Cameron´s
immigration bill to include crackdown on illegal foreign workers.
Published by The Guardian – May 21, 2015. |
David
Cameron will try to brush off embarrassing net migration figures on Thursday by
announcing details of a new immigration bill to be included in the Queen’s
speech, which will propose a new criminal offence of illegal working that will
allow police to seize the wages of anyone employed unlawfully.
It
has been estimated that the backlog of people in Britain who have overstayed
their visas and whose whereabouts are unknown is 300,000, but it is not known
how many are working. Cameron managed to survive the general election, even
though he once urged voters to kick him out if he failed to bring net migration
down to the tens of thousands.
The
last official quarterly net migration figures showed net migration was 298,000
last year, 54,000 higher than when he made the pledge in 2010.
Cameron
promised in the Tory manifesto to keep the pledge, although he also said he
would be adding new metrics to test whether migration was being reduced.
In
practice, his success in this parliament will not depend solely on new
legislation but also on deeper trends in the European labour market and any
agreements reached on tightening social security entitlements within the EU –
one of his key targets in his renegotiation of the UK relationship with the
rest of the trading bloc.
The
last published figures covered the 12 months to September 2014 and showed that
immigration rose from 530,000 the previous year to 624,000, while emigration
remained stable at 327,000.
In
his latest speech on immigration – clearly designed to address the latest
figures – Cameron will promise that the Queen’s speech will contain an
immigration bill designed to bring the whole of government into the battle to
reduce migration flows. He will promise the bill will make “Britain a less attractive place to come and
work illegally”.
Migrants
with current leave to remain but who are working illegally in breach of their
conditions may be prosecuted under the Immigration Act 1971 and be liable on
summary conviction to a six-month custodial sentence and/or an unlimited fine.
But
ministers say there is a loophole for migrants who entered illegally or have
overstayed their leave and are not therefore subject to current conditions of
stay.
This
new offence will address this gap and close a loophole whereby the wages of
some illegal migrants fall outside of the scope of the confiscation provisions
in the Proceeds of Crime Act, unlike those individuals who are working in
breach of leave conditions.The offence will apply to those who arrived
illegally or those who entered the UK legally but then overstayed.
Cameron
said: “A strong country isn’t one that
pulls up the drawbridge, it is one that controls immigration. Because if you
have uncontrolled immigration, you have uncontrolled pressure on public
services. Reforming our immigration and labour market rules so we reduce the
demand for skilled migrant labour and crack down on the exploitation of
unskilled workers. That starts with making Britain a less attractive place to
come and work illegally”.
The
home secretary said on BBC Radio 4’s Today that the amendments would act as a
deterrent to people working in the UK illegally.
Theresa May said: “It is not about revenue raising. It is about
making it harder for people to be working illegally and setting a clear
deterrent for those that want to stay here illegally I think most people would
think it is entirely fair and right to say that if you’re here illegally you
have got no right to be here and you’re working, that is an offence, and we
should be able to deal with the wages as the proceeds of crime.”
The
main powers, many previously trailed but rejected by the Liberal Democrats,
include new measures for councils to crack down on unscrupulous landlords and
evict illegal migrants more quickly.
Banks
will also be required to do more to check bank accounts against databases of
people in the UK illegally.
The
right to deport first and for the migrant to appeal later will be extended to
all immigration appeals and judicial reviews. Satellite tracking tags will be
placed on foreign criminals awaiting deportation so it is easier for Home
Office officials to follow their location.
A
new offence of illegal working will also be introduced to close a loophole that
means people who are in the UK illegally cannot benefit from working and their
wages will be given the same status as a proceed of crime so making it subject
to seizure by police.
No
businesses and recruitment agency will be permitted to recruit abroad without
advertising in the UK.
In
addition, a new labour market enforcement agency will established to crack down
on the worst cases of labour market exploitation, such as workers being paid
the minimum wage but then being housed in tied accommodation at extortionate
rents.
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