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James Cleverly to announce big hike in salary requirement for migrants – UK politics live | Politics

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James Cleverly to announce big hike in salary requirement for migrants – UK politics live | Politics


Cleverly to announce big hike in salary requirement for migrants as part of measures to cut immigration

James Cleverly, the home secretary, will unveil a package of measures intended to bring down net migration after figures hit a record high, PA Media reports. PA says:

He is expected to tell the Commons this afternoon that the minimum salary requirement for a skilled worker from overseas will be significantly hiked to around £38,000, a Whitehall official said.

The increase from £26,200 a year for migrants coming to Britain was said to feature in a wider package to be announced as Rishi Sunak comes under huge pressure.

The prime minister has vowed to “do what is necessary” to bring down net migration in the wake of an official estimate saying it had reached a record of 745,000 in 2022.

Key events

James Cleverly’s migration statement will now come before Oliver Dowden’s one on risk and resilience, not after as originally planned (see 12.29pm), we’ve been told. That means Clevelry will start around 4.15pm.

Reducing number of dependants foreign care workers can bring to UK will be ‘utter disaster’ for care sector, Unison leader says

Christina McAnea, the general secretary of Unison, which represents many workers in the care sector, has said that the tighter immigration rules being announced this afternoon will be an “utter disaster”. She made the point in an interview with Radio 4’s the World at One. Here are the key quotes.

  • McAnea said the new rules would be an “utter disaster” for the care sector because they would lead to more workers leaving, or failing to fill vacancies in the first place. Referring in particular to the plan to limit the number of dependants care workers can bring to the UK, she said:

Have they spoken to anyone in the sector about this? I suspect not.

This will be an utter disaster, because what they’re doing is basically sending a really strong message to those migrant workers who are propping up our care sector, and indeed in many cases the health sector, and saying: you’re not welcome here, because we don’t want you to bring your families here.

I think it is cruel. Remember, this is a predominantly female workforce. So we’re saying: ‘You’re allowed to come here, but you can’t bring any children, or a child, if you’ve got them.’ And to those who are already here, who do have dependants, when they come to renew their visa, presumably they will be told you have to send your children back again. What do you think is going to happen? I suspect most of them will leave.

  • She called for a major improvements in the way care workers are treated, including better pay. People were leaving because they could earn £2/3/4 an hour more working in a supermarket, she said. She said a national care service was needed.

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Here is Rajeev Syal’s story about what James Cleverly is set to announce.

Christina McAnea.
Christina McAnea. Photograph: James Manning/PA

Yesterday the Sunday Times splashed on a story saying that Rwanda would get at least £15m from the UK as part of a move to clinch the new treaty being signed between the two countries. Rishi Sunak believes that upgrading the deportation agreement into a full treaty will help to address some of the concerns that led to the supreme court saying the policy was unlawful.

At the Downing Street lobby briefing this morning the PM’s spokesperson played down the story, but without ruling out extra money going to Rwanda. Asked about the £15m figure, he said:

Certainly I don’t recognise that figure of £15m, there’s been no request for additional funding for the treaty made by Rwanda, or not offered by the UK government.

At the Commons home affairs committee last week Sir Matthew Rycroft, the permanent secretary at the Home Office, said the deportation deal did envisage further payments going to Rwanda every year, on top of the £140m already paid.

The government is expected to publish the new treaty, and also details of the legislation it wants to pass to enable Rwanda deportations to go ahead despite the supreme court ruling, later this week. The spokesperson would not say when, but he told journalists: “We are still working urgently on both the treaty and emergency legislation and we will set out more information in due course.”

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No 10 says immigration laws being tightened to tackle ‘abuse in system’

At the Downing Street lobby briefing this morning the PM’s spokesperson would not answer questions in detail about the immigration announcement, saying that James Cleverly would be setting out the plans in parliament later.

But the spokesperson said that net migration figures were too highly partly as a result of “abuse in the system” and that “that’s what we will clamp down on”.

He said, by abuse, he was referring to “changes that were introduced over successive years”. Asked if he was referring to the rules about the number of dependants that people with visas can bring to the UK, he replied: “That’s a specific area I think the home secretary will talk to.”

In its report last month which said that net migration reached a record 745,000 in the 12 months to the end of 2022, the Office for National Statistics said:

There have also been changes in the number of dependants coming to the UK; in YE [year ending] June 2019, dependants accounted for 6% of non-EU student immigration and 37% of non-EU work immigration, which increased to 25% and 48%, respectively in YE June 2023.

The Commons authorities have announced that there will be two statements in the chamber this afternoon, and an urgent question. The schedule means James Cleverly won’t deliver his migration statement until around 5.15pm, or possibly later. Here are the estimated timings.

