Net Migration Miriam Cates (Penistone and Stocksbridge) (Con) 1.
What recent progress his Department has made on reducing net
migration. (902316) The Secretary of State for the Home Department
(James Cleverly) I put on record my condolences for your loss, Mr
Speaker. The Government have implemented a number of measures to
reduce net migration. Those include restricting overseas students
from bringing family dependants to the UK while they study,
stopping...Request free trial
Net Migration
(Penistone and Stocksbridge)
(Con)
1. What recent progress his Department has made on reducing net
migration. (902316)
The Secretary of State for the Home Department ()
I put on record my condolences for your loss, Mr Speaker.
The Government have implemented a number of measures to reduce
net migration. Those include restricting overseas students from
bringing family dependants to the UK while they study, stopping
overseas care workers from bringing family dependants, increasing
the salary threshold for skilled worker visas—ultimately to
£38,700—and increasing the minimum income requirements for family
visas. We recognise that levels of migration have been too high
and, upon my appointment, I immediately took action to bring
those figures down.
Miriam Cates
I thank my right hon. Friend for his answer, but one of the main
drivers of immigration over the past 20 years or so has been
labour shortages caused by falling birth rates. According to
projections by Philip Pilkington and Paul Morland, if birth rates
do not increase, immigration will have to rise to over a third of
the population over the next 50 years if we are going to maintain
a sufficient working-age population. Immigration on this scale
has no democratic consent and obviously my right hon. Friend has
promised repeatedly to reduce net migration, so what discussions
has he had with colleagues in the Treasury about this issue? Does
he agree that the Government must have a strategy to address
falling birth rates, to ensure that we do not always have to rely
on ever-increasing rates of immigration?
James Cleverly
My hon. Friend makes an important point. Birth rates are driven
by myriad social and economic factors, which I have to concede
are beyond my control, but I have spoken with my right hon.
Friend the Chancellor of the Exchequer about related issues and
recognise that GDP per capita is an important metric, as is
overall GDP. We are ensuring that we invest in a British
workforce: my right hon. Friend the Education Secretary is
passionate about apprenticeships and lifelong learning. We want
to be a high-skilled, high-income economy, rather than a
low-skilled, mass-migration economy. That remains the
Government's priority, and we are taking action through our
immigration policy to reflect that desire.
Andy Slaughter (Hammersmith) (Lab)
Trhas Teklehaimanot Tesfay is one of the elite female cyclists
chosen to lead RideLondon next month. She is also an asylum
seeker, living in a hotel in my constituency where the food is so
bad it makes her sick and unable to compete. Last month, an
investigation by Sustain found food for asylum seekers that was
undercooked, past its sell-by date and infested with insects,
which in some cases left them malnourished and hospitalised.
Could the Secretary of State investigate this scandal and the
responsibility of the contractor Clearsprings, so that asylum
seekers such as Trhas are not subject to such dangerous and
degrading conditions?
James Cleverly
Mr Speaker, I can assure you, the hon. Gentleman and the House
that our contractors are expected to maintain standards and,
where they fall below those standards, they will be held to
account. I will absolutely take note of the case that the hon.
Gentleman has raised.
Kelly Tolhurst (Rochester and Strood) (Con)
I welcome the measures my right hon. Friend has taken to tackle
the levels of legal migration, but could he inform me what
assessment he has made of the expected impact of the new
immigration salary list and what impact that will have on the net
migration figure?
James Cleverly
My hon. Friend is at the frontline of our fight against illegal
migration, but legal migration is important. We have recognised
that, for a number of reasons, the figures have been too high in
the most recent couple of years and I have listed measures we
have taken. The combined impact of that is that, by our
estimations, under the new regime that I have put in place,
300,000 people who would previously have been eligible will no
longer be eligible. That is the order of magnitude of change that
we will eventually see once these proposals are fully
implemented.
Tim Farron (Westmorland and Lonsdale) (LD)
The refusal to allow care workers from overseas to bring a spouse
with them comes at the same time as, in Cumbria, we are finding
it impossible to fill at least a fifth of all the social care
jobs. Would the Home Secretary explain to constituents of mine
who are unable to find people to care for them and their loved
ones why it seems sensible to make the lives of people from
overseas so miserable in coming over here to care for our loved
ones that they do not come at all?
James Cleverly
I recognise that, in rural communities, recruitment and retention
of staff is difficult and in the hon. Member's constituency—a
wonderful, beautiful, but very rural constituency—there are
particular pressures. I can assure him that the global supply of
potential care workers is very significant. Actually, the issues
about where in the country those people work are more about the
internal dynamic within the UK economy than the quantum of people
around the world who would seek to work in the UK. There are
plenty of people who would wish to work here, recognising that
they are not allowed to bring their dependants with them, but the
issue of where in the country those people work is actually a
broader issue.
Mr Speaker
I call the SNP spokesperson.
The cruel Conservative hikes to the visa minimum income threshold
have caused deep distress—deep, deep distress—to many. Does the
Home Secretary understand the pain that these changes have
caused, and what message does he believe it sends out to those
who would do us the honour of making their home in these islands
that he puts such a high price on love and family life?
James Cleverly
It is absolutely right that any nation in the world puts
conditionality on the people it accepts within its own borders.
This country has a long-standing tradition—in fact, I am a
product of this, as are the Prime Minister, the Business and
Trade Secretary and many others in the Government—of being open
and welcoming. However, when we see the orders of magnitude of
legal migration that we have seen over the last couple of years,
it is incumbent on us to take action. We have made it clear what
action we will take, and we have given notice of the changes so
that people can make their plans accordingly. When there are
special cases, there is a special cases exemption, so that we can
both control immigration and do our moral duty to protect those
people who seek our protection, and be an attractive place for
people to come and work.
Safer Streets Fund
Kim Johnson (Liverpool, Riverside) (Lab)
2. What recent assessment he has made of the adequacy of the
level of funding allocated to the safer streets fund.(902317)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home
Department (Laura Farris)
Since 2020, we have supported 413 projects through our safer
streets fund and the safety of women at night fund, investing
over £150 million, including £3.9 million that has been
designated to Merseyside. The objective of the fund is to improve
public protection—particularly that of women, particularly at
night—and independent evaluation shows that it is more than
achieving its objective.
