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Migration Settlement Pathway 2025-11-20

20 November 2025

Lead MP

The Secretary of State for the Home Department

Debate Type

Ministerial Statement

Tags

ImmigrationAsylum & RefugeesMigrants & BordersTaxation
Other Contributors: 22

At a Glance

The Secretary of State for the Home Department raised concerns about migration settlement pathway 2025-11-20 in the House of Commons. A government minister responded. Other MPs also contributed.

How the Debate Unfolded

MPs spoke in turn to share their views and ask questions. Here's what each person said:

Government Statement

ImmigrationAsylum & RefugeesMigrants & BordersTaxation
Government Statement
Today, Shabana Mahmood announced a fairer pathway to settlement for migrants. She highlighted that since 2021, approximately 400,000 people have claimed asylum and 2.6 million more have moved to Britain than left it. The minister criticised the previous Conservative government's 'Boriswave' period, where immigration controls were lifted significantly, leading to abuse in health and care visas. She proposed extending settlement eligibility from five years to ten years with new criteria including a clean criminal record, English proficiency at A-level standard, sustained national insurance contributions, and no debt. The minister also announced specific pathways for those with higher earnings or volunteering and outlined stricter conditions for those who have received benefits or entered illegally. These changes apply to all current migrants not yet granted indefinite leave to remain, but the rules will not change for those already holding settled status.

Shadow Comment

Chris Philp
Shadow Comment
Chris Philp responded by criticising the Labour government's handling of illegal immigration and legal migration. He noted that since the Home Secretary took office, 10,000 illegal immigrants have crossed the channel, and asylum claims hit a record high under their leadership. Philp supported many aspects of the minister’s statement but criticised the delay in implementing policies previously proposed by his party, which Labour initially opposed.
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