considering leaving because the drop in the
pound—which, as we have seen, helps exporters—is hitting
the value of their wages, and hence the remittances they
can send home. I believe that reasonable control of our
borders on a needs-first basis is a national good in the
interests of balance in all parts of the country. Whether
it is up in the north-east with the right reverend Prelate
the or elsewhere, we
want good, integrated immigration and settlement, not
immigration that causes trouble.
In the closing moments of my speech, I want to reflect on
what the right reverend Prelate said in the closing moments
of his speech. My right honourable friend the Chancellor of
the Exchequer has said endlessly since last autumn—and most
recently in the fleshpots of Davos—not just, in the
oft-repeated phrase, that the UK should be and is open for
business but that it will remain open for talent,
university teachers, scientists, scholars and
entrepreneurs, and not just those in the traditional
financial services, where I work, but in the new developing
fintech, biotech and artificial intelligence areas. I think
that the Chancellor of the Exchequer is right to stress
that. It sends a very good, clear message to those we will
be negotiating with in future months.
12.18 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I chair the Justice Sub-Committee of the European
Union Select Committee. Our committee was really the
producer of the Brexit: Acquired Rights report, which was
submitted to the House by the European Union Select
Committee. The very term “acquired rights” is one that had
to be examined because, in the run-up to the referendum,
confidence was given to European Union nationals living in
this country and to our citizens living in other parts of
Europe that they would have acquired rights, that
everything would be fine and that they were not to worry.
In fact, the notion of acquired rights is a term in
international law, and the evidence before our committee
showed that acquired rights did not provide very much
comfort at all for people living here or for British
citizens living in other parts of Europe. It was not
designed for that purpose. It relates much more to the
state’s compulsory acquisition of companies and assets and
so on, and works on a different level. The individual
rights that people cherish—the right to live, work and
study in this country, or for our citizens to do so in
other parts of Europe—will certainly be in question as we
leave Europe. Therefore, we should be thinking about this
very seriously.
The Justice Sub-Committee was convinced by the moral
argument, and it is that that we should think about first
and foremost. One thing we have taken pride in is that we
do not just operate on what suits us economically, we also
think about our responsibilities. We have responsibilities
to those who come to live and work and who need a life in
this country. Many of those people face real anxiety. As we
have heard, many of them have been confronted with serious
problems in trying to consolidate their position and take
up formal residence. The procedures are elaborate and
byzantine—there are 80 pages of documentation—and they have
to produce all manner of stuff that most of us would not
have kept over many years. A very close friend of mine who
is an enormously successful businessman in this country,
who has been in the financial sector, describes how after
40 years of living here he has had to employ lawyers. He
asks what that might mean for ordinary people trying to
engage with this process. This should not be the case for
people who have come here to work in our National Health
Service, our financial services or our hospitality
industries, who do all manner of work or who are here
studying. We should also consider how it affects their
families. Those people should not be a bargaining chip.
While we are of course concerned for the rights of our
citizens living in Spain who perhaps retired there because
of the climate—I only today received an email from a
gentleman living in Spain who went there because of his
wife’s chronic illness; she has now died and he is very
anxious about his position and his own healthcare now that
he is a retiree—people who have come to live and work here
should not be a bargaining chip. Our report recommends that
we should make a unilateral declaration that we will
protect the rights of those citizens into the future as
they have had them up until now.
I am the head of an Oxford college. Our vice-chancellor,
Louise Richardson, called a meeting for Europeans working
at all levels in the university—some were academics, but
some worked in staffing and administration and so on. Some
1,700 people turned up, full of anxiety about their future.
We should urge the Government to take a unilateral step.
That would do a number of things. Any of us who have ever
been involved in negotiations know that if you put
something out there in the beginning, it wins good will for
you in further negotiations. I have no doubt that there
will be reciprocity from the other countries of Europe with
regard to our citizens living there. But to hesitate at
this stage and not to give such an assurance now is wrong.
I have heard from firm Brexiteers that they agree that we
should act now and not wait until the triggering of Article
50.
We should create a new system of fast-tracking specifically
for those from other parts of Europe, and it should not
involve the byzantine process that currently exists. We
should have a special system for those who were living here
at the point of the referendum.
12.23 pm
-
My Lords, those are very wise words. The noble Lord, Lord
Forsyth, however, accused opposition parties of creating
fear and worry. Who is creating the fear and worry? It is
not opposition parties. The fear and worry exist as a
result of the referendum decision and what the Government
have been saying since then, and of the experience of
people who have been trying to get British citizenship and
permanent residence.
My noble friend referred specifically
to the right of spouses of British citizens living here to
continue to do so even if they are not British citizens.
That strikes very close to home with me, because my
daughter’s husband is a Danish citizen. He has been based
in this country for many years, but he is one of those
people who do not go through life hoarding all the
documents that are ever sent to them. Some of us are
hoarders; he is not. Putting together a case for permanent
residence and gathering what is required are tasks that
will be almost impossible because of his life generally
while he has been based in this country.
In particular, a lot of people are coming up against what
is now revealed as the need for comprehensive social
insurance, something which many of them who have lived in
this country for many years never realised they needed.
They were living in family groups but perhaps did not have
a permanent or full-time job. They now find that they are
penalised because they never had this insurance. Nobody
told them that they would need it; nobody imagined that
they would be in the position that they are.
The Government say that they want to sort out this problem
as early as possible with the rest of Europe, but is this a
policy or a procedural matter? Can it be sorted out with
the European Union within the two years of the Article 50
negotiations, or is it one of those things where there will
have to be new treaty negotiations after Article 50 has
been sorted out? The Government have to be very clear on
this question. If it is not possible to secure an agreement
with the European Union as a whole, do the Government
intend to secure bilateral agreements with each of the 27
remaining European Union countries, so that the rights of
French citizens here might be different from those of
Swedish or Bulgarian citizens, or differ from the rights of
Britons in those countries? That is clearly a recipe for a
great deal more uncertainty and worry. I think that the
noble Lord, , talked about
equivalence but we are not talking about that here: we are
talking about individual people, not robots. To use these
people as poker chips, as has been said—perhaps it is brag
rather than poker—is immoral and unethical. It should not
be happening.
Unfortunately, the experience that people are having is
with the Home Office. From my 15 years of dealing with the
Home Office over immigration and asylum cases, I have
personal experience of what so many people report: that
that organisation is not the most efficient or competent.
There have been lost papers. Inquiries for visa extensions
are not replied to in time. I know of a couple whose
lifetime documents—the letters and communications between
themselves—had to be sent to the Home Office. These were
very intimate and they have been lost. There have been
arbitrary decisions with no common sense, people treated in
an offhand and insulting way and bureaucratic obstructions
of every known variety. Unfortunately, this is endemic in
too much of the Home Office. At a high level, the Home
Office is not very competent; at an operational level, it
is too often inefficient. It is widely seen by many people
as exhibiting what I would call malevolent carelessness.
This is coming out too much in the experiences of European
citizens who are now in this country.
12.28 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, many of your Lordships are quite rightly
concerned about the status of EU citizens living in this
country. But I would have thought that my right honourable
friend the Prime Minister had done almost everything she
could to reassure them that they would be allowed to stay
here. What your Lordships are asking is that she should
take unilateral action, but there are many people in senior
positions within the EU who never stop telling us that
Britain has to be punished for voting to leave the EU. So
there is a risk—this has to be accepted—that if we gave
guarantees to the EU citizens living in this country, that
form of punishment might take place and discrimination
might be exerted against British citizens living in the EU.
I do not want to dwell on that, but I do think that my
right honourable friend has done everything she can to
reassure citizens living here. I sincerely hope that, once
Article 50 is moved, we will see this at the top of the
agenda as something that has to be agreed with the EU.
I want to talk about the White Paper that was agreed to by
the Government yesterday. I quite understand the attitude
of the Opposition parties; they hope that a tremendous
amount of detail will be put into the White Paper so that
the Government can be accused at a later stage of not
honouring some pledge made in it and therefore of failing
in the negotiations. I have no particular inside
information on what is going to be in the White Paper, but
I have a very strong feeling that it is actually going to
be a repetition, probably with rather more verbiage, of the
speech the Prime Minister has already given, laying out the
objectives of where she wants the negotiations to go. I do
not think that there will be much more in it than that.