Kim Johnson
I do not think the Minister answered the question about the
impact of the reduction. Merseyside has now received a combined
reduction of £180,000 to our safer streets fund in round 5. Our
police and crime commissioner, Emily Spurrell, has called this
“ill-considered and short-sighted” because projects have already
begun and delivery is under way, but the funding has been
restricted yet again. So will the Minister agree today to
reinstate the lost funding, so that Merseyside police and others
can continue their great work, keeping our streets safe?
Laura Farris
May I just gently tell the hon. Lady that, in the last round of
funding, round 4, Merseyside received £1.3 million through the
safer streets fund— that was quadruple what it had received in
round 3—and over half a million of that was designated
specifically to CCTV and street lighting in Liverpool city
centre? Round 5 should be seen in the context of record funding
to the Merseyside police, who received an unprecedented uplift of
£27.6 million—a 6.5% uplift. I am confident that Merseyside will
still be able to deliver its schemes, including the safe home
cards providing safe transport to help women get home from , in this round.
Vicky Ford (Chelmsford) (Con)
In Essex, the police, fire and crime commissioner Roger Hirst has
used the safer streets money to pay for CCTV and safety measures
in the Bunny Walks, to pay for safety improvements around
Chelmsford Prison to keep residents safe, and more recently for
CCTV cameras in Central Park and the Avenues and extra safety
measures around the cathedral. Despite all this the local Lib
Dems want to take credit for all of Roger's work, so will the
Home Secretary pop down to Chelmsford to come and see me and
Roger and make sure we say thank you to Roger for all he has done
with this Government money to keep people safe?
Laura Farris
I thank my right hon. Friend for her question. She is correct.
Roger Hirst has an exceptional track record as a police and crime
commissioner. He has done outstanding work driving down
antisocial behaviour and domestic burglary and the examples she
gives are exactly what the safer streets fund is for: bespoke,
local, dedicated services that will improve public protection. I
know that Essex police have higher numbers than at any point in
their 185-year history, and I will certainly urge the Home
Secretary to pay them a visit at the next available
opportunity.
Mr Speaker
I call the shadow Minister.
Alex Davies-Jones (Pontypridd) (Lab)
Thank you, Mr Speaker, and on behalf of the whole shadow Home
Affairs team may I place on record our sincere condolences on the
loss of your father?
Following the horrific killing of Kulsuma Akter in Bradford, who
was tragically stabbed to death in broad daylight while pushing
her three-year-old son in a pram, West Yorkshire and Greater
Manchester police have referred themselves for investigation
because of prior contact with Kulsuma and her husband, who has
since been arrested for her murder. Cases of multiple contact
with the police before violent escalation are all too common.
Labour will mandate domestic abuse and wider violence against
women and girls training for every police officer in the country
and we will introduce Raneem's law to overhaul the policing
response when reports are first made. So I ask the Minister, how
many more women will have to die before the Government can do the
same?
Laura Farris
The hon. Lady is right to mention the case of Kulsuma Akter. What
happened to her was appalling. I obviously cannot comment on any
specifics in relation to the case, but the hon. Lady will know
that the bail conditions that the perpetrator had been released
under contained restrictions that were breached themselves. So it
was not a case of the court refusing to apply conditions; he
breached them. In relation to her wider point, of course every
single one of these cases is a tragedy. She will know, because we
have worked on a cross-party basis in the past, how much time and
attention we dedicate to this at the Home Office, but I simply
say this. We now have domestic abuse training that has been
rolled out to over 80% of forces and the Home Secretary and I are
working very closely with the nine outstanding ones. They are on
a timetable for delivery—I want to reassure the hon. Lady of
that—and we now, this month, have trained rape specialists in
every single in England and Wales.
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style="font: inherit; font-size: 1em;">Tim Loughton Threat
from China
Tim Loughton (East Worthing and Shoreham) (Con)
3. What recent assessment he has made with Cabinet colleagues of
the level of the security threat from China. (902318)
The Minister for Security (Tom Tugendhat)
I thank my hon. Friend enormously for raising this question. Let
me be clear that the hostile activity we have seen from Chinese
authorities and state-affiliated groups poses a serious threat to
the security and wellbeing of the British people and to our
partners and allies across the world. The Deputy Prime Minister
came to this Chamber last month to speak about the pattern of
malign activity, including the targeting of our parliamentarians
and two malicious cyber-campaigns by Chinese state-affiliated
actors. We must never be afraid to stand up for ourselves and to
call out this kind of activity that has targeted both my hon.
Friend and me.
Tim Loughton
Mr Speaker, may I add my personal condolences to you on the loss
of your father?
I say to my right hon. Friend that we had the scandal of the
hacking of MPs' email accounts back in March and we subsequently
learnt that the FBI informed our Government—as well as foreign
Governments who had legislators who were affected—about these
incidents two years ago. Why has it taken two years for us to be
told about a serious security breach? Will he now, with his
colleagues in Cabinet, make sure that China is absolutely treated
and labelled as a threat, not just an “epoque-defining systemic
challenge”, and everything is done urgently to put China in the
enhanced tier of the foreign influence registration scheme?
Tom Tugendhat
My hon. Friend, who has given this House and our country
exceptional service over many years, and who will sadly be
standing down at the next election, has again made some strong
points. On the first, he knows the language that I use and he has
heard the words I have said. The reality is that we face threats
from around the world, and many of them sadly are emerging out of
Beijing today. We know it, we have seen it, and many of us in
this House feel it. It is not something we are shying away from.
The reality, however, is that there are many different ways of
answering it. He has raised an important aspect on FIRS, which of
course is being looked at, but he will have heard the words of
the Deputy Prime Minister in this Chamber only a few weeks ago
and how clearly he made himself heard.