3.30pm: Urgent question from Lisa Nandy, the shadow development minister, on Gaza.

Around 4.15pm: Oliver Dowden, the deputy PM, makes the government’s annual statement on risk and resilience.

Around 5.15pm: Cleverly makes a statement on legal migration.

Cleverly to announce big hike in salary requirement for migrants as part of measures to cut immigration

James Cleverly, the home secretary, will unveil a package of measures intended to bring down net migration after figures hit a record high, PA Media reports. PA says:

He is expected to tell the Commons this afternoon that the minimum salary requirement for a skilled worker from overseas will be significantly hiked to around £38,000, a Whitehall official said.

The increase from £26,200 a year for migrants coming to Britain was said to feature in a wider package to be announced as Rishi Sunak comes under huge pressure.

The prime minister has vowed to “do what is necessary” to bring down net migration in the wake of an official estimate saying it had reached a record of 745,000 in 2022.

Here are tweets from two experts sceptical of the JL Partners polling highlighted earlier (see 10.19am) about how Reform UK is eating into the Conservative party vote.

From Keiran Pedley, a pollster at Ipsos

Reform UK by election performance 2019-23 parliament

Average performance
2023: 3.65%
2022: 2.18%
2021: 2.58% (inc. 6.6% where Richard Tice stood in Bexley & Sidcup)

Obviously ‘where’ by elections are is important.

But they’ve broken 5% twice this parliament. Food for… pic.twitter.com/Ly6FhQHxlX

— Keiran Pedley (@keiranpedley) December 4, 2023

From the FT’s Stephen Bush

That isn’t the biggest reason to be highly sceptical of this JL Partners’ study: that’s (completely unexplained) decision to exclude at least five regular UK pollsters, including one (Ipsos) which has the lowest Reform score, but it is one reason: https://t.co/ztt8RZH99F

— Stephen Bush (@stephenkb) December 4, 2023

Hunt rejects claim UK economy suffering from ‘broken leg’, saying it’s more of sprained ankle

During his Q&A at the Resolution Foundation conference, it was put to Jeremy Hunt, the chancellor, that the Resolution Foundation report showed economy was suffering the equivalent of a “broken leg”. He said he did not accept that description. It was more of a sprained ankle, he said:

Sometimes we forget that other countries also have the things that they need to improve.

I think we shouldn’t lose confidence that we do some things absolutely amazingly. I know he’s controversial in other ways but when Elon Musk was here three weeks ago, he said there were only two centres in the world for AI, San Francisco and London.

We’ve got a lot going for us, so if we’re going to go into dealing with the sprain, rather than the broken leg, then let’s do so from a perspective of positivity.

Robert Booth

Robert Booth

MPs have launched an inquiry into the state of children’s social care in England amid growing warnings children are suffering from a lack of foster carers, and that private companies are profiting from the taxpayer by charging up to £63,000 a week for single social care placements.

The House of Commons education select committee launched the inquiry with figures showing the number of children supported by social services is up 30% since 2010 and the number of care leavers facing homelessness is on the rise.

The committee chair, Robin Walker, said the MPs would ask “whether the government needs to go further and faster” with changes to how the country’s most vulnerable children are cared for.

Last week, the Guardian reported a warning from councils that they are being “held to ransom” by private care providers, as it emerged the taxpayer has been paying as much as £3.3m a year for single children’s social care placements. The Department for Education has identified “looked-after children market failure” as a key risk.

And today, child protection experts called for an urgent nationwide hunt for thousands of new foster carers after a net loss of 1,000 families in the past year and a record number of children being placed far from home.

The inquiry will get under way in earnest in 2024 and evidence can be submitted until 15 January.

This is what Jack Elsom and Ryan Sabey say in their Sun story about the announcement that is coming this afternoon on measures to cut immigration.

The PM is expected to dramatically hike the salary requirement for overseas workers to £38,000 alongside further limits on them bringing family.

He has been under enormous pressure to get tough after figures showed 745,000 came to Britain last year …

The current minimum salary for foreign workers is just above £26,000.

And this is what Charles Hyman and Ben Riley-Smith report in their Telegraph story.

It is understood that the number of dependants that social care workers are allowed to bring into Britain will also be scaled back.

Home Office figures showed that visas granted to foreign health and social care workers more than doubled to 143,990 in the year to September. Those migrants brought in a total of 173,896 dependants.

The total number of NHS and social care visas may also be limited, as proposed by Mr Jenrick under a five-point plan to reduce net migration.