That will be absolutely the right thing to do. It would be
against the interests of this country if we laid out in
detail what we want, because that would undermine our
negotiating position and would not be in the national
interest.
We have also got to bear in mind that a number of European
countries are fighting elections over the next nine months
or so: the Dutch, the French and the Germans. I was talking
to a lobbyist from Brussels on Monday whose wife is
Italian, and he reckons that the Italians will have a
general election by the end of March. They will all be
facing Eurosceptic candidates. So if during this process of
negotiation from the end of March we ask for any
concessions, there would be tremendous momentum to make
sure that no concessions are given. This is the problem we
are up against in the short term; all the parties that are
fighting these elections have to make out that Brexit is a
complete disaster.
As my noble friend, who is no longer in his place, pointed
out, the British economy is booming at the moment. It will
be very difficult for people in Europe to say that Brexit
has been a disaster. The pressure on a number of these
countries is going to be very great. It even resulted in
Chancellor Merkel saying that if we were going to have
access to the single market, we would have to agree to the
free movement of labour. That is not true. The United
States has access to the single market and certainly does
not agree to the free movement of labour between Europe and
the United States. So we have a long way to go on all this,
but let us try to keep the truth beaming out and let us be
optimistic that this is going to work out well in the
interests of both the United Kingdom and the EU.
12.32 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, last week the Prime Minister clarified the UK’s
negotiating priorities. While I regret the signal that the
top line of this negotiating position is a rejection of the
principle of freedom of movement and withdrawal from the
single market, it is important to know where we stand
because, as many other noble Lords have said, so many other
aspects of our future relationship with Europe depend on
this decision. I declare an interest as a member of council
at two universities.
One thing I noted in the Prime Minister’s speech was that
she signalled strongly that she will look for continued
collaboration with other European member states in the
field of science, research and innovation. It is the
clearest signal yet that the Government are willing to
continue to participate in EU structures and funding for
universities and research and to continue contributing to
funding them. Will the Minister clarify in his reply
whether that is an accurate reading of what the Prime
Minister said?
There are many fields in which it is simply impossible to
achieve the scale needed to push forward the frontiers of
knowledge within a single research group or even a single
country. The framework programmes, of which Horizon 2020 is
the current incarnation, have been hugely significant
initiatives that have provided a platform for multilateral
co-operation across Europe. Nearly half of British research
publications have an international co-author. Nearly half
the co-authors are European. Of the top 20 countries UK
researchers collaborate with most often, 13 are other
European countries—so it would undoubtedly be damaging to
UK research if it were cut off from mechanisms to support
this sort of joint work.
I started by saying that the negotiating position on
freedom of movement affects many other things, and that is
particularly true in this area. It is not at all clear that
the UK will be able to reach so-called associate country
status without accepting freedom of movement. Indeed, the
recent experience of Switzerland, which voted to restrict
the rights of Croatian nationals, was that the European
Commission acted swiftly to bar it from participation in
Horizon 2020. I understand from academics involved in
discussions with European partners in Germany, the
Netherlands, France and elsewhere that there is a strong
desire in many other countries to find a way through
this—but it will take political will on both sides.
Once Article 50 has been triggered, I would urge the
Government, and the Minister for Universities and Science
in particular, to pull out all the stops to engage with
other European education and science ministries to persuade
them to make common cause here, despite the political
pressures to the contrary. Would the Minister explain,
either in his response to this debate or afterwards, what
plans the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial
Strategy has to engage in this way? I would urge it to
involve universities in these discussions, in view of the
work that Universities UK and others have been doing in
Europe to build alliances on this issue.
Finally, the foremost issue for me, as for many others, is
access to talent. In setting out her position in relation
to freedom of movement and the free market, the Prime
Minister has caused deep concern about the basis on which
universities will be able to continue to attract the
talented staff and students on which we depend. I commend
the noble Lord, , who raised this
important issue again in debates on the Higher Education
and Research Bill yesterday. The House has spoken on this
topic many times. Will the Minister reassure the House
that, in crafting a new immigration relationship with
Europe, the Government will ensure that universities will
continue to be able to welcome academic staff and students
from Europe?
We have great universities. They are great because of the
people who teach and conduct research in them. They are
great because they can attract brilliant students—enough of
them to sustain a wide range of subjects. Cut off the flow
of talent and the quality of our universities will decline,
and we will all lose as a result.
12.37 pm
-
(CB)
My Lords, I want to focus on two specific groups of EU
citizens living in this country: teachers of modern foreign
languages in our schools and foreign-language assistants. I
declare interests as co-chair of the All-Party Group on
Modern Languages and vice-president of the Chartered
Institute of Linguists.
Thirty-five per cent of MFL teachers are non-UK EU
citizens, and the figure for language assistants is 82%.
Quite simply, unless they are guaranteed residency status
in the UK after Brexit, language teaching in our schools
will collapse. The UK alone is not producing enough
languages graduates to fill the teacher shortage, which is
already estimated at 3,500. These points are among those
made in a checklist on Brexit and languages published by
the all-party group which is intended to assist government
negotiators.
There are, of course, many reasons why learning other
languages is a good thing, but given the terms of this
debate, I will focus only on the economic benefits, and
that boils down to two factors: economic growth, and the
employability and mobility of our workforce. Research shows
that the language deficit is already costing the UK 3.5% of
GDP, or £48 billion every year. The CBI and the British
Chambers of Commerce have called for better language skills
among British graduates and college leavers in order to
boost export performance. They say that language
availability rather than market strategy is driving export
decisions. We are overdependent on Anglophone markets, and
83% of SMEs operate only in English when over half of them
say that language skills would help expand their business
opportunities and build export growth.
The employability of UK citizens in a post-Brexit world is
also a vital part of our economic well-being. Many
employers are forced to recruit from overseas if they need
language skills. The all-party group has heard detailed
testimony from many businesses and employers’ organisations
to this effect. It is no coincidence at all that
graduates—in all subjects, not just languages—who have
spent a year abroad on the Erasmus programme have an
unemployment rate 23% lower than others.
In summary, we need to reverse the decline in language
skills in the UK. A reasonable start has been made at GCSE
level, but A-levels are in sharp decline and the number of
languages graduates has fallen by 57% in 10 years. For the
sake of our economic health and competitiveness, we need to
do a lot better. I hope the Minister will agree that we
should not shoot ourselves in the foot by forcing out EU
nationals who are teaching languages in our schools. It is
not enough to say, as the Government are currently doing,
that residency status will be guaranteed only if
reciprocated for Britons abroad. That is self-defeating and
I ask the Minister if he will commit to reviewing and
improving the position in the long-term national economic
interest.
12.40 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, I add my thanks to the noble Baroness, Lady
Hayter of Kentish Town, for giving us a chance to debate
this matter today, but she will not be surprised to hear
that I do not intend to follow the line she pursued, nor
indeed the line of the noble Baroness who has just spoken.
I take this opportunity to urge my noble friend on the
Front Bench, who will play an influential part in the
negotiations that are about to begin, to take a really
tough line on the issue of the free movement of labour
because it is critical.
Before going into that in detail, let me make two points.
This is not a rant about immigrants or immigration. I
recognise that skilled immigration at a high level has been
an important part of our country’s dynamism and that it is
should continue at a limited level in the future. Secondly,
this is not about EU citizens who are resident in this
country. I recognise that they have come here on one basis
and we should honour it. Like my noble friend Lord
Hamilton, I fear that it can only be part of a negotiation
and that reciprocity is an essential part of that. The
Prime Minister has made our position clear and I am sure
that, with good will on both sides, we can achieve the
outcome we all desire.
My argument today is that for too long for British
industry, British commerce and British public services,
immigration has been the default option. It has been, as
the Migration Advisory Committee, the government body which
speaks on these matters has said, the “Get out of jail
free” card. That has had and is having a deleterious effect
on members of our settled population. When I talk about our
settled population, I mean irrespective of race, colour,
creed, religion and ethnic background. Of course, the
default makes perfect economic sense for employers. Why
take the trouble to train up a member of the settled
population when for the same money they can get a skilled
or perhaps overskilled individual from, say, eastern
Europe? It also makes perfect economic sense for the person
to accept the post because it may well pay three or four
times as much as is available in their home country.