Sir Chris Bryant (Rhondda) (Lab)
I am sorry, but I am not convinced by the Government's attitude
on this. When the Deputy Prime Minister came to see us a few
weeks ago, he did not say anything new; he announced things about
events that happened two years ago. The Security Minister himself
knows of attempts by the Chinese Government to undermine the work
of the Foreign Affairs Committee of this House. Why are we only
ever told about things that happened years ago? If we are to take
these issues seriously, we surely have to have an up-to-date and
present account of the activities of the Chinese state.
Tom Tugendhat
The hon. Member will well know that, when there is a reason to
act quickly and draw something to the attention of the House, we
do, as was the case with Christine Lee, which he will remember
involved the payment of money to a certain Member of this House.
The reason we took that action was because we needed to expose it
fast.
Mr Speaker
I call the shadow Minister.
Dan Jarvis (Barnsley Central) (Lab)
The Biometrics and Surveillance Camera Commissioner said last
year that our policing and security services were technologically
vulnerable because of their use of Chinese-made equipment,
including CCTV, drones and body cameras. Can the Minister say
whether the digital asbestos of Chinese-made technology is still
used in our policing and security infrastructure—yes or no?
Tom Tugendhat
My friend the hon. Member will know well that the work of Fraser
Sampson before he retired or ended his mandate last year has been
fantastically important to many of us in making sure “digital
asbestos” —I approve of the term—is got out of our institutions.
This is something that is ongoing. It has got out of the most
secure sites already, but there are other areas where there is
work to do, because an awful lot of sites bought technology that
would now be problematic. It is not just static sites; there is
potential that some electric vehicles could be easily turned into
mobile intelligence-gathering platforms by hostile states, so it
is about looking not simply at the past, but at the future.
Returning Illegal Migrants to their Home Country
Henry Smith (Crawley) (Con)
4. What recent progress his Department has made on returning
illegal migrants to their home country. (902319)
The Minister for Countering Illegal Migration (Michael
Tomlinson)
In 2023, we delivered a strong removal performance, with overall
returns back to pre-covid levels. In total, 26,000 were returned,
an increase of 74%, at an average of 500 removed every week last
year.
Henry Smith
I am grateful to the Minister for his response. Can he update the
House on how his Department is prioritising the return of foreign
national offenders to their home countries to keep the streets
and communities of the United Kingdom safe?
Michael Tomlinson
May I first pay tribute to my hon. Friend and the work that goes
on in his constituency? As he knows, I visited Gatwick recently
and saw for myself the good work of the Border Force team there.
He will be pleased to know that removals of foreign national
offenders were up last year by 27%. We are committed to the
removal of foreign criminals and those with no right to be in the
United Kingdom.
Jessica Morden (Newport East) (Lab)
On that point, I sadly see many asylum seekers in Newport who are
stuck in limbo due to this Government's incompetence. However,
can I draw the Minister's attention to the case of a man in
Newport who lied about his name and country of origin and is a
convicted sex offender who has breached the terms of his licence?
The courts want him returned home. He wants to return home and
will even pay for his flight, but for some unfathomable reason,
the Home Office seem incapable of authorising or allowing that.
It has been three years—why?
Michael Tomlinson
The removals increased last year. It is interesting to note that
Opposition Members, including the leader of the Labour party,
have campaigned to ensure they are preventing the deportation of
foreign criminals. Those on the Government Benches are determined
to see foreign criminals removed, and there was an increase in
removals of 74% last year.
Mr Speaker
I call the shadow Minister.
Stephen Kinnock (Aberavon) (Lab)
Under successive Conservative Governments since 2010, returns of
failed asylum seekers have collapsed by 44%, and returns of
foreign national offenders have fallen by almost 30% over the
same period. For all the Government's tough talk, only 2% of
those arriving on small boats since 2018 have been returned
anywhere, yet Ministers are still resisting Labour's plan for a
new returns and enforcement unit to ensure the swift removal of
those with no right to be here. Meanwhile, over the weekend, more
people crossed the channel in small boats than will be covered in
the entire first year of the Government's failing Rwanda scheme.
Will the Minister stop the headline-chasing gimmicks and instead
commit to setting out his plan for the 99% of people currently
stuck in the asylum system who will never be sent to Rwanda?
Michael Tomlinson
The fact of the matter is that nearly 18,000 foreign national
offenders were returned between January 2019 and December 2023.
The fact of the matter is that Opposition Members, including the
leader of the Labour party, have campaigned to prevent the
deportation of foreign criminals, while Government Members
welcome an increase of 74%, with an average of 500 people being
removed every single week.
Neighbourhood Policing
Andrew Western (Stretford and Urmston) (Lab)
5. What recent assessment his Department has made of the adequacy
of neighbourhood policing levels. (902320)
Virginia Crosbie (Ynys Môn) (Con)
6. What steps he has taken to increase police visibility in local
communities. (902321)
Paul Howell (Sedgefield) (Con)
8. What steps he has taken to increase police visibility in local
communities. (902323)
Debbie Abrahams (Oldham East and Saddleworth) (Lab)
15. What recent assessment his Department has made of the
adequacy of neighbourhood policing levels. (902333)
Mary Glindon (North Tyneside) (Lab)
16. What recent assessment his Department has made of the
adequacy of neighbourhood policing levels. (902334)
James Morris (Halesowen and Rowley Regis) (Con)
18. What steps he has taken to increase police visibility in
local communities. >
The Minister for Crime, Policing and Fire (Chris Philp)
I am happy to remind the House that last year we reached record
numbers of police officers—in excess of 149,000, which was over
3,000 more than at the previous peak under the last Labour
Government. In terms of local policing, we achieved 67,785 as of
March last year.
Andrew Western
Under this Government, 10,000 neighbourhood police officers have
disappeared since 2015 and have yet to be replaced on the
frontline. Given the Government's proclivity for lifting Labour's
policies, may I gently encourage the Minister to adopt Labour's
plan to recruit 13,000 new neighbourhood police officers,
allowing for a named, contactable officer in every ward in the
country?
Chris Philp
The hon. Member is using figures that went up to 2019. Of course,
the reason he is using figures that are five years out of date is
that the numbers have gone up since then. If we take
neighbourhood policing as a whole, we see an increase of 6,000,
from 61,083 in 2015—the year he mentioned—to 67,785. I am
surprised that he is not joining me in welcoming that.
