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Further details of the Immigration Bill published

Summary

Queen's Speech background briefing notes reveal slightly more of what to expect in the forthcoming Immigration Bill

By EIN
Date of Publication:
28 May 2015

Background briefing notes published yesterday to accompany the Queen's Speech have revealed some further details of the forthcoming Immigration Bill.

Echoing much of the pre-election "hardworking family" rhetoric, the briefing says that the purpose of the Bill is to control immigration so as to put "hard working British families first" and "support working people."

As the Guardian noted about the election campaign in March: "It's about hardworking families. Families, working hard. In fact you could boil the whole campaign down to two key issues. Families. And hard work."

With the Immigration Bill's focus on targeting and criminalising illegal workers, Don Flynn of Migrants' Rights Network views the contrast with the above hard working families as "a step into that new territory which is shifting and moulding each and everyone of us into the ideologically useful forms of being either ‘good’ or ‘bad’ types of worker-citizens."

Regarding appeal rights, the briefing says that the Immigration Bill will boost removals and deportations by extending the principle of "deport first, appeal later" to all non-asylum cases, "except where it will cause serious harm."

You can read the full section on immigration from yesterday's Queen's Speech briefing below:

______________________________

Immigration

"Measures will be introduced… to control immigration."

The purpose of the legislation is:

• Control immigration, making sure we put hard working British families first.

• To support working people, clamp down on illegal immigration and protect our public services.

The main benefits of these clauses would be:

• Dealing with those who should not be here, by rooting out illegal immigrants and boosting removals and deportations.

• Reforming our immigration and labour market rules, so we reduce the demand for skilled migrant labour and crack down on the exploitation of low-skilled workers.

The main elements of the clauses are:

Illegal working: The Bill will introduce an offence of illegal working, making it clear to migrants who have no right to be here that working illegally in the UK is a crime, with consequences for their earnings. This will provide a firm legal foundation for the wages paid to illegal migrants to be seized as proceeds of crime.

Work: We will create a new enforcement agency that cracks down on the worst cases of exploitation. Exploiting or coercing people into work is not acceptable. It is not right that unscrupulous employers can exploit workers in our country, luring them here with the promise of a better life, but delivering the exact opposite, and the full force of the State will be applied to them. A new single agency will have the scale and powers to do this. The Bill will also make it illegal for employment agencies to recruit solely from abroad without advertising those jobs in Britain and in English.

Skills levy: A consultation will be carried out on funding apprenticeship schemes for British and EU workers by implementing a new visa levy on businesses that use foreign labour.

Services: A clearer bar on access to services by illegal migrants. We will build on the national roll-out of the landlord scheme established in the Immigration Act 2014, and make it easier to evict illegal migrants. We will ensure banks take action against existing current accounts held by illegal immigrants.

Appeals: Extend the principle of "deport first, appeal later" from just criminal cases, to all immigration cases. In 2014 the last government cut the number of appeal rights but other than foreign criminals, migrants retain an in-country right of appeal against the refusal of a human rights claim. We will now extend the "deport first, appeal later" principle to all cases, except where it will cause serious harm.

Tagging: Require all foreign offenders released on bail to be tagged, so we always know exactly where they are. This will prevent absconding and increase the number of criminals deported.

Existing legislation in this area is:

• Immigration Act 2014.

Devolution:

• Immigration is a reserved matter.