Starmer says today’s ONS figures show Tories were running an ‘open borders experiment’ by design
Keir Starmer says the figures from the ONS today show the last government were running “an open borders experiment”.
He makes the point, made by a Labour spokesperson earlier (see 11.25am), about how the figures show net migration going up four times under the Tories.
This wasn’t just bad luck, he says.
He claims this happened by design. It was an experiment to turn Britain into a country with open borders.
And now the Tories want to wave this away with a simple “we got it wrong”.
That is unforgiveable, he says.
Key events
-
What Starmer said as he claimed Tories running ‘open borders experiment’ after Brexit
-
Starmer defends deal handing over sovereignty of Chagos Islands, and refuses to say if Farage right about Trump hating it
-
Starmer says he wants to see net migration fall ‘significantly’
-
Starmer says rise in net migration under Tories ‘off the scale’
-
Starmer says government will soon publish white paper with plan to cut net migration
-
Starmer says today’s ONS figures show Tories were running an ‘open borders experiment’ by design
-
Scottish government says it will restore winter fuel payments for all pensioners next year
-
UK signs deal with Iraq to tackle people smugglers in Europe
-
Keir Starmer holds press conference
-
More than half of applications for pension credit since winter fuel payments cut announced have been refused, DWP says
-
Unite union launches legal bid to try to overturn government’s decision to cut winter fuel payments
-
Starmer condemns Russia’s attack on Ukraine’s energy grid as ‘depraved’ in call with Zelenskyy
-
‘People-first’ transport in English towns could be integrated by apps
-
Tory visa changes may not reduce migration below pre-Brexit levels, experts say
-
Home Office announces plans to toughen sanctions applied to firms breaking visa rules for foreign workers
-
Farage says Reform UK will have to win ‘hundreds’ of seats in local elections to be credible
-
Former Tory MP Andrea Jenkyns has joined Reform UK, Farage says
-
Farage says today’s ONS figures ‘horrendous’, and claims Tory migration policies made people poorer
-
Reform UK says it now has more than 100,000 members
-
Labour says today’s figures show net migration quadrupled in 4 years under Tories
-
Number of cases in asylum backlog down 22%, says Home Office, but at 97,000 still higher than before 2022
-
Net migration in year ending June 2023 hit record high of 906,000, says ONS, as it revises up past figures
-
ONS revises up its estimate for net migration in year ending June 2023 by 166,000
-
Net migration down 20% in year ending June 2024, but still 728,000, ONS says
-
Use robots instead of hiring low-paid migrants, says shadow home secretary Chris Philp
-
David Cameron supports assisted dying bill due to ‘extremely strong’ safeguards
-
Tories say a drop in net migration figures would be due to their visa changes
What Starmer said as he claimed Tories running ‘open borders experiment’ after Brexit
Here is the passage from Keir Starmer’s opening statement where he accused the Conservatives of running an “open borders experiment”. He said
When we came into office – we immediately conducted an audit of public finances and we found a £22bn black hole.
Now – the independent Office of National Statistics has conducted vital work on the state of immigration and found the previous government were running an open borders experiment.
As the ONS sets out, nearly one million people came to Britain in the year ending June 2023. That is four times the migration levels compared with 2019.
Time and again – the Conservative party promised they would get those numbers down. Time and again – they failed.
And now the chorus of excuses has begun. We heard that from the leader of the opposition, yesterday.
But what we didn’t hear what the British people are owed is an explanation.
Because a failure on this scale isn’t just bad luck it isn’t a global trend or taking your eye off the ball.
No – this a different order of failure. This happened by design, not accident.
Policies were reformed deliberately to liberalise immigration.
Brexit was used for that purpose to turn Britain into a one-nation experiment in open borders.
Global Britain – remember that slogan. That is what they meant. A policy with no support and which they then pretended wasn’t happening.
And now they want to wave it away with a simple “we got it wrong”.
Well that’s unforgivable. And mark my words – this government will turn the page.
Q: The ONS had to revise its past net migration figures. Do you think we need a rethink of how these figures are calculated if they are so wide of the mark?
Starmer says the problem with these figures does not lie with the ONS. What is shocking is not the revisions, but the actualy figures. He goes on:
You have to double take when you see an increase of 184,000, to 906,000 in four years.
If we think about the previous decade or more, in terms of the sorts of numbers we were talking about, what’s shocking is not the way the figures are arrived at. This is one of those occasions, a bit like the £22bn [the black hole Labour claims to have discoverd in government accounts for this year], a bit like the prisons are over full, where the shock through the system is the sheer size of the number, and the loss of control under the last government.
And that was the end.
I will post a summary soon.
Starmer defends deal handing over sovereignty of Chagos Islands, and refuses to say if Farage right about Trump hating it
Q: Nigel Farage says Donald Trump hates the deal transferring sovereignty of the Chagos Islands to Mauritius. Is he right?
Starmer says the Chagos Islands deal is a good one. He says the government is taking it forward.
Q: [From the Sun] Are you sympathetic to the argument that immigration is bad not for economic reasons, but for cultural reasons?
Starmer says he has talked about the economic impact. He says Britain should be training people to do the right jobs. The government should have a skills strategy.
(That was not what the questioner was really getting at.)
Q: Of the £5.4bn spent on asylum, how much has been spent on hotels. And can you get the spending down to zero next year?