Virginia Crosbie
Antisocial behaviour has been a big problem in Holyhead. Almost
£700,000 of UK Government safer streets funding has been used for
CCTV, improved lighting, self-defence training for local women
and girls, delivering crime prevention packs and outreach work.
Will the Minister join me in thanking Chief Inspector Robert
Rands, PC Lisa Thomas and many others who work so hard to lives of people who live and
work in Holyhead?
Chris Philp
I certainly join my hon. Friend in thanking those officers as
well as countless thousands of others around the country who do
such good work. On ASB, in addition to the safer streets money
that she mentioned, from the beginning of this month we have an
extra £66 million of funding for antisocial behaviour hotspot
patrolling. Every single one of England and Wales's police forces
will get that, and that will make an enormous difference in
combating the scourge of ASB.
Paul Howell
Does the Minister agree that getting extra officers out in our
communities should be top of the list for any police and crime
commissioner? Unfortunately, in Durham, we see that the Labour
PCC is more interested in increasing her back-office staff and
overseeing a decline in standards, with the latest police
effectiveness, efficiency and legitimacy report showing two areas
requiring improvement for the first time ever in Durham. Does he
agree that the sooner we get an ex-beat cop in place, such as the
Conservative candidate, Rob Potts, the sooner Durham will return
to being an outstanding police force?
Chris Philp
I completely agree. Spending money on things such as flowerbeds
and diversity staff instead of frontline police officers is the
wrong priority. Former frontline officers such as Rob Potts,
running for PCC in Durham, will do a good job of getting
priorities straight.
Debbie Abrahams
Kulsuma Akter from Oldham was murdered by her estranged husband
on a busy Bradford street in the middle of the day, in front of
their baby son. Research has repeatedly shown that regular foot
patrols—especially in crime hotspots—lead to reduced offending
and increased public confidence, particularly if combined with
community-based prevention. Greater Manchester police and West
Yorkshire police want to learn lessons from this tragic murder.
What lessons has the Home Secretary learned about reducing
neighbourhood policing and the prevalence of such appalling
crimes?
Chris Philp
That is a tragic case, and we will study any findings by the
Independent Office for Police Conduct very carefully. The hon.
Lady mentioned hotspot patrolling; I mentioned in a previous
answer that the Government are providing £66 million this
financial year on top of the regular police funding settlement to
fund hotspot patrolling, which may help in such situations. To
repeat a previous point, local policing numbers have gone up by
about 6,500 since 2015. Selectively quoting figures that are five
years old does nothing to help public debate.
James Morris
Halesowen police station is under threat of closure thanks to
decisions taken by the Labour west midlands police and crime
commissioner. Tom Byrne, the Conservative candidate for PCC, says
that he will stop that closure programme. Does the Minister agree
with me and Tom Byrne that keeping Halesowen police station open
is critical for community confidence and for the effectiveness of
neighbourhood policing?
Chris Philp
I agree very strongly. The Labour PCC's police station closure
plans in the west midlands are shocking. This year, West Midlands
police is getting an extra £50 million—a 6.8% increase and well
above the rate of inflation. Tom Byrne would do an excellent job
of making sure that that maintains frontline services, which is
exactly how that money should be spent.
Mary Glindon
Northumbria police force has lost 11,000 officers and £148
million from its budget since 2010. Even after the uplift it will
remain 427 officers short compared with 2010 levels. Will the
Minister support the call from Northumbria's PCC Kim McGuinness
for further investigation into police resources as, clearly, not
all areas of the country have benefited equally from the uplift
programme?
Chris Philp
I am pleased to tell the House that for this financial year,
which started just a couple of weeks ago, Northumbria force's
funding has gone up by £28 million —a 7.6% increase and more than
double the rate of inflation. The resources are there, but using
those resources wisely is a matter for police and crime
commissioners. Conservative police and crime commissioners tend
to spend those resources most wisely.
Violence against Shop Workers
Ruth Cadbury (Brentford and Isleworth) (Lab)
7. What steps his Department is taking to help tackle violence
against shop workers. (902322)
The Secretary of State for the Home Department (James
Cleverly)
Violence and abuse towards shop workers is not and will never be
acceptable. Last October the police published a retail crime
action plan, which the Government have embraced and enhanced.
Last week we launched the fighting retail crime action plan,
which includes a commitment to create a new offence of assaulting
a retail worker, as the sector has been calling for.
Ruth Cadbury
Last week I met a shopkeeper in Hounslow who has been repeatedly
targeted by shoplifters. The family who own the shop cannot
afford security guards or to lose a large amount of stock, unlike
the big chains. It is welcome that the Government have finally
backed Labour's 10-year campaign, along with the Union of Shop,
Distributive and Allied Workers and other campaigners, to
introduce a stand-alone offence of assault against a shop worker,
but will the Minister go further and scrap the unfair £200
minimum, which leaves offenders getting away with impunity?
James Cleverly
Shoplifting is still a criminal offence, irrespective of the
financial value of what is taken. We have made a clear commitment
to ensuring that shopkeepers are protected and that the retail
environment is safe. That is why we have put in place funding to
put more police officers on the street and why, as my right hon.
Friend the Member for Croydon South (Chris Philp) just mentioned,
neighbourhood policing numbers are up. We have committed the
police to pursuing all reasonable lines of inquiry, and I am
proud that we have put in place a specific criminal offence of
assault against a retail worker.
Theresa Villiers (Chipping Barnet) (Con)
For our high streets to thrive, people need to perceive them as
safe places to be, but there is real concern that the Mayor of
London is failing to get the Met to take retail crime seriously
enough. Does my right hon. Friend agree that we need a new Mayor
for London, Susan Hall, to ensure we have more effective policing
on our high streets?
James Cleverly
Quite frankly, the Mayor of London has been a massive
disappointment when it comes to the policing of London. The Met
is the only police force in the country to see its police numbers
reduce. It has failed to meet its recruitment targets. Quite
frankly, Londoners deserve better.
