UK touts a clampdown on illegal working as it seeks to look tough on
immigration
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[February 10, 2025]
By JILL LAWLESS
LONDON (AP) — The British government on Monday touted its success in
raiding businesses that employ unauthorized workers and deporting
thousands of migrants with no right to stay in the U.K.
What’s billed as a “blitz on illegal working” is part of a pledge by the
center-left Labour government to reduce immigration -– a priority for
many voters -– and stop the growing popularity of the hard-right party
Reform U.K.
But for migrants groups, and some Labour Party members, the images
uncomfortably recall a previous Conservative government’s pledge to make
Britain a “hostile environment” for illegal migration. That led to
thousands of long-term legal residents being denied housing, jobs or
medical treatment because they could not prove their status. Dozens were
detained or deported to countries they had not visited for decades.
The government said Monday that immigration enforcement teams have
carried out more than 5,000 raids since Labour was elected in July on
businesses including nail bars, convenience stores, vape shops,
restaurants and car washes, and made almost 4,000 arrests. The figures
are significantly higher than the previous year, when the Conservatives
were in power.
Britain also has deported more than 16,000 people in the same period.
The government plans to release video footage of migrants being deported
later Monday in a PR move that has been criticized as crass and
insensitive.
Home Office Minister Angela Eagle defended the government’s tough
approach.
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“We have to have a system where the rules are respected and enforced,”
she told the BBC. “It’s important that we show what we are doing and
it’s important that we send messages to people who may have been sold
lies about what will await them in the U.K. if they get themselves
smuggled in.”
A new tough immigration bill likely to pass Monday
The government says the perception that it’s easy to find work in
Britain is a “dangerous draw” for migrants who try to cross the English
Channel on small boats. Authorities in the U.K. and France have
struggled for years to stop the dangerous crossings, which brought more
than 38,000 people to Britain in 2024. More than 70 people perished in
the attempts.
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People thought to be migrants who undertook the crossing from France
in small boats and were picked up in the Channel, arrive to be
disembarked from a small transfer boat which ferried them from a
larger British border force vessel that didn't come into the port,
in Dover, south east England, Friday, June 17, 2022. (AP Photo/Matt
Dunham, File)
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Prime Minister Keir Starmer has said the crime gangs are a threat to
global security and should be treated like terror networks. The
Border Security, Asylum and Immigration Bill, which faces a key vote
in Parliament on Monday, contains new powers including the ability
to seize suspected traffickers' phones before they are arrested.
It will also formally scrap the Safety of Rwanda Act, which
underpinned the previous Conservative government’s contentious plan
to send some asylum-seekers who reach Britain by boat on a one-way
trip to Rwanda. Starmer branded the plan an expensive gimmick, and
canceled it soon after taking office.
The new immigration bill is almost certain to pass because of
Labour’s large majority. But some feel uneasy. Human rights group
Liberty said the bill sets a “dangerous precedent” in bringing in
counterterrorism-style powers for offences that are not terrorism.
The Conservatives, meanwhile, called it “a weak bill that won’t stop
the boats.”
Support for anti-immigrant Reform party on the rise
Labour won a landslide election victory just seven months ago, but
the government’s popularity has slumped and polls suggest a surge in
support for Reform U.K., the populist anti-immigrant party led by
Nigel Farage. Reform has only five seats in the 650-seat House of
Commons but is vying for top spot in polls with Labour and the main
opposition Conservatives, even though an election is likely four
years away.
Reform’s rise has left both Labour and the Tories scrambling to
respond, and is part of the reason for the government talking tough
on immigration.
But Rob Ford, professor of political science at the University of
Manchester, cautioned that “wooing back Reform voters with red meat
on Farage’s favorite issues is a strategy with low prospects of
success and high risks.”
“Labour won last summer with a ruthless focus on issues which united
a broad coalition -– growth, public services and the cost of
living,” he wrote in The Observer newspaper. “Focusing instead on
issues which divide Labour and play to Farage’s strengths is not a
great strategy.”
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