Mahmood demands migrants earn right to settlement in UK

Updated 29 September 2025: BBC: Mahmood demands migrants earn right to settlement in UK

Migrants will have to prove they are contributing to society to earn the right to remain in the UK, the home secretary has said.

In her speech to the Labour conference, Shabana Mahmood outlined a series of new conditions migrants have to meet to qualify for indefinite leave to remain.

Under the proposals, legal migrants will have to learn English to a high standard, have a clean criminal record and volunteer in their community to be granted permanent settlement status.

Labour says the policy draws a clear dividing line between the government and Reform UK, which says it would abolish indefinite leave to remain.

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The truth about asylum seeker hotels

21 September 2025: Manchester Evening News: The truth about asylum seeker hotels

SPECIAL REPORT: As protests continue outside hotels housing people seeking asylum in our region, the Manchester Evening News looks at how we ended up in this situation, what the government is planning to do about it and where asylum seekers will go when the hotels are closed.

[…] The number of decisions made on asylum applications has increased since the Labour government came to power last year.

However, according to GMIAU, the ‘rushed process’ means that many are being wrongly rejected and appealing these decisions.

“Although the Home Office has sped up decision making, the rushed process is affecting the quality of decision making, meaning that many are being wrongly refused asylum,” a spokesperson for GMIAU said.

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Behind the doors of asylum hotels

23 September 2025: BBC: Behind the doors of asylum hotels – what I found when I went inside

As I eat a meal cooked on the floor of a shower, I realise nothing has prepared me for what life is like for the residents of an asylum hotel.

[…]

The Home Office says it is identifying more suitable relocation sites for asylum seekers, such as disused buildings and former military facilities.

In the meantime, “we expect all providers to uphold the highest standards in preserving the safety, security, and wellbeing of those in their care”, said a spokesperson.

Since talking to me at the asylum hotel, Kadir and his family have been told they are to be moved on once more – to two hotels in different cities. Kadir and his baby daughter have been offered accommodation in one hotel, and Mira, Shayan and Roman in another, nearly 200 miles away.

But they are refusing to go. Kadir has already been told he has lost his weekly benefit and there is a chance the family will be deemed to have made themselves intentionally homeless.

The future for the family – like many other asylum seekers – remains anything but certain.

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Yvette Cooper’s Plans to Fix the Asylum System Won’t Work

1 September 2025: Independent: Yvette Cooper’s Plans to Fix the Asylum System Won’t Work

After a summer of spiralling migrant numbers and protests outside asylum hotels, the home secretary has returned to the Commons with tougher new restrictions – but Labour looks like it’s playing catch-up to Reform, says Emily Sheffield

On the government’s first day back in the Commons – after a summer marked by dire headlines about asylum hotels and an ever-rising number of arrivals in small boats – Yvette Cooper was probably hoping that her plans to fix “our broken asylum system” would draw a line under things. Fat chance, home secretary.

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Briefing: the sorry state of the UK asylum system

27 August 2026: Freemovement: Briefing: the sorry state of the UK asylum system

In this briefing we will take a look at what is really going on with the main features of the contemporary asylum system: arrivals, the backlog, detention, removal and resettlement. The focus is on what caused the backlog and what consequences will flow from the large number of decisions being made. The information is drawn mainly from the quarterly immigration statistics and transparency data for the year ended June 2025, the most recent available at the time of writing.

The picture the data presents is of a system that has been overwhelmed. Not by new arrivals but by mismanagement.

Read more: https://freemovement.org.uk/briefing-the-sorry-state-of-the-uk-asylum-system