Governments of all persuasions—indeed, the noble Lord,
, referred to this—say
that immigration increases GDP. If you increase your
population, you would expect to GDP to rise and it is
counterintuitive for it to be otherwise. What no one
focuses on, or focuses on insufficiently, is GDP per head
of population, and here the figures are much more nuanced.
The cross-party Select Committee of your Lordships’ House
looking into the economic impacts of immigration concluded:
“Both theory and the available empirical evidence indicate
that these effects are small, especially in the long run
when the economy fully adjusts to the increased supply of
labour”.
As a result of the widespread use of the default option,
there is a real danger that our settled population is
being, as commentators now say, “crowded out”. The noble
Baroness, Lady Kennedy of The Shaws, talked about the moral
option—this is a moral option which has to be faced as
well.
I simply cannot give the House examples of how this
crowding out is taking place and look at its impacts in a
speech of only three or four minutes, but I would like to
quote briefly from Dame Louise Casey’s report published
last month, The Casey Review: A Review into Opportunity and
Integration. It is a hard-hitting report in which she said:
“At the start of this review, I had thought that I knew
what some of the problems might be and what I might report
on. Discrimination and disadvantage feeding a sense of
grievance and unfairness, isolating communities from modern
British society and all it has to offer.
I did find this. Black boys still not getting jobs, white
working class kids on free school meals still doing badly
in our education system, Muslim girls getting good grades
at school but no decent employment opportunities; these
remain absolutely vital problems to tackle and get right to
improve our society”.
This is stirring up trouble for our society in the future.
One important, critical way to improve economic
opportunities for these people must be to resist and stop
the default option, the “Get out of jail free” card, of
recruitment from overseas.
That is why I urge my noble friend, as these negotiations
get under way, despite the pressures that will undoubtedly
be applied to him and the Government to relax the line, to
pursue a really firm line on this issue. It is difficult,
sensitive, emotive and frequently misinterpreted, but it is
essential that we get it right.
12.45 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I shall probably surprise the House by starting
my remarks on this subject by saying that I agree very much
with the noble Lord, Lord Forsyth. I strongly agree with
what he said about the time constraints imposed on us now.
I hope that in the months to come the Government, having
promised to give Parliament a full opportunity to debate
these important issues, will not do so in a way that
artificially constrains our debates into periods of two and
half hours, one and a half hours or what have you, so that
in practice it is impossible for anyone to develop a
coherent argument or make an intelligent contribution on
the subject.
This is a pressing matter. Personally I have always felt
that freedom of movement was a great ideal and an asset
that it was important to preserve for our people and for
future generations. In my view it has worked extremely
well; it is inconceivable that we would have had the growth
we enjoyed in the 10 years before the Lehman Brothers
collapse and the banking crisis if we had not had the
immigration we then enjoyed from other parts of the EU. I
think I was the first person to alert your Lordships’ House
a couple of years ago to a study done by the University
College London economics team showing that the contribution
made by eastern European immigrants in this country in the
form of national insurance and taxation was far greater, by
billions, than their consumption of public services or
receipt of any kind of benefits. In other words, every
taxpayer in this country was better off as a result of
eastern European immigration. That was not true of other
groups of immigrants to this country, but it was
particularly true of them.
On the whole, the experience has been a very happy one. Of
course, it is always possible to say that you can import
unskilled labour from any part of the world. That is
perfectly true but, if people were to come here in droves
from all sorts of places around the globe—from Chad,
Eritrea, Somalia, Afghanistan and other places where there
is enormous poverty and enormous need—we would find
ourselves integrating into this country people who in many
cases were almost certainly illiterate in their own
languages, coming from countries with traditions of
political and religious fanaticism and violence. That would
be a problem of a quite different order of magnitude from
the integration of people from eastern Europe, which on the
whole has been a very happy experience. I speak with some
experience locally in Lincolnshire. It has to be said that
the great advantage of having that kind of close
relationship with neighbouring countries and being in the
single market is that the freedom of movement principle is
reciprocal, which is not something we get through any such
deal with other countries around the world.
Something, however, must have gone badly wrong because the
Prime Minister and the Government, far from regarding
freedom of movement as an asset, an advantage and an
achievement, now seem to regard it as such an evil that in
order to escape from it, we should be prepared to pay the
enormous economic price of leaving the single market. I do
not think the Prime Minister has thought through properly
the costs, which will be enormous. Another debate will be
required to discuss the economic aspects of Brexit, and I
am sure we shall have those opportunities. Still, it is
quite terrifying that any responsible Government should
even be contemplating such a drastic move as leaving the
single market, threatening our position—certainly
undermining it—as the financial service capital of the EU.
All this in order to get out of freedom of movement.
I wonder what has gone wrong over the last few years. It
has been a matter of perception: people have been concerned
that there is no limit to the immigration that can result.
It is unfortunate that the last Prime Minister did not
succeed in negotiating some form of emergency brake; if he
had approached matters in a much more communautaire way, he
would have been much more successful in that negotiation. A
quite different issue has darkened the whole picture: the
sense that the whole common external frontier of the EU is
not secure. People see on the television pictures of people
coming in from Libya across the sea, from Turkey and from
Syria. The German Chancellor’s decision to invite 800,000
refugees from Syria to Germany enormously undermined
confidence in this country because there was a sense that
these people would arrive in Germany tomorrow and be here
the next day. That is of course complete nonsense—it is
hysteria—but it unfortunately played a critical and
negative part in the referendum campaign. Whether we are
part of it or not, the European Union will need to look
carefully at strengthening the external frontier and to
take serious measures, such as the Australians have had to
do, to prevent illegal immigration becoming a major social
problem.
I hope we have other opportunities to discuss this matter
in greater detail, because it really deserves it.
12.50 pm
-
(LD)
My Lords, I am grateful for the opportunity to speak in a
debate of such vital importance to the millions of European
citizens living and working in the UK and, consequently, to
the future of our public services and the performance of
our economy. The Motion makes specific reference only to EU
citizens in the UK but, like other noble Lords, including
the noble Baroness who moved the Motion, I hope we will not
forget the plight of British citizens who have made their
home elsewhere in the European Union.
The EU Justice Sub-Committee, on which I am privileged to
serve under the expert chairmanship of the noble Baroness,
Lady Kennedy, notes in its recently published report on
Brexit and acquired rights:
“The anxiety of EU nationals in the UK is matched by that
of UK nationals in other EU States—the evidence we received
of their distress is compelling”.
This is not some abstract debate about technicalities or
government processes. It is about very real fears and
uncertainties for millions of people who, in good faith and
reasonable expectation, have made their lives in EU
countries other than their own. It is about people who are
now afraid that they will no longer have healthcare cover
when they are sick or infirm, and will be forced to leave
the place that has become their home. It is about children
who are uncertain what their future holds: whether in a
year or two they may be uprooted from their schools, their
friends and all they have come to know.
It is about husbands and wives who are unsure whether they
will have the right to continue to live in the same country
because of obscure rules relating to comprehensive sickness
insurance. It is about people such as Jet Cooper, a Dutch
citizen resident in our country for 30 years and married to
a British citizen who is, sadly, seriously ill, who has
been told by our Immigration Minister that she may not be
eligible to remain in the country after Brexit. It is about
British pensioners living abroad in the European Union
fearing that their pensions will no longer be uprated after
Brexit. It is, above all, about millions of people who are
unable to get on with planning their lives and are afraid
for their futures because, through no fault of their own,
they have no idea of the rules which will govern them.
At the time of the referendum, leave campaigners
claimed—rather as the noble Lord, Lord Forsyth, did
today—that questions about the future status of EU citizens
were nothing more than scaremongering. The leave
campaigners claimed that EU citizens had nothing to fear
because their rights would be protected under the Vienna
Convention on the Law of Treaties. The anti-EU campaigner,
MP, said:
“Clearly any EU citizen that is legally here would
absolutely have the right to remain here. Any other
suggestion is just absurd. It is a scare story, full stop.
