Starmer announces reform of “breaking” immigration system

Keir Starmer is expected to announce reforms to the UK’s “broken” immigration system.
As part of the government’s broader change plan, the Prime Minister will announce that new immigration rules will reduce reliance on overseas recruitment and prioritize those who contribute to the UK economy.
In a Monday press conference ahead of the government’s new immigration white paper, Starmer will say that living in the UK is a must-have privilege.
Nigel Farage’s reforms The two weeks after Britain won the victory in the local elections, the number of relocation calms came two weeks later, winning two mayor seats and 677 council seats, as well as by-elections for Runcorn and Helsby.
Reform Britain wants to freeze all unnecessary migrant.
As of June 2023, net migration volume reached nearly 1 million, four times that of 2019.
Through this repression, Labour will promise to end the days of mass recruitment to fill avoidable skill gaps.
The threshold for automatic reconciliation and citizenship for anyone living in the UK will increase from the current five years to 10 years unless immigration can prove that they have a real and lasting contribution to the UK.
Highly skilled and highly contributed immigrants will be quickly tracked.
The English language requirements will be extended to all adults who wish to live and work in the UK.
Individuals will have to demonstrate that they have a basic understanding of English to help them integrate with their communities and reduce the risk of exploitation.
The Prime Minister would say it was part of a plan to prioritize British workers over cheap overseas workers.
Home Secretary Yvette Cooper will announce further reforms on Monday.
She has revealed over the weekend that Labor is stopping work visas this year.
More than 24,000 people have not been authorized to return here since Labor was elected.
Starmer is expected to say: “For years, we have had a system that encourages businesses to attract lower wages rather than investing in our young people.
“This is what this broken system creates Britain.
“Every area of the immigration system, including work, family and study, will be tightened, so we have more control. Law enforcement will be stricter than ever before, and immigration will fall.”
He will promise to create a “controlled, selective and fair” system that restores “common sense and control over our boundaries” and is a concise rest “with the past.”
The Prime Minister would say: “Lower net immigration, higher skills and support for British workers – that’s what this white paper can offer.”