The fifth proposal is expected to increase the minimum £18,600 income required for a British citizen to bring a spouse or dependant into the UK on a family visa.

There will also be an overhaul of the shortage occupation list, under which companies can pay foreign workers in shortage areas 20 per cent below the going rate.

Sources said it would be “widely scrubbed” with a high bar set for any exceptions. There had been concerns that ending the exemption for care workers could worsen severe shortages in the care sector.

These proposals are largely in line with measures that Robert Jenrick, the immigration minister, has reportedly been pushing No 10 to adopt. But Jenrick reportedly favoured raising the minimum salary threshold for a work visa to £35,000. Suella Braverman, the former home secretary, and Boris Johnson, the former PM, have both been pushing for £40,000 to be the minimum salary threshold.

Sunak to announce major package of measures to cut immigration later today

Rishi Sunak is going to announce plans to cut immigration today, it is being reported.

The Sun says he will announce that the salary threshold for people wanting to got a work visa to come to the UK will rise to £38,000. The Daily Telegraph is reporting something similar, quoting a Whitehall source as saying: “People will be surprised at how strong a package it is.” This is from the Telegraph’s Ben Riley-Smith.

🚨EXCLUSIVE

Major package of policies to reduce net migration being unveiled *today*

– Big rise in minimum salary threshold for skilled worker visas

– Scaling back of health+social care visas

– Overhaul of shortage occupation list

With @charleshymas https://t.co/fJogFgKWZO

— Ben Riley-Smith (@benrileysmith) December 4, 2023

It has been confirmed to the Guardian that the announcement is coming later today.

Q: Why do you think the UK still has a productivity problem when it is good at innovation?

Hunt says productivity is driven by a combination of human capital, businesss investment, regional factors, and “total factor producivity”, which includes the ability to innovate.

The UK has been good on the latter, he says. It has been less good at investment. And, on human capital, it has been good at university-level skills, but not so good at vocational skills, he says.

Q: What will you do to support people in debt?

Hunt says he has promoted the mortgage charter to help people struggling to pay their mortgage.

Minton Beddoes is now taking questions from people in the audience.

Q: Are you worried about the impact of spending cuts on the creative industries?

Hunt says he sees the creative industries as an area of national advantage.

He says there has been an increase in film-making in the UK. The film industry is an offshoot of the technology industry, because special effects are so important.

And he says public service broadcasting is central to what makes the UK attractive.

Q: How can you claim to be the party of planning reform when your MPs keep blocking planning reform measures?

Hunt says all parties have to manage their MPs.

But he claims that, for the last year for which full figures are available, housebuilding numbers were higher than under Labour.

Hunt claims UK has potential to become ‘most prosperous 21st century economy’ because of innovation record

Jeremy Hunt said the UK could be the “most prosperous” economy this century because of its “untapped potential”.

Speaking at the Resolution Foundation conference, he said the industrial sectors that would grow the fastest were the ones “where we are doing really well”. He said:

If I was going to choose one country in the world that had the most untapped potential to become the most prosperous 21st century economy, it would be Britain.

UPDATE: Hunt said:

If I was going to choose one country in the world that had the most untapped potential to become the most prosperous 21st century economy, it would be Britain.

And why is that? … Most of all because the sectors that are going to grow the fastest this century are the sectors where we are doing really well. Technology is the obvious one. We have a technology sector that’s double the size of Germany, three times the size of France.

If you ask why it is that we’ve grown faster than Germany since 2010, despite their higher productivity, it is because we are actually stronger in innovation. So if we could solve the productivity bit, there would be no stopping us.

And the reason I think that is an omission [from the Resolution Foundation’s report] is because, you spend a lot of time rightly talking about our strength in the service sectors, if you’ve done an equivalent report in the 1980s and not mentioned Big Bang in the City of London, which has gone on to be an area of global leadership for the UK, you’d be ignoring the sector that whose taxes now fund half the cost of the NHS.

So I think you have to think about technology, AI, life sciences, clean energy, creative industries, because those are the sectors that are going to be really important for us going forward.

Jeremy Hunt speaking at the Resolution Foundation conference
Jeremy Hunt speaking at the Resolution Foundation conference Photograph: Maja Smiejkowska/PA

Q: Ministers keep changing posts very often. Do you accept that volatility is a problem?

Hunt says that volatility is not a good thing, but he says it was a consequence of Brexit and the parliamentary problems that followed that.

He says he wants to see more stability going forward.

Q: What about institutional reform. The Economist recently published an article saying it was too short-termist.

Hunt says he normally agrees with the Economist, but he suggests he did not agree with that article. He says the argument might be right historically. But he says since he has been at the Treasury he has found it very pro-growth.





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