It just shows how desperate the government and the remain
campaign are”.
, the chair of Vote
Leave, similarly dismissed fears, claiming:
“You have got the Vienna convention, which guarantees the
rights of existing citizens and existing arrangements.”
, another Brexit Tory MP,
said:
“The entitlement to residency for existing expats after
Vote Leave would be unchanged and protected under the
Vienna Convention”.
Not for the only time in the campaign, the protagonists of
the leave campaign were pedalling falsehoods—or alternative
facts, as I believe they are now known. As the report of
the EU Justice Sub-Committee, drawing on expert and
undisputed legal evidence, states:
“In no sense, therefore, can this provision”,
of the Vienna convention,
“be said to safeguard individual rights under EU law that
will be lost as a consequence of the UK’s withdrawal”.
With the legal guarantees asserted by the leave campaign
proving, like so many of their claims and commitments, to
be a mirage, and in the absence of any certainty from the
Government, EU citizens in the UK and UK citizens in the EU
are left in limbo and beset by uncertainties. Millions of
lives are being blighted by distress and fear.
The truth is that very few senior members of the Government
seem to recognise the devastating impact of their failure
to act to address these uncertainties. Indeed, the Minister
for International Trade is so indifferent to this human
aspect that he referred to the status of EU citizens as our
“main cards” in negotiations. How shameful—how
scandalous—and what callous indifference it shows to the
impact on the lives of so many people. What a blot on the
reputation of this country.
12.55 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, I am glad to follow the noble Lord, , because I agree almost
entirely with what he said. As my noble friend on the Front
Bench knows only too well, I have made this point many
times in supplementaries, in questions in the EU Home
Affairs Sub-Committee and elsewhere. I have received many
letters as a result from people who have been in this
country for years and years, who have brought up their
children, paid their taxes and now feel threatened. My
noble friend may be
right in saying that they should not feel threatened, but
in fact they do. The speech made by the noble Baroness,
Lady Kennedy of The Shaws, illustrated that vividly—1,700
people gathering in a meeting in Oxford because of their
doubt and uncertainty.
The slogan of the leavers, “take back control”, echoes
around this Chamber, even though we cannot hear it at the
moment. We can take control now and, by a unilateral
decision—I never thought that I would refer to myself as a
unilateralist, but I do in this context—we can put the
minds of those people at rest without risking anything. We
can lead by example and say, before we go into the
negotiations, “Your position is secure—you are not
threatened”. We could take the moral high ground and the
moral imperative, and that is what we should do. I hope
that when my noble friend winds up, he will show a little
more sympathy with that position than he has hitherto. I
have great regard for him; he is handling these matters
with great distinction and aplomb, but I would like to have
a little movement on this matter.
We should not forget that it is less than 30 years since a
large number of our fellow citizens in the EU lived under
the Soviet yoke. They came into the European Union, and
many of them—Poland and the Baltic states in
particular—looked to this country as a leader and for an
example. I am sorry that the link through the EU is to be
severed, but it is; however, what does not need to be
severed is the feeling of obligation. My father served
throughout the Second World War in the Royal Air Force, and
he instructed a number of Poles, who fought with enormous
bravery. They flew from the airfields of Lincolnshire, and
many did not come back. At the end of the war, when the
Carpathian Lancers were disbanded in Lincolnshire, many
remained as residents. We have had more Poles recently, and
they contribute enormously to the local economy. They are
people who enrich our society.
If we are to begin negotiations by saying that we wish to
maintain and strengthen our friendship with the other 27
nations of the European Union, which I believe that we do
and must, it is very important, and would be a wonderful
opening gesture, to say, “Your position is not threatened;
you are part of us and, whatever may happen in future we
guarantee this now: those of you who have made your home
here and made your contribution here, this is your home and
this is where you can stay”.
12.59 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, there is a very strong consensus emerging in the
House; I find myself in total agreement with the last two
speakers, and I am very glad to follow what they said. I
also have the joy of serving on the EU Justice Committee,
chaired so well by my noble friend Lady Kennedy of The
Shaws. She will remember, as indeed will the noble Lord,
, that when we were taking
evidence from the French ambassador, there was a very
telling moment—a moment for real thought. She was asked
what she was encountering in the French community as a
response to what has happened. She said very clearly that
what is sad is that the people from France felt that they
were part of Britain, enjoyed being here and felt that they
were part of the community and belonged to it, but now they
felt that they are strangers. I think that this deserves a
great deal of thought. What are we doing to British
society?
In my education at school, let alone later in life, I
learned about the importance of citizenship, going right
back to the classic Roman and Greek times. Citizenship is
something very profound. When this country became part of
the Maastricht treaty, people in the European Union had
dual citizenship: European citizenship with all that went
with that, and citizenship of their own country.
Unilaterally, we have removed from our people living abroad
and from European citizens living here that status of dual
citizenship. They have lost the rights that they believed
they had inherited in the situation to which we had come as
a free party. I did not hear any evidence from what we
heard in our committee that there was any indication
whatever at the time that they became European citizens
that it was clear to people that it was a conditional
citizenship. We have removed their European citizenship.
I would be a much happier man if the message that was going
out from this House and Parliament as a whole was “thank
you” to the people who have come and contributed and
committed their lives to this country—thank you to those in
the health service; thank you to those in education, both
in schools and universities; thank you to those who have
contributed so well to commerce; thank you to those who
joined the community, participated and enriched the life of
our country by bringing different cultures with them. Thank
you—we are absolutely determined that we will preserve your
security and well-being into the future, whatever it takes.
All this business of turning them into pawns and nothing
more than a bargaining counter is totally unworthy of a
Britain worth living in.
1.03 pm
-
(CB)
My Lords, when the Government lost the case in the Supreme
Court, the reason that I thought it was a very good thing
for this country was that I believe it was wrong of the
Prime Minister and the Government to try to by-pass
Parliament in this matter. It is not that I want in any way
to delay implementing Article 50—the timing of Article 50,
by the way, is a huge negotiating tool and I do not think
it was right for the Prime Minister to say we would impose
it on a certain date; it is giving away a big part of the
negotiation—but, importantly, we are a parliamentary
democracy and this Parliament should be involved from day
1. This case has now established that we will be involved
from day 1, and the Prime Minister is already U-turning—a
White Paper; no White Paper; now we have a White Paper
coming and there will be more to come. I am really relieved
that this has happened.
We are talking about people—3 million people from the
European Union who are over here and working. And in spite
of the non-EU workers over here, we have the lowest level
of unemployment in our history and the highest level of
employment in our history. We need these people. We heard
up front from the noble Baroness, Lady Hayter, how the
National Health Service would not function without the
foreign workers that we have—160,000 are EU workers—and
about the care sector and hospitality industry. wants to build more
houses; 250,000 people from the European Union work in the
construction industry. You can go to a restaurant or a
hotel anywhere in the country—I was in Bristol
yesterday—and of course there are EU staff serving you and
working very hard. As the noble Lord, , said, instead of
being grateful for this, we are treating these people as
bargaining chips.
Can the Minister confirm how many EU citizens there are
here exactly and how many of them are here beyond five
years and eligible to stay under our permanent residency
rules? He cannot give us an answer, because we have removed
our exit checks from our borders. We have no control over
our borders. If we bring back visible exit checks and check
every EU person and non-EU person in and out, we will know
who is and who is not here. We will not make assumptions
that foreign students overstay, when only a small fraction
of them do. As the noble Baroness, Lady Warwick, said, our
universities are dependent on EU workers. Thirty per cent
of academics are foreign and 18% to 20% are from the EU.
What happens to all the EU students who might not come
because they were reliant on being treated like domestic
students and eligible for loans? It is 160,000 students—I
am the president of UKCISA and chancellor of the University
of Birmingham. We are jeopardising all this and it is
seriously dangerous. The Government need to get on and
control our borders.