Starmer says he wants to bring costs down, and hotel use down. He says one problem was that claims were not being processed. Now they are being. There has been “a significant redeployment of staff”, he says. And more flights have left taking people back.
Starmer repeats his point about immigration being far too high. But he says he won’t set a target for reductions.
Starmer says he wants to see net migration fall ‘significantly’
Q: Will you set a target for reducing immigration?
Starmer says:
I want to see immigration come down significantly. I said that before the election, I said that during the election, I say it again here today.
That means bearing down on the influences that have driven it up this high with the measures that I set out a moment ago. We had a supposed cap in place for the best part of a decade, and it didn’t have any meaningful impact on reducing immigration.
So I don’t think setting an arbitrary cap, which is what previous governments have done, is the way forward. But do I want it to significantly reduce? Yes, I do, and that’s what our plan will achieve.
Q: Have you changed your view on assisted dying?
Starmer says it is a genuinely free vote. He does not want to put pressure on MPs. He has got a huge amount of experience on this. As DPP, he looked at every case for five years. He will vote tomorrow, he says.
Starmer says rise in net migration under Tories ‘off the scale’
Starmer is now taking questions.
Q: [From Beth Rigby from Sky News] People feel let down by their politicians. What does bringing net migration down. Are you talking about the low hundred thousands? And how does that square with your need for economic growth?
Starmer says people were let down. This kind of increase was unprecedented. The rise in immigration was “off the scale”.
He says it will take “hard graft” to get it down.
He wants immigration to come down “significantly”, he says.
But he repeats the point about the four-fold increase not being “bad luck”, but “their policy”.
He says what they have discovered today is another “legacy failure”.
UPDATE: Starmer said:
When you say people have been let down, you are absolutely right because they were promised by the last government that we would get control of our borders and we had a government that completely lost control of our borders.
This sort of increase is unprecedented. It is off the scale what has happened in four short years. The way to get it down is the hard graft, not the gimmicks but the hard graft of driving it own on the skills agenda, migration advisory committee, making sure we are cracking down on employers that are breaking the rules.
Starmer mentions the deal with Iraq – briefed to journalists earlier, but embargoed until 3pm. (See 3.09pm.)
He says he has a message for the public.
Where the last government failed you, this one will not. They drove immigration numbers up. We will get them down. They left the NHS flat on its face. We will get it standing tall again. They [made you] poorer. We will put more money in your pockets.
It won’t be quick or easy, but we are going to turn things around, not with gimmicks, but with graft – a government that will not rest until the foundations are fixed, borders are secure, and Britain is rebuilt.
Starmer says government will soon publish white paper with plan to cut net migration
Starmer says the government will soon publish a white paper on plans to reduce immigration.
The Migration Advisory Committee is already conducting a review, he says.
And, in areas where employers are over-reliant on foreign workers, the government will crack down.
He says the UK will no longer be a soft touch. Employers who do not cooperate will be banned from hiring foreign labour.
UPDATE: Starmer said:
We will publish a white paper imminently, which sets out a plan to reduce immigration.
The Migration Advisory Committee is already conducting a review and where we find clear evidence of sectors that are overreliant on immigration, we will reform the points-based system and make sure that applications for the relevant visa routes, whether it’s the skilled worker route or the shortage occupation list, will now come with new expectations on training people here in our country.
We will also crack down on any abuse of the visa routes.
For far too long, we’ve been casual about malpractice in our labour market, which sends a clear signal overseas that we’re a soft touch.
Well, no more – our rules will be enforced.
Any employers who refuse to play ball, they’ll be banned from hiring overseas labour.
Starmer says today’s ONS figures show Tories were running an ‘open borders experiment’ by design
Keir Starmer says the figures from the ONS today show the last government were running “an open borders experiment”.
He makes the point, made by a Labour spokesperson earlier (see 11.25am), about how the figures show net migration going up four times under the Tories.
This wasn’t just bad luck, he says.
He claims this happened by design. It was an experiment to turn Britain into a country with open borders.
And now the Tories want to wave this away with a simple “we got it wrong”.
That is unforgiveable, he says.
Scottish government says it will restore winter fuel payments for all pensioners next year
Every pensioner in Scotland will receive a winter heating payment next year, the Scottish government has announced. PA Media says:
Ministers were forced to delay plans to bring in the devolved pension age winter heating payment this year when the universality of its UK-wide counterpart was cut.
This afternoon social justice secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville announced the Scottish government will ensure every pensioner receives a payment next year.
Under the plans, those in receipt of pension credit or other benefits and who have received a £200 or £300 payment this year will get the same next year through the devolved scheme.
All other pensioners will receive a reduced payment of £100.
As well as widening the eligibility of the payment, Somerville also announced a further £20m for the Scottish Welfare Fund and the same amount for Warmer Homes Scotland in this financial year.
The Scottish government, she said, has been forced to “mitigate” decisions made by the UK government, adding: “There has been change, but that change is that we are now mitigating against a Labour government and not a Tory one.
“We have not taken this decision lightly, given the significant pressures on the Scottish government’s budget, but this Scottish government is determined to stay true to our values.
“On our watch, we will treat people in this country with fairness, dignity and respect.
“We will not abandon older people this winter, or indeed any winter, and we will continue to protect our pensioners from the harsh reality of a UK Labour government.”
UK signs deal with Iraq to tackle people smugglers in Europe
Keir Starmer’s government has signed a deal with Iraq to tackle people smugglers across Europe, Rajeev Syal reports.