Steve McCabe (Birmingham, Selly Oak) (Lab)
As the chair of the all-party parliamentary group on retail
crime, I welcome the announcements, as I am sure will shop
workers everywhere. When will the announcements be
operationalised, and what is the monitoring process, so that we
can all judge whether they are not just words but action?
James Cleverly
The hon. Gentleman makes an important point. We are putting the
changes through as amendments to the Criminal Justice Bill. The
sooner it makes its passage through the House, the quicker we can
put these specific changes in place, but we are not waiting for
that. We have had conversations with police forces to ensure
there is visible policing on our high streets and that they
respond to every reasonable line of inquiry, sending a signal to
retailers and potential criminals that we take this issue
incredibly seriously, and that the police will respond to this
important type of crime.
Matt Vickers (Stockton South) (Con)
I realise the Home Secretary may be sick of hearing from me about
assaults on retail workers, but I welcome the huge and
comprehensive package announced last week to support them. Will
my right hon. Friend implement the measures as quickly as
possible to benefit retail workers across Stockton South and the
rest of the country?
James Cleverly
I pay tribute to my hon. Friend, who has campaigned vigorously on
this issue and met me on a number of occasions to go through the
specifics of the proposals, working closely with the Secretary of
State for Justice, my right hon. and learned Friend the Member
for Cheltenham (Alex Chalk), to ensure that both the policing
response and the criminal response send a very clear deterrent to
those who may be tempted to assault retail workers. It is not
acceptable and we will take action.
Mr Speaker
I call the shadow Minister.
Feryal Clark (Enfield North) (Lab)
In January, the Government voted down our latest attempt to
introduce a stand-alone offence tackling violence against retail
workers, continuing a pattern of years of failing to address this
issue while such violence reached epidemic proportions. Last
week—surprise, surprise—they U-turned and an offence is now to
follow. When will the Government follow that up by stealing the
other ideas they keep denying: a restoration of neighbourhood
policing, which was down between 2015 and 2023—not the response
officers they have been talking about, but proper neighbourhood
policing; and getting rid of the £200 limit?
James Cleverly
Members should recognise that just because a clause might have a
similar sounding name, it does not mean it is the same. The
simple truth of the matter is that the Opposition clause was
deficient in many ways. The clause that we will put forward in
the Criminal Justice Bill will address the issue. On local
policing, the hon. Lady should recognise that there has been a
6,000 uplift.
Antisocial Behaviour
Justin Madders (Ellesmere Port and Neston) (Lab)
9. What steps his Department is taking to help tackle antisocial
behaviour. (902324)
The Secretary of State for the Home Department (James
Cleverly)
Last year, we launched the antisocial behaviour action plan,
backed by £160 million-worth of funding and over 100,000 hours of
police and other uniformed patrols undertaken to target
antisocial behaviour hotspots, extended to every single police
force in England and Wales. We banned nitrous oxide, increased
fines for fly-tipping, littering and graffiti, and are
strengthening powers to tackle antisocial behaviour through the
Criminal Justice Bill that is making its way through the
House.
Justin Madders
One of the aspects of antisocial behaviour that really annoys my
constituents is persistent cannabis smoking by people in their
own homes, particularly, but not exclusively, in blocks of flats.
When I raise the matter with the police, they tell me that they
are not going to go into people's homes and deal with it. I do
not think that that is good enough; does the Home Secretary?
James Cleverly
The police should take action when there is credible reporting of
criminal behaviour. I have had this conversation with police
leaders from areas around the country, and it is a conversation
that we will continue to have with the police. People need not
only to be safe but to feel safe, in their communities and in
their homes.
Sir Michael Ellis (Northampton North) (Con)
My condolences to you, Mr Speaker.
Protesters who recently created an obnoxious stunt outside the
home of the Leader of the Opposition belong in jail, as do the
trust fund vandals who caused tens of thousands of pounds' worth
of damage outside the Ministry of Defence last week. The truth is
that frontline politicians of any political hue, and our military
personnel, are prepared to put themselves forward to serve and
protect this country, which is, of course, a concept that the
vandals would know nothing about. When it comes to this type of
antisocial behaviour, will my right hon. Friend consider
increasing visibility at high-profile locations such as those
that I have mentioned?
James Cleverly
My right hon. and learned Friend has raised a couple of points.
First, it is completely unacceptable to try to intimidate
parliamentarians whatever their political hue, and I will stand
shoulder to shoulder with them regardless of their political
party in defending their right to do and say what they believe to
be in the best interests of their countries and their communities
without fear of intimidation. That is an absolute red line, and
it will be enforced. Secondly, these petulant acts of vandalism
in the name of protest are unacceptable. When criminal damage
occurs, it will be pursued, and in the Criminal Justice Bill we
are taking specific actions to remove the veneer of a defence
that criminal behaviour is somehow justified because people are
not getting their way at the ballot box.
Lilian Greenwood (Nottingham South) (Lab)
Too many residents in Nottingham South tell me that antisocial
behaviour is making their lives a misery. They never see a bobby
walking the streets, and under the lawbreaking Tory police and
crime commissioner, Nottinghamshire police has been placed in
special measures, with His Majesty's inspectorate of constabulary
and fire and rescue services saying that the force is letting
victims down. My constituents tell me that they will be voting
for Labour's Gary Godden on 2 May, in order to rebuild
neighbourhood policing and adopt a zero-tolerance approach to
antisocial behaviour. They are right, are they not?
James Cleverly
They would be very wrong if they voted Labour expecting that that
would increase a policing presence. Across the country we have
seen over and over again that the best-performing police areas
are typically controlled by Conservative police and crime
commissioners. I know the situation in Nottinghamshire very well,
and I have spoken directly to its police and crime commissioner,
who has a clear plan of action to ensure that she continues to
put police officers on the frontline. Labour-run police forces in
the area have been sadly lacking in that regard.
Jonathan Gullis (Stoke-on-Trent North) (Con)
Following an increase in antisocial behaviour in Tunstall, I was
proud to work with more than 500 local residents to gain support
for new CCTV, new alley gates and better street lighting through
the safer streets fund. However, when I met the Labour leader of
Stoke-on-Trent City Council, she told me that there would be no
money for Tunstall—and, to make matters worse, she has dumped
some undesirables in the Sneyd Arms hotel in the town centre,
which has led to further criminal activity that is blighting high
street stores throughout our community. Does the Home Secretary
agree with me that, thank God, Ben Adams, Staffordshire's police,
fire and crime commissioner, was listening and ensured that we
received that safer streets funding so that those in our
communities would feel safer, and that people should vote for Ben
on 2 May?