I was with Professor Deepak Malhotra at the Harvard
Business School, who is an expert in negotiations. He said
that it is very likely that there will be a no-deal
scenario—this would be disastrous. His view is that if a
deal is going to happen, we need to be creative and we need
to be sensitive to the other side. Both sides will have to
make concessions. The EU is not trying to punish us. If we
look at it from its point of view, it is trying to preserve
the Union and keep it together. Smart negotiators know that
the goal is not to win but to achieve their objectives. We
need to have empathy for the other side.
What really worries me is the mindset of this Government
when it comes to immigration—all immigration. It is across
the country. This wretched referendum has created race and
hate crime that did not exist before. It has unleashed it.
It is sad that when the Prime Minister was Home Secretary,
she made statements that she wanted foreign students to
leave the day they graduated. The Chancellor of the day had
to say that it was not Conservative Party or government
policy. wanted companies to list
foreign workers. Immediately, there was an outcry in the
country. Then a Minister I have never heard of wanted
companies to pay £1,000 for every EU worker. This is
ridiculous. It shows the mindset of the Government—we have
to get out of this mindset. If we are going to get through
this negotiation, it must be in the best interests of this
country that we treat with gratitude the 3 million EU
workers who are here and who have benefited our country and
helped to make us the fifth—or sixth—largest economy in the
world.
1.08 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, I, too, thank my noble friend Lady Hayter for
tabling this debate today. It is an important aspect of the
consequences of the result of the June 2016 referendum.
Many of us are calling for caution and thorough scrutiny of
the Brexit process, but the subject of today’s debate needs
some speedy footwork if we are not to end up with large
swathes of the economy seriously short of labour and very
large numbers of EU nationals with their lives turned
upside down and no status in a country to which they have
committed many years.
Many EU nationals who have made this country their home
have wanted to regularise their situation by applying for
British citizenship. Since November 2015, a person with at
least 12 months’ permanent residence in the UK who wishes
to become a British citizen has to apply for a permanent
residence certificate or card. This takes us to the
notorious 85-page application form and the 18-page guidance
note that goes with it.
A young friend of mine is, by birth, Italian. She has lived
in this country for 23 years, is married to a British
citizen and has two children, both born here. She is a
well-educated and intelligent young woman but both she and
her lawyer have found the form extremely difficult to deal
with and, in parts, contradictory. Inconsistent and
contradictory advice has been received from the Home Office
on more than one occasion. Of course, applications for
citizenship should be thoroughly examined and the process
must be rigorous, but the requirement to provide paper
proof of utility bills paid, rental agreements et cetera
going back five years is not easily met and is nigh on
impossible for most applicants.
There is also much confusion regarding the need for those
who have had low earnings over the years to pay
comprehensive sickness insurance. This brings into play the
difference between the right to apply for citizenship via
the employment route as opposed to the self-sufficient
route. Such confusion would have to be faced by women who
have had time out of the labour market to bring up
children, for example. Therefore, the requirement to take
out CSI could be indirectly discriminatory.
There is a view that even if EU citizens are given the
right to stay, there will still be a requirement to
complete an application. If this does turn out to be the
case, more thought needs to be given to producing a form
which is less complicated and less burdensome on the
applicant. But supposing it is decided that EU citizens
will have to leave these shores. Could the Minister advise
the House of the Government’s view of the relationship
between the possible expulsion of EU citizens lawfully
resident in the UK on 23 June 2016, and their rights under
the European Convention on Human Rights?
What, though, of the other aspect of this debate—the loss
of thousands of people from the workforce? I seem to
remember the Treasury pointing out that immigration to this
country gave a net profit to the public coffers. My noble
friend eruditely set out
this argument in his earlier contribution. All that tax and
national insurance paid in far outweigh the costs involved
in immigrants being here. How would we balance the books if
that money were to be lost? It is not in the interests of
the country to allow this muddle to continue. It is not
fair on families, individuals and business, and is not
helpful to the country’s economy.
1.12 pm
-
(Ind SD)
My Lords, the rights of EU citizens already living in this
country are a matter of honour and it is wholly appropriate
that this House should direct its attention to that issue.
It is not only a matter of honour for people in this
country. We talk about Article 50, but Article 8 deals with
good neighbourly relations between member states.
Negotiation is an inaccurate word to describe our
proceedings on Article 50; rather, it is a discussion. If
this discussion is to produce what I call an amicable
divorce, it is essential that we are all aware that there
is more than Article 50, and that Article 8 should be one
of the touchstones of the negotiation.
I agree with the plea of the noble Lord, , in relation to
British citizens who have served the European Union in many
institutions. We urged them to go and work there—they were
part of our membership of the European Union. We have an
obligation to see that they are properly looked after in
terms of redundancy and other aspects, and that the cost is
borne by this country as it is our decision to leave. I
believe that is also an essential element.
I mention Article 50 very briefly. It is a trap and was
designed by two extremely clever people, one of whom I
believe is in this House, sitting below me. The other was a
former Prime Minister of Italy, Signor Amato. Both claim
credit for this and boast that it was designed specifically
never to be used. The more you look at it, the more
surprised you are that any Government have ever used it. I
have made it quite clear throughout that I do not believe
it is appropriate to use Article 50 and that it would be
much better to use the Vienna procedure for leaving a
treaty, which has been established over many decades.
Nevertheless, we are into Article 50. There is an absolute
necessity for the Government not to conduct their
negotiation against a cliff edge. There are various ways of
doing this and I have suggested some to them. However, at
the end of the day, you can certainly limit the negotiating
period not to two years but to a year or a little more so
that your people have some months at least in which to
prepare to leave the European Union. At the moment nothing
protects us from the cliff edge.
You can imagine circumstances in which you are negotiating
in good faith and perhaps the 27 other member states agree
with you. The matter then has to go to the European
Parliament, which is famous, particularly in the run-up to
elections, for delivering a bloody nose to member states to
prove its own virility. The matter also has to go through
the procedures of every single Parliament of the 27 member
states. Let us be clear about this: the article is designed
to damage a country that leaves. It is a disgraceful
article and should never have been put into the treaty. It
is one of the reasons many of us believe that the Treaty of
Lisbon should have been subject to a referendum, and
believe it was a disgrace that it was not. A lot of the
damage we have suffered since entering the European Union
has arisen due to the persistent view that people will not
respect one another’s rights or the rights of member
states. Article 50 does not respect the rights of member
states.
1.16 pm
-
(Con)
My Lords, I congratulate the noble Baroness on securing
this debate. I find it very difficult not to be emotional
on occasions such as this for the simple reason that my
mother was born in Denmark and lived in Copenhagen during
the German occupation. I have had many opportunities to
study and work in Denmark and Brussels and regret bitterly
that future generations will not have the same
opportunities.
I take this opportunity to congratulate my noble friend the
Minister on the interest he has taken in British citizens
who live elsewhere in Europe. I hope that he will put down
a marker that we owe a sense of duty to those whom we
encouraged to work in the British institutions, as the
noble Lord, , said, and to those
who, like myself, worked as EU lawyers in private practice.
A whole host of people are still studying with a view to
working and living elsewhere in the European Union. Others
have retired to the European Union or work there in private
practice as lawyers, dentists, doctors, bankers and others.
There is a willing and ready workforce in European
institutions who would be able to put their services to
good use in assisting the Government in the difficult
negotiations that we face.
I shall focus on the agriculture sector in Essex and
Suffolk, where I was an MEP, and in North Yorkshire, where
I served as an MP. At the last count, there were about
20,000 EU citizens working in this country in farming,
horticulture, forestry and fisheries. Apparently, it is
difficult to extrapolate the figures for farming alone. We
currently export something like 72% of our food and drink
produce to the European Union, so my question to the
Minister is: who will take the place of the EU citizens who
work in those industries, particularly farming and
horticulture? Are we going to revert to the six-month rule?
Will it be the case that someone can enter only if they
have a position—so will employers have to go to other EU
countries to recruit for whatever purpose—or will they
still be allowed to visit the UK for three to six months
and then have to leave? These are very real questions
which, as my noble friend will know, are exercising the
minds of those in the farming and growing industry at this
point.
It is the first duty of the Government to defend the
nation; it is the second duty of the Government to feed the
nation. I urge the Prime Minister and my noble friend and
his department to stick to their guns. Any negotiation must
be done on the basis of reciprocity. It breaks my heart to
see that we are giving up a single market of 505 million
consumers, with free movement of goods, services, capital
and people, for a potential free trade agreement with a
number of other countries.
