Good morning. Families have been left in limbo by the
government’s new plan to reduce net immigration — and the
politics of the row are far from certain to rebound to
Conservative advantage. Some thoughts on how and why the
government got here in today’s note.
Where I did
begin, there shall I end
|
|
|
Families already settled in the UK face
being uprooted under the new rules that will require
anyone sponsoring a family visa — and in some cases, renewing
one — to earn £38,700 a year, up from £18,600 today. Downing
Street confirmed that this sharp increase in the income that UK
citizens and settled migrants must earn if they want to bring
foreign family members or partners into the country will apply
retroactively in some cases. When renewing a family visa,
British citizens living with a foreign spouse can consider their
combined income when both of them are already working in the UK.
Most of Britain’s population do not earn enough to be able to
marry and live in the country with a foreign spouse. That the
change is set to apply to some visa renewals as well as new
applications will, I think, leave people feeling a particularly
keen sense of injustice. (That said, as a result, I don’t think
this measure will last very long, if it is ever fully
implemented.)
The Conservative party’s difficulties over net migration are
very reminiscent of New Labour’s struggles over the free
movement of people when they were in government. Labour didn’t
want to pull the lever that would have allowed them to actually
“resolve” the thing some of their voters disliked (leaving the
EU) so instead they tried to meet the public halfway by
introducing greater and greater cruelty into the rest of the
UK’s immigration system.
The prohibition on allowing asylum seekers to work while the
Home Office processes their claim was a New Labour innovation —
as was the hostile environment and a slew of additional
obstacles to people coming to the UK from outside the European
Economic Area. Of course, none of these policies actually did a
thing about the free movement of people within the EEA, and
ultimately did nothing to stop the UK leaving the EU.
The political circle that Labour increasingly struggled to
square was that it wanted to keep the UK’s then-economic model —
which relied on being inside the EU — but they also wanted to
retain and gain the votes of people opposed to free movement.
Now the Conservative party are in a similar place over
immigration more broadly. They want to keep the UK’s current
economic model, broadly speaking — they don’t want taxes to get
higher or the labour market to get tighter — but they also want
the votes of people who don’t like the numbers of people who
come to the UK every year.
And just like New Labour, the response is to add layers of
additional cruelty into the system: such as preventing most
Britons from living with a foreign spouse. Even by the
government’s own account, these measures would see net
immigration fall to what would still be a very high level
(unpublished Home Office estimates put
the reduction expected from the doubling of the earnings
threshold “in the low tens of thousands”.) As the Times
reported, Rishi Sunak overruled advice from Home Office
officials not to raise the threshold that high, warning that
family reunion rights enshrined in the Human Rights Act would probably be used to challenge the
policy.
Just as then, very few Labour politicians would candidly say “I
am an unashamed pro-European”. Very few Conservative MPs will
say privately “I want to keep the current levels of spending and
taxation where they are or lower, and as such I am not that
bothered about tens of thousands of people coming to the UK to
work in the social care system”. And just as you would find with
Labour politicians right up until 2016, there are plenty of
Conservatives who talk a tough game on immigration in private
but who struggle once you ask them to turn aspiration into
policy.
What eventually happened to Labour was the system shock of
losing the EU referendum. It’s not clear what equivalent event
might force the Conservative party out of the same cycle of
evermore eye-catching proposals to tackle a problem that matters
to some Tory voters, but in practice is not that important to
most Tory ministers.
A confession: several of you have asked what my Spotify Wrapped
artists were (the streaming platform’s marketing exercise
summarises your listening habits during the year). I have to be
honest, although we use Spotify to collate all of the music I’ve
recommended in the course of this email, because you don’t need
a login to view it, I no longer use Spotify. This is because
Apple Classical is such a huge leap forward in terms of finding
classical music. I’ll publish my top listens later on in the
year, but today as I write I am listening to Ulrich Gumpert’s
recording of Erik Satie’s Pièces Froides.
-
English councils left with tough choices
| Nearly one in five council leaders in England
have said
they are likely to declare de facto bankruptcy
this year or next as a result of a lack of government
funding, according to the Local Government Association.
-
Infected blood payouts not ‘scored’ in spring
Budget | Ministers are drawing up plans to
establish
a £10bn to £20bn compensation scheme for the
victims of the UK’s long-running infected blood scandal,
but will schedule the payouts so they do not jeopardise
pre-election tax cuts.
-
Johnson set to face grilling | Boris
Johnson arrived at the Covid inquiry early this morning.
He will be forced to revisit and explain how his
government responded
to coronavirus over two days of questioning.
-
‘Red line’ | Rishi Sunak faces up to 10 ministers quitting if he
adopts a hardline approach on Rwanda and uses emergency
legislation to circumvent the European Convention on
Human Rights, Charles Hymas reports in the Telegraph.
|