James Cleverly
I could hardly have put it better myself. I recently visited the
wonderful town of Stoke and saw the passion of its people. This
is a classic example of local leadership in the hands of the
Labour party failing people, and local leadership in the hands of
Conservatives defending them.
Visa Scheme for Palestinian Refugees
Patrick Grady (Glasgow North) (SNP)
10. If he will make an assessment of the potential merits of
introducing a visa scheme for Palestinian refugees.(902325)
The Minister for Legal Migration and the Border (Tom
Pursglove)
We are all concerned about the plight of those living in Gaza.
Currently, we are not considering establishing a separate route
for Palestinians. In any humanitarian situation, the UK must
consider its resettlement approach in the round, rather than on a
crisis-by-crisis basis.
Patrick Grady
It is not surprising that the upper tribunal found the decision
to require biometric data for people from Gaza to be “irrational
and unreasonable”, because most of us find that to apply to most
decisions made by the Home Office. Is it not also irrational and
unreasonable for the United Kingdom to offer humanitarian visas
to people caught up in the conflicts in Ukraine, Syria and
Afghanistan, but not to offer such visas to people fleeing the
conflict in Gaza?
Tom Pursglove
I will not give a running commentary on ongoing litigation, but I
can say that we are supporting British nationals with dependants
in Gaza to get those individuals out of Gaza safely, working in
collaboration with Foreign Office colleagues. There are also
marked differences at play here. Of course, the right of return
is fundamental as part of efforts towards a two-state solution,
and other factors are at play in responding to the Ukrainian
situation. The dynamic is very different, which directly affects
the relationship we have with the Ukrainian Government,
particularly in respect of the ability to carry out checks on
individuals.
Mr Speaker
I call the SNP spokesperson.
Alison Thewliss (Glasgow Central) (SNP)
Gaza Families Reunited's petition for a Palestinian family visa
scheme has garnered 100,000 signatures, and I hope it will soon
be debated in Parliament. Gazans are stuck in a cruel and
irrational Catch-22 situation: they cannot cross the border to
Egypt because they do not have visas, as they cannot get their
biometrics registered, but they cannot get their biometrics
registered because they cannot get to a visa application centre
in Egypt. The Government have the power to waive the requirement
for be registered, and it is in the Minister's hands to
do so. Why won't he?
Tom Pursglove
The hon. Lady will appreciate that the security of the system is
imperative. We must act in accordance with the requirements,
which we put front and centre. I will not comment on ongoing
litigation, but I can say that we will continue to work with
Foreign Office colleagues in the way that we have described.
Elements of the peace process are at play in relation to these
issues, but we will keep our response to this crisis under review
as matters develop.
Asylum Seekers Accommodated in Hotels
Sir Desmond Swayne (New Forest West) (Con)
11. What progress he has made on reducing the number of asylum
seekers accommodated in hotels.(902328)
Sir David Evennett (Bexleyheath and Crayford) (Con)
12. What progress his Department has made on closing asylum
hotels.(902329)
The Minister for Legal Migration and the Border (Tom
Pursglove)
The Home Office has been clear that the use of hotels is a
temporary and short-term measure to ensure that we meet our
statutory obligation to accommodate destitute asylum seekers. We
have made significant progress in closing over 100 asylum hotels
as of the end of March. Our actions mean that there are over
20,000 fewer asylum seekers in hotels today compared with six
months ago.
Sir Desmond Swayne
Does the Minister's ambition extend to closing all the
hotels?
Tom Pursglove
My right hon. Friend is absolutely right that the Government's
ambition is to close the hotels. We closed 100 by the end of
March, and we are working towards closing 150 by May.
Fundamentally, the objective is to alter the way in which people
are accommodated and to introduce more cost-effective and
appropriate approaches, but also to reduce the flow of people
coming into this country illegally, which is the very best way of
alleviating the pressures.
Sir David Evennett
I welcome all the efforts that my hon. Friend is making to deal
with and speed up the asylum process. However, will he outline
what measures he considers when deciding which hotels to close in
each tranche?
Tom Pursglove
My right hon. Friend will recognise that value for money is a
critical consideration that informs hotel closure decisions, as
are operational deliverability and the notice periods on
contracts. It is also about recognising the needs in particular
locations and the challenges that these sites present. We have a
plan,Mr hotels, and we will continue
to deliver on precisely what we promised.
Mr Toby Perkins (Chesterfield) (Lab)
For almost two years, the Sandpiper Hotel in Chesterfield has
been used as a hotel for asylum seekers. The North Derbyshire
Refugee Support Group has told me that not a single person who
has stayed there has been asked to go back to their country. In
fact, the vast majority of them have had their applications
approved, which undermines the Government's suggestion that all
these asylum seekers are not entitled to be here. Actually, the
Government approve the vast majority of applications, so their
approach is a waste of money. Why do the Government continue to
fail in this way? For the Minister to celebrate the extraordinary
usage of hotels just because it is diminishing slightly is
hopeless. When will we get the Sandpiper back in public use?
Tom Pursglove
I thought it was interesting that a Labour insider said to The
Times last week:
“We need a viable answer to what we'd do differently other than
just ‘smash the gangs'”
and that
“we can't currently say how we are going to tackle the demand
side of the issue.”
They are absolutely right. I suspect we will be waiting a very
long time for the answer. That goes right to the heart of the
point that the hon. Gentleman raises. He says that we ought to be
closing the hotels, but it is only this Government that have a
credible plan to do just that.
Jim Shannon (Strangford) (DUP)
Mr Speaker, may I pass on the condolences of myself and my party
on the death of your father? We know you loved your father, and
we know that your father loved you.