Look at the United States. I was involved with opening up
liberalisation with the US carriers. The US continues to
stop any new carrier flying within it, yet I hope the Prime
Minister will take this very powerful message to President
Trump: we will open our markets if America will open its
markets. But I hope the Prime Minister will take this
opportunity to say that we do not want hormone-produced,
steroid-infested beef and chlorine-washed chicken in this
country, and that we will continue to eat the very best of
Yorkshire and British beef, produced to the highest
possible safety and welfare standards, and that the
Americans will take our beef in preference to their
inferior produce. It has to be done on a basis of
reciprocity for the simple reason that otherwise we will
cave in before we know what their bargaining terms are.
1.21 pm
-
(Lab)
My Lords, time is very short, so in thanking my noble
friend for enabling this debate, and having spoken last
week on the right to remain, at col. 346, I will follow the
example of the noble Lord, Lord Forsyth, and cut straight
to the Brexit chase.
I have always believed that referenda are bad politics. I
will go further: I believe their use to be an abrogation of
political leadership, made more dangerous by the
inexplicable decision to opt for fixed-term Parliaments. On
a number of occasions in your Lordships’ House, I have
stated my belief that we live in a far more fragile
democracy than we appear to appreciate, one in which the
introduction of an ill-informed and prejudiced referendum,
an increasing threat of deselection, and the catastrophic
loss of trust in public and private institutions have all
served to undermine the principles of strong representative
democracy.
Few politicians remain brave. In the end, more often than
not, calculation trumps principle. By way of example,
Stanley Baldwin told the House of Commons in 1933 that he
had been unable to pursue a sensible policy of rearmament
because of the strong pacifist sentiment in the country.
Two years later, in 1935, 11 million people went so far as
to sign the Peace Ballot, pledging support for the
reduction of armaments. Imagine if instead of a petition
there had been a referendum and 51% of the electorate had
voted against rearmament. They would have been avidly
supported by the Daily Mail, as well as very many members
of my own party. Would noble Lords have behaved
undemocratically if we had sought to reverse that
expression of public will based on what this House
sincerely believed to be growing and ever-more compelling
evidence of Hitler’s intentions?
Should Winston Churchill have been deselected by his local
party in Epping when early in 1938 he gave possibly his
bravest speech to a largely hostile House of Commons,
during which he said:
“I do not grudge our loyal, brave people … but they should
know the truth … they should know that we have sustained a
defeat without a war … they should know that we have passed
an awful milestone in our history, when the whole
equilibrium of Europe has been deranged … And do not
suppose that this is the end … This is only the first sip,
the first foretaste of a bitter cup”?—[Official Report,
Commons, 5/10/1938; col. 3723.]
I believe we have once again sustained a self-inflicted
defeat without a war. I am convinced that we have yet to
taste the first sip of what could follow.
Surely I cannot be alone in finding an anomaly in the fact
that according to the Daily Telegraph’s post-referendum
analysis, the vote split along age, class and educational
lines, with the future economic security of the elderly and
most vulnerable now largely dependent on those whose clear
wish was to remain in and share their future with Europe. I
cannot convince myself that this conforms to any kind of
sustainable outcome.
I have never been able to explain to my children why my
name was in the “Content” column when the vote was taken in
this House on the second Iraq War, in the absence of any
well-thought-through post-conflict plan. I sincerely
believed that the then Government had a fuller
understanding of what we were blundering into. I now know
myself to have been duped, foolish and wrong. I will not
make that same mistake twice.
Finally, it is my sincere belief that we are engaged upon a
hopelessly ill-thought-through misadventure. Irrespective
of what may emerge as the attitudes or tactics of my own
party, I will at every opportunity speak and vote against
what I consider to be the most self-destructive policy ever
to have been pursued in this country in my lifetime. The
torrent of disinformation directed against Europe for 20
years and more by Murdoch, Dacre and others has done its
worst, which is why the last word must be reserved for the
thoughtful consideration of the whole of this Parliament.
HG Wells memorably described civilisation as,
“a race between education and catastrophe”.
I can hope only that before it is too late we in Parliament
might find the courage and the perception of Winston
Churchill to finally bring this nation and its leaders to
their senses—on this issue and many others.
1.26 pm
-
(LD)
My Lords, this has been an excellent debate, which has
highlighted many issues that have been discussed over the
past seven months since the decision of 23 June, when the
United Kingdom, by a majority, voted to leave the European
Union. The debate has highlighted some serious differences,
even if we have heard some similarities of views on many
sides on one particular issue. The one area where I think
there is almost universal agreement is the importance of
securing the rights of EU nationals already resident in the
United Kingdom. That is something I shall come back to
repeatedly.
Two different aspects are listed in the Motion in the name
of the noble Baroness, Lady Hayter. It refers to the rights
of EU citizens already here, but one issue that has been
raised throughout the debate has been the rights of EU
nationals and UK nationals in terms of free movement of
people. That is about the future. In my remarks I will
suggest that there are three things we need to think about:
the rights of EU citizens who are already here; future free
movement issues, which are quite separate; and the future
needs of the UK economy. Those issues are all interrelated,
yet in this debate we have heard very little about the
future needs of the UK economy. Almost all the discussion
has been about the rights of EU citizens—perhaps not
surprisingly.
Before I get into those questions, the noble Lord, Lord
Forsyth, suggested that the may be muddled because
the Motion refers to the “potential” leaving of the single
market. Clearly, the Motion was tabled before the Prime
Minister outlined her objectives. She has made it clear
that Brexit means Brexit—whatever that means—and, more
clearly, as the noble Lord, Lord Forsyth, says, leave means
leave, and that on all sides during the referendum, that is
what we had been saying. I certainly did say in referendum
debates that leave means leave, but that meant: we will not
have the opportunity to rerun the question. It was not
something where we could say, “If we get the wrong answer,
let’s try again”. It was about saying, “This is not a
game”.
Leaving meant leaving the European Union—that decision was
clear. Far less clear at any point was what leaving
actually meant. The Labour and Liberal Democrat Front
Benches and the Cross Benches pressed the Government to
outline the alternatives to membership of the European
Union. They produced a rather pusillanimous document on the
alternatives to membership, which suggested a
Canadian-style relationship, the Turkish customs union or
the EEA model. If we had decided to go down the EEA route,
we would still have been in the single market, so it was
not inevitable that by voting to leave the European Union
we would leave the single market.
-
Throughout the whole of the referendum campaign, the noble
Baroness and her colleagues on the Liberal Democrat
Benches, as well as the Opposition Benches, argued that a
Norway or EEA model would be the worst of all worlds. They
said that we would end up in the single market without any
ability to change the rules. They described it as the worst
of all worlds but are now presenting it as the best of all
worlds.
-
My Lords, I will not at this stage get into the details of
the full Liberal Democrat policy on what we think should
happen in the negotiations generally. However, it is
important to recognise that there was no clarity from the
leave campaign over whether it thought being in the EEA was
the best or worst thing. At various times, supporters of
the leave campaign suggested that we could remain in the
single market. There was no clarity, the Government did not
have a plan B, and the leave campaigners kept saying, “It’s
not for us to say what leave will look like—it’s up to the
Government to decide”. Now is the time for that to be
discussed.
The Prime Minister has said that we will leave the single
market and has ruled out staying in, precisely because she
has now realised what the 27 other member states have been
suggesting for quite some time: we cannot be in the single
market and not have free movement of people. This is
essentially a binary choice. Here I touch on one aspect of
Liberal Democrat policy that is essential for this debate.
The Prime Minister is talking about wanting “the greatest
possible access” to the single market,
“through a new, comprehensive, bold and ambitious Free
Trade Agreement”.
However, surely the greatest possible access is via
continued membership of the single market. That is how we
get the best of the single market, not via access that does
not mean membership. That is why the Liberal Democrats have
been pressing for ongoing membership of the single market
and the benefits that it brings. It might be less good than
membership of the European Union, but it would bring
considerable benefits to the British economy and give
certainty over the rights of EU citizens. However, that
means the right of free movement of people, which clearly
the Brexiteers do not want. The context of the debate today
is clearly in line with the Prime Minister’s stated
objective of leaving the single market.
That leaves us with the question of what rights EU citizens
will have in the light of leaving the single market. We
have been told by many of those on the Government Benches
that there is an issue of reciprocity. There is also,
however, an issue of what it is right to do. One of the
things that Members from all sides of your Lordships’ House
have been saying for the last seven months is that the
rights of EU nationals already resident in the United
Kingdom should be guaranteed. There is no need for
reciprocity. That is something on which we can act
unilaterally, now. It is not about the future but about
citizens who are here, now. It is about EU nationals who
have exercised their rights as EU citizens, who are here
and who have not taken out British citizenship, because
they never thought they would have to. Some of them may
do—some may be able to. Others will not be able to afford
it and, as we heard from the noble Baroness, Lady Hayter,
and many others, the forms are complex and difficult and
many people do not have the appropriate paperwork. As EU
citizens, they never needed it. We need to guarantee the
rights of those people right now, so that we do not tear
apart our society and communities, as the right reverend
Prelate said. This is something on which the United Kingdom
can take the moral high ground, and we can make a decision
now. The Liberal Democrats call on the Government to secure
the rights of EU nationals resident in the United Kingdom.
The rights of UK nationals resident elsewhere in the
European Union are clearly also important. We have all
received emails from people who are concerned about their
pensions and about whether they will be able to stay in the
countries where they are. If we take the lead, however, we
can try to negotiate the rights of UK citizens resident
abroad. To use EU nationals currently here as pawns is
completely wrong.
The future rights of UK and EU nationals and free movement
is the subject of the future negotiations. I could ask
whether the Government will tell us what will be in the
negotiations, but I am sure I will get the answer that we
are not going to get a running commentary, as that will
damage the negotiations. I therefore would rather suggest a
set of things that perhaps the Government can consider in
future negotiations, about what sort of United Kingdom we
want to be and what sort of relationship we need with the
rest of Europe to secure our economic future. The NHS,
financial services, the agricultural sector, higher
education—people in all those areas have already expressed
concerns that if we lose the benefits of EU nationals who
are here, we will face problems. It is vital for the
British economy that we keep some sort of rights of free
movement of labour—free movement of people may not be there
if we are outside the European Union—which will be
beneficial to the UK economy. Surely the Government can
think about that when they lay out their negotiating hand.
In addition, please can we not have the imposition of visas
on EU nationals? To keep the economy open, it is vital that
we do not create barriers that we have not seen in the past
and will not benefit us in the future.
1.36 pm
-
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State, Department for
Exiting the European Union (Lord Bridges of Headley)
(Con)
My Lords, I thank all noble Lords who have contributed to
this excellent debate. I start by heeding the remarks of my
noble friend Lord Forsyth and the noble Lord, Lord Davies,
about the length of speaking time. I note that, and I will
have conversations. It is important that we give everyone
the opportunity to scrutinise these important matters as we
proceed in the weeks ahead.
I will put today’s debate in a little more context. Leaving
the European Union will, obviously, touch on every aspect
of our nation. As the great, late Lord Denning put it,
European law has been like “an incoming tide”. It has
flowed into the estuaries and up the rivers of our
communities, our businesses and our lives. Today, with
Brexit, we are seeking to do what no nation has done
before: to create a new relationship with an economic and
political entity whose regulations and laws we currently
observe and with whom we co-operate and collaborate on a
range of issues, from justice and home affairs through to
education, science and space.
As I have said and will continue to say, we are leaving the
European Union but we are not leaving Europe. It has always
been and will always be in our interests for Europe to be
stable and prosperous—a continent with which we can trade
freely and with whose nations we can collaborate and
co-operate where it is in our national interest. Given
this, it is entirely correct that we should look to forge a
unique relationship with the European Union: one that
befits a nation that is one of the largest economies in the
world, which has been an EU member for over 40 years, and
which has deep links, not just across Europe but around the
world.
This is why, as the Prime Minister set out last week, our
approach is to forge a new partnership with our European
neighbours, in which, as a sovereign, independent nation,
we have a new, comprehensive, bold and ambitious free trade
agreement with the European Union. This agreement should
allow for the freest possible trade in goods and services
between Britain and the EU’s member states. It should give
British companies the maximum freedom to trade with and
operate within European markets—and let European businesses
do the same in the UK.
On the noble Baroness’s Motion, I will say a little about
the word “impact”, which lies at its heart and which brings
me to what the noble Baroness, Lady Smith, said
passionately. In the referendum campaign, the debate was,
obviously, about the economy—about matters of pounds and
pence. However, it was also about something more profound,
which my noble friend Lord Forsyth mentioned. It was about
parliamentary sovereignty and national self-determination.
In a word, as my noble friend said, it was about
control.
After that debate and the referendum, the majority of
people voted to leave the EU, which is what we are now
going to do. That is why the Prime Minister has been clear
that the UK will no longer be a member of the single market
nor abide by the common external tariff or the common
commercial policy. As my noble friend Lord Forsyth
mentioned, we need to consider the impact of our not
following the course of action the Prime Minister set out.
Remaining a member of the single market would mean
accepting that the European Court of Justice still has
direct legal authority in our country, so the impact of not
leaving the single market would be, to all intents and
purposes, to keep the UK under the aegis of the EU. We
would not control our laws, nor our borders. We would not
be leaving the EU.
As to the point from the noble Lord, , his remarks were
very well judged in many respects, but I disagree with him.
We are not putting immigration control above free trade.
That is not the case. As I have been arguing, we want a new
partnership in which we enjoy free trade, and we wish to
control immigration. That is our ambition, and it will be
spelled out in the White Paper, which we are now committed
to publishing. I turn to what my noble friend Lord Hamilton
said: the White Paper will build on the 12 negotiating
objectives laid out in the Prime Minister’s speech to build
a global Britain with this strong new partnership with the
EU after our exit.
I am not going to go into further great detail now, but I
will say a couple of words about the White Paper’s
components to pick on what a number of your Lordships said
on specific issues. First, I know that the noble Baroness,
Lady Warwick, speaks with a lot of authority about higher
education. I can confirm that we will continue to look at
how we can continue to co-operate and collaborate with
European partners so we can build on our world-class
universities and our record in research and development. I
have been fortunate to meet a number of the representatives
of universities—I hope to continue to do so—to hear about
their needs. The noble Baroness might have mentioned that
there was some connection between Horizon 2020 and freedom
of movement. That is not my understanding. I do not think
it is correct to say that all models of co-operation
require the acceptance of freedom of movement.
We would also be willing to take the same approach on
co-operation for Erasmus and other schemes. Erasmus was
referred to by the noble Baroness, Lady Coussins, who has
great expertise on the teaching of foreign languages. On
that point, I entirely heed the points she made about the
need to continue to ensure that we are training our young
people to have the right skills in modern languages. That
is why we are increasing the amount we are spending on
training and the help we provide teachers in that area.
To briefly touch on financial services, which the noble
Lord, Lord Davies, touched on, the Government are obviously
incredibly conscious of the challenges faced by financial
services right across the sector. I am certainly not
complacent about the future, but I was heartened to read
that the chief executive of Barclays said within the last
few days that he thinks the UK,
“will continue to be the financial lungs for Europe”.
Likewise, the chief executive of HSBC said he thinks that,
“actually, London will remain a global financial centre”.
Finally, the German Finance Minister said:
“London as a financial centre will play an important role
for Europe even after Brexit”.
The Prime Minister was quite clear in her speech how we
will negotiate. The noble Lord, , made some very
interesting remarks about Article 50 and the process around
it, which I have noted. I will not add to what the Prime
Minister has said, other than to repeat that we expect to
get an agreement in two years. We look to negotiate our
exit agreement and the new relationship at the same time,
as set out in Article 50.
I will now focus on the position of EU nationals now and
after Brexit, which has been raised by a large number of
your Lordships. I start by thanking the right reverend
Prelate the for the contribution
that the Church of England has made and continues to make
in hosting events with church groups across the country. I
am extremely grateful for that. It has provided a welcome
forum in which to have a very wide-ranging discussion. I
also thank the noble Baroness, Lady Kennedy, for the
contribution that her committee makes and made in its
report.