When it comes to reducing the number of asylum seekers, I want to
suggest one option to the Minister that we could certainly do in
Strangford. For those people who are in hotels, there are
companies in my constituency that wish to employ them and to give
them accommodation at the same time. If we want to help the
asylum seekers in the hotels in my constituency, and in the
consistency adjoining mine, then let them get the jobs and let
them get the accommodation.
Tom Pursglove
While I am always very willing to engage with the hon. Gentleman,
he will appreciate that the difficulty that we have in respect of
that approach is the pull factor that it would present—it would
potentially encourage people to make dangerous journeys via small
boats to get to the UK. We do not want to do anything that plays
into the business model of the evil criminal gangs responsible
for that miserable trade. What we want to do is put them out of
business. On the wider accommodation point, I am very happy to
engage with the hon. Gentleman.
Sir Simon Clarke (Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland)
(Con)
In 2016, Middlesbrough had the highest ratio of asylum seekers
per head of population of anywhere in England. I welcome the
closure of hotels, but I worry about reports in today's Daily
Mail that the Home Office is buying up large amounts of property
in some of the poorer areas of England, which risks taking us
back to the situation we saw in 2016. Will the Minister reassure
me that that is not the case, because my constituents are clear
that that places an unacceptable strain on the community, and
indeed an unhappy strain on community cohesion?
Tom Pursglove
My right hon. Friend is a strong supporter of the work the
Government are doing to get a better grip on the flow of people
coming across to our country, who inevitably need accommodating
while they are here. We have a mixture of accommodation to meet
those needs, and getting the numbers down is critical to be able
to reduce that dependence. I am able to say, however, that we are
not actively pursuing procurement in the three local authorities
cited in the article that my right hon. Friend references—and
that includes Middlesbrough.
Mike Amesbury (Weaver Vale) (Lab)
My sincere condolences, Mr Speaker.
The Government promised some considerable time ago that a hotel
used in my constituency would no longer be used to house those
seeking asylum. That is not the case; it has almost become de
facto permanent. Could the Minister speak to me—not necessarily
on the Floor of the House, but separately—and give me an
assurance that there will be a managed closure of that
facility?
Tom Pursglove
What I cannot do on the Floor of the House is make commitments
about specific hotels, but I would be very happy to meet the hon.
Gentleman to discuss this. What he could do to help me with this
particular challenge is to get behind the work that the
Government are doing to reduce the flow of people coming to the
UK, which fundamentally and crucially would help us to be able to
close hotels such as the one in his constituency.
Topical Questions
Sir John Whittingdale (Maldon) (Con)
T1. If he will make a statement on his departmental
responsibilities.(902342)
The Secretary of State for the Home Department (James
Cleverly)
We have increased the volume of asylum cases processed. We
successfully met a ministerial commitment to close over 50
asylum-seeker hotels by January 2024, and we had closed over 100
by the end of March.
Last year, I brought forward measures to make legal migration
fairer and to radically reduce the numbers; 300,000 people who
came to the UK last year would not now be eligible to do so.
Anyone who wants to bring a family from abroad must be able
comfortably to support them financially.
In the Budget, the Government put forward £75 million to roll out
violence reduction units and hotspot policing across England and
Wales, and £230 million for technology that will save the police
time and money and make sure that police officers are on the
frontline doing the job that they were recruited to do.
Sir John Whittingdale
May I add my condolences, Mr Speaker?
My right hon. Friend will be aware that police numbers in Essex
are at record levels and that overall crime is down. However,
there has been a rise in vehicle thefts. Will he therefore
welcome the efforts of our excellent police, fire and crime
commissioner, Roger Hirst, in establishing a stolen vehicle
intelligence unit that has so far recovered £14 million-worth of
vehicles? Will he look at what further support can be given to
Roger Hirst to crime?
James Cleverly
My right hon. Friend is right to highlight the fantastic work of
Roger Hirst and the stolen vehicle intelligence unit. A number of
large-scale seizures have been made against attempted vehicle
exports. The Government have reduced vehicle-related crime by 39%
since 2010, and we seek to go further through the Criminal
Justice Bill. We want to see more innovative approaches like the
one taken by Roger Hirst, which is why I am very proud to
campaign alongside him. He has done fantastic work to protect the
people of Essex.
Mr Speaker
I call the shadow Home Secretary.
Yvette Cooper (Normanton, Pontefract and Castleford) (Lab)
Mr Speaker, I remember the kindness that your father showed me
and our long discussions on rugby league. I add my
condolences.
The Hillsborough tragedy was 35 years ago to the hour. We
remember the 97 who were lost and support the families' campaign
for a Hillsborough law.
We strongly condemn Iran's attack on Israel this weekend, and we
must do everything we can to prevent further escalation in the
middle east, but there are also domestic security issues in
relation to Iran. The Iran International journalist Pouria
Zeraati was attacked on the streets of London a few weeks ago
following repeated Iran-related security threats on British soil,
including threats to kidnap and kill. Does the Home Secretary
believe it is now time to proscribe the Islamic Revolutionary
Guard Corps in the UK?
James Cleverly
The right hon. Lady will know that we keep our response to Iran
under constant review, and of course we have done so in the light
of the attack in Wimbledon. We do not speculate about future
designations or sanctions, but she will know that the IRGC is
sanctioned in its entirety and a members are sanctioned as
individuals. As she knows, we will keep this under constant
review.
Yvette Cooper
The Home Secretary will know that we have raised this many times.
I understand the complexity of the issue. The proscribing
legislation was drawn up more than 20 years ago to address
terrorist threats such as al-Qaeda, rather than state-sponsored
threats that have both domestic and international security
objectives. Our bottom line must be keeping this country safe,
which is why Labour has proposed new security legislation to
allow the Government to put appropriately targeted
proscription-style restrictions on the operations of state-linked
organisations such as the IRGC. The Government previously
resisted this, but will he look at it again in the light of
recent events and work with us on any legislation that is needed
to keep this country safe?
James Cleverly
We have the National Security Act 2023 and a range of tools at
our disposal. Defence against state threats is one of the
Department's priorities, and my right hon. Friend the Security
Minister leads on its practical implementation. I can reassure
the shadow Home Secretary and the House that we constantly review
the range of options at our disposal and deploy those that are
most appropriate. Protecting the UK and the people living and
working here against state threats will always be a priority of
this Government.
Mr Philip Hollobone (Kettering) (Con)
T4. Will my right hon. Friend the Minister for Crime, Policing
and Fire support the excellent initiative of a number of
Conservative police and crime commissioners to include filling in
potholes as part of the community payback initiative for
convicted offenders? Will he apply pressure on the Ministry of
Justice to get this up and running as soon as
possible?(902345)
The Minister for Crime, Policing and Fire (Chris Philp)
My hon. Friend raises an excellent idea that has my enthusiastic
support. I will do exactly as he asks straightaway.
Sarah Dyke (Somerton and Frome) (LD)
T2. I offer you my condolences, Mr Speaker.The former chief
inspector of borders and immigration recently produced a report
stating that 275 certificates of sponsorship were granted to a
company that used forged documents and purported to be a real
care home. Such Home Office failures clearly leave people at risk
of exploitation and modern slavery, so what steps is the Minister
taking to make the system more robust and to protect vulnerable
people who come here to work in our care system?(902343)
The Minister for Legal Migration and the Border (Tom
Pursglove)
I am grateful to the hon. Lady for that question. We responded
within the eight-week deadline to that ICIBI report and accepted
the recommendations made to us in it. We are working through
them, but work was already in train, particularly in
collaboration with the Care Quality Commission, on better
accreditation practices for care providers when we are matching
people to those visas.
Mrs Pauline Latham (Mid Derbyshire) (Con)
T6. Outdated laws are allowing child sexual predators and
offenders to enter or leave our country while in possession of
illegal material on their digital devices because Border Force
does not have the power to access them. Will my right hon. Friend
work with his colleagues in the Ministry of Justice to consider
the merits of a new offence of wilful obstruction, under which an
individual could be prosecuted if they fail to unlock their
devices to allow them to be properly searched?(902347)
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for the Home
Department (Laura Farris)
I thank my hon. Friend for her work in this area. The issues that
she raises are of direct importance to intelligence gathering and
child protection. My officials have been working closely with
Border Force to ensure that its powers keep pace with the digital
age. When the next legislative opportunity arises, if not before,
we will carefully consider giving Border Force powers to compel
individuals to submit to searches of their devices, if they are
suspected of holding child sexual abuse material.
Mr Toby Perkins (Chesterfield) (Lab)
T3. The murder of Gracie Spinks in Chesterfield sent shockwaves
through the town, and the report on Derbyshire police's handling
of this desperately unhappy situation was salutary. There is
still far too much inconsistency in how stalking and violence
against women are handled, so will the Home Secretary back
Labour's plan to bring in mandatory national standards, and
mandatory training on tackling violence against women, so that we
see consistency in policing on stalking right across the
country?(902344)
James Cleverly
I reassure the hon. Gentleman and the House that, under my
leadership, the Home Office and policing across the UK will
maintain its focus on preventing violence against women and
girls. We have a roll-out of police guidance and training when it
comes to women and girls. I will listen carefully to the
proposals he has put forward, because we want to make sure that
women and girls feel safe in this country.
Dr Lisa Cameron (East Kilbride, Strathaven and Lesmahagow)
(Con)
T7. This Government champion fantastic animal welfare standards.
My constituents would like to see alternatives to animal testing
wherever possible, and would be keen to hear a vital update from
the Department.(902349)
The Minister for Security (Tom Tugendhat)
Given that interest is about to switch in this House to a
different matter, I will be brief. I promise to write to my hon.
Friend on this, but she should know that this Government have
already doubled spending on finding alternatives to animal
testing. We will continue to make sure that the inspection regime
is as strict as possible, to make sure that when animals need to
be used, the conditions are as humane as possible.
Justin Madders (Ellesmere Port and Neston) (Lab)
T5. Will the Home Secretary tell us what level of auditing there
will be of the hundreds of millions of pounds being sent to
Rwanda? In particular, will he guarantee that no UK taxpayers'
cash will, either directly or indirectly, be used to fund the M23
militia in the Democratic Republic of the Congo?(902346)
James Cleverly
All our overseas expenditure, whether it is through official
development assistance or through contractual relationships, such
as the ones with Rwanda, is always robustly policed to ensure
that it is spent exclusively on the issues that it is designed to
address. We have a strong, good working relationship with the
Government of Rwanda, who are absolutely committed to being the
exporter of solutions to global problems, rather than the
exporter of problems.
Andrew Rosindell (Romford) (Con)
The people of Romford are angry that they are not getting the
police cover from the Mayor of London that we pay for. We are
seeing a crime wave across Romford, including in Gidea Park, and
we have seen a stabbing in the town centre. We have had enough.
Will the Minister please ensure reform, so that Essex towns such
as Romford get the service that Roger Hirst gives to the people
of the historic county?
Chris Philp
My hon. Friend is quite right to draw attention to the contrast
between the excellent work done by Roger Hirst in Essex and the
appalling job being done by Sadiq Khan in London. Sadiq Khan is
the only one of the 43 police and crime commissioners to have
missed his recruitment target and, tragically, police officer
numbers are falling in London, in contrast to the rest of the
country. Londoners will have a chance to cast their vote on 2
May, and I hope that they kick him out.
James Murray (Ealing North) (Lab/Co-op)
T8. My constituent Maysara is a British citizen, and his parents
live in Gaza. His parents successfully applied for visas to visit
him in the autumn last year, but they were unable to travel after
7 October, and their visas expired. I contacted the Home Office
on Maysara's behalf to ask if those visas could be extended, but
I was told that his parents would have to make new applications.
However, there are no functioning visa application centres in
Gaza, so will the Minister explain what exactly my constituent's
parents should do?(902350)
James Cleverly
I am more than happy to look at the details of the case. The hon.
Gentleman has to understand that the circumstances on the ground
changed dramatically after Hamas' brutal mass murder rampage on 7
October, and our security posture in the region has had to be
enhanced. I am not making any implications about his
constituent's family, but he and the House will understand that
we must be careful in everything we do when it comes to accepting
people who are leaving Gaza in these circumstances.
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