On this point, of course I recognise the important role
that EU nationals make in a vast number of areas in our
society and to our economy. Obviously it has been the
Government’s approach and wish throughout to provide as
much certainty for them in the days and months following
Brexit as possible. That is why the Prime Minister in her
speech last week made protecting the status of this group
of EU citizens a top priority. It is also why we must move
to trigger Article 50 as soon as possible. I will spell out
why that is the case. The Prime Minister has made it clear
that she stands ready to reach an agreement right now.
Indeed, she has already told EU leaders that we could give
people the certainty they want straightaway—a point the
noble Lord, , might like to bear in
mind. However, we know that they are not open to any
negotiations before Article 50 is triggered. To provide
that certainty, I argue that we need to proceed, as the
Government intend, to trigger Article 50 by the end of
March. Then, we can proceed to seek an early agreement when
we have begun formal negotiations, while being very
mindful, as the noble Lord, , so rightly mentioned,
of Article 8.
Despite this strong signal from the Prime Minister, I
understand and have heard today that a number of your
Lordships and others wish us to make a unilateral move to
grant assurances now, ahead of the negotiations. The noble
Lords, , and , the noble Baroness, Lady
Kennedy, my noble friend and a number of
other people have made these points. I sense the strong
feeling there is on this issue.
I am sorry to disappoint your Lordships, but I am not here
to move the Government’s position. The Government disagree
with this point. We need to ensure that the rights of EU
nationals in this country are seen concurrently and
negotiated alongside protecting the rights of UK nationals
in the EU. I argue as some have done—the noble Lord,
, mentioned this—that there
are currently living in other EU member states more than 1
million UK nationals. I argue, as my noble friend Lady
McIntosh of Pickering picked up on, that we as a Government
have an obligation to them. They are UK citizens after all.
I add that there have been no changes to the rights and
status of EU nationals currently in the UK as a result of
the referendum. Until exit negotiations are concluded we
remain a full member of the European Union, and all the
rights and obligations of EU membership remain in force.
This includes the right, as transposed from the free
movement directive under EU law, for any EU national who
has been lawfully residing in the UK for more than five
years to automatically acquire permanent residence.
The noble Baroness, Lady Hayter, and the noble Lord,
, mentioned the
delays that EU citizens face. I am sorry to say I am not
going to comment on individual cases—I am sure your
Lordships would not expect me to—but the terms under which
an EU national can be considered as lawfully living in the
UK are set by EU law. Guidance is available for EU
nationals wishing to obtain a document to provide permanent
residence. To simplify and ease the process that the noble
Baroness, Lady Prosser, mentioned, the Home Office has
introduced a European passport checking service to avoid
the need for EU nationals to send in their passports.
The noble Lord, , asked about the rights
of individuals, in particular spouses. I cannot go into
detail on this point right now, but I will say that there
has been no change to the right of EU nationals to reside
in the UK, as I said, and therefore no change to the
circumstances in which someone could be removed from the
UK. EU nationals can be removed only if they are considered
to pose a genuine threat to the public or if they are not
lawfully resident, and, as he referred to, the Government
are obviously aware of Article 8, on the right to a private
and family life, and Article 1, on the right to property,
of the ECHR. I repeat that the Government have no plans to
withdraw from the ECHR.
I will now say a word about UK nationals in EU
institutions. I thank from the start my noble friends
and Lady McIntosh of
Pickering for their contributions on this issue and for the
time they have spent talking to me about it. The Government
are very seized of this issue: I have had conversations
with both officials here in London and those based in UKRep
about it. I will return to the fray in the light of what my
noble friend said about wishing to
signal this more strongly. If he feels that his message has
not got across to those UK nationals in EU institutions, I
will redouble my efforts.
UKRep is currently undertaking engagement—which I have
asked to be stepped up—with our British nationals out in EU
institutions, to ensure that their concerns are heard. On
top of that, we are recruiting the necessary expertise from
within the UK Civil Service as well as opening some
positions up to external recruitment.
As regards pensions, the rights and entitlements that will
apply following the UK’s exit are subject to the wider
negotiation on our future relationship with the EU. I can
assure your Lordships that at every step of these
negotiations we will ensure the best possible outcome.
Let me now turn to the future immigration system. I
entirely concur with the comments of the noble Lord,
, who made a very
powerful speech, and of the right reverend Prelate. We need
to be extremely sensitive with regard to both the language
that we use and the approach that we take. We are looking
to take control of immigration. That is sometimes
misunderstood or misread as meaning “ending immigration”.
This is absolutely not the case. As my ministerial
colleagues and I have said on many occasions, we still want
to attract to this country and retain the brightest and the
best of European talent and talent from right across the
world. I agree with what my noble friend said about the need
to make sure that we attract them to work not just in
financial services, but in creative industries—in which the
noble Lord, , is interested—biotech
and academe, upon which the right reverend Prelate
remarked. Meanwhile, as we look to create a new system, we
also should not do anything that would cause labour
shortages in other sectors such as construction,
agriculture and finance.
We are extremely conscious of these points and we are also
looking at means by which to improve the opportunities for
British people, which my noble friend Lord Hodgson
mentioned. The Government have set out how they intend to
do so in their industrial strategy earlier this week, which
furthers existing proposals, and therefore we are looking
at the vast panoply of measures and implications that
taking control of immigration involves.
As the Prime Minister set out in her speech last week, we
want to ensure that this country emerges from Brexit
stronger, fairer, more united and more outward-looking than
ever before. We will have further debates of this kind, and
it is absolutely right that we do so as the Government’s
thinking is set out before your Lordships and before the
country. I welcome the chance for your Lordships to
scrutinise that policy and I thank noble Lords for the
contributions that have been made today.
1.53 pm
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of Kentish Town
I join the Minister in thanking everybody for their
contributions today. He might not like the content of them
as much as I did: it was a very strong plea to recognise
the rights and expectations of those 3 million people
already living here. I regret that he was not able to make
any move on that.
The Minister might say that there is no change now, but two
years is a very short period, particularly for those with
children, making arrangements for their future. As has been
said, these are families: they should not, in the words of
my noble friend , be seen as pawns, or,
in the words of a Home Office Letter, as “negotiating
capital”. As the right reverend Prelate said, they are not
bargaining chips to be used: they are human beings, our
friends and colleagues. We urge the Government to make a
commitment not to use these people as a negotiating hand.
Indeed, as my noble friend said, it is not a
good technique: it is not a good tactic in negotiating to
start using human beings. It will not be looked at very
well by the other side, particularly as it was we who
opened this whole negotiation for change.
The right reverend Prelate the said that the manner
of how we leave will say something about us as a country,
but it will also be of wider international interest. As the
noble Lord, , said, it is a matter
of honour and of our future good relationships with our EU
neighbours. Therefore, while we recognise and welcome the
commitment to look after UK nationals living abroad, who
are also uncertain of their future, we hope that there will
be a grown-up approach to this and that we will recognise
the rights of people living here without saying that as
something that is a reciprocal tool to be played with. If,
as I am sure she is, the Prime Minister is such a good
negotiator, she will have other cards up her sleeve that
will enable us to get a good deal and other tricks to play
to ensure, without trading the rights of people living here
already, that UK nationals living abroad will also have
their future guaranteed.
The Minister quoted Lord Denning saying how EU laws have
flowed up the river into every part of our lives. The
Government might find, like the earlier Canute, that waters
do not withdraw quite as easily as they think. This very
short Bill that we have in our hands today is only the
start of the process: I hope that we do not make these EU
citizens wait the full two years to know what their future
is. In the very short term, I ask him to look at that form.
I reassure the noble Lord, , that my mother got
to a military hospital while his mother-in-law was coming
back to England, so I was actually born British. I do not
have to fill in the form, but lots of others do, so will
the Minister look at that and see whether the paperwork can
be simplified?
With that, I thank everyone for, I hope, the strong noises
that they have left ringing in the Minister’s ears. I beg
to move.
Motion agreed.
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