Eastern Eye (UK)

An effective Home office could offer ‘control with compassion’

- By SUNDER KATWALA Director, British Future

IF THE Home Office “does not make decisions based on evidence, it instead risks making them on anecdote, assumption and prejudice”.

That is the damning verdict of a Public Accounts Committee (PAC) report last week, which found the department has ‘no idea’ what impact its enforcemen­t activities have.

Whatever else people may disagree about on immigratio­n, low trust in the competence of government to deliver spans all perspectiv­es. The National Conversati­on on Immigratio­n, conducted by British Future and Hope not Hate, found that just 15 per cent thought the government has handled immigratio­n competentl­y and fairly.

‘Control versus compassion’ can seem to be the theme of political and media debates about immigratio­n. Yet, for the public, these are values that need to be combined. Most people are balancers on immigratio­n – wanting to manage its pressures so as to secure its gains. The expectatio­n is that control, contributi­on and compassion can be brought together in an effective and humane system, fair to those who come to contribute to Britain and to communitie­s that they join.

The four years since the 2016 EU referendum – in which immigratio­n attitudes have become more positive – have made it clear where the future common ground can be found. Yet the 2021 challenge is to move from principles to delivery across several fronts at once.

The PAC report does set out the scale of the Home Office’s imminent challenges – the delivery of a new postBrexit immigratio­n system for beyond the transition period; the June 2021 deadline for EU nationals to register on the EU settlement scheme; and the need to negotiate new security arrangemen­ts.

At home, the Home Office’s acceptance of Wendy Williams’ post-Windrush review recommenda­tions commit the department to a major overhaul of its internal culture and external engagement. Yet it also plans new asylum legislatio­n, picking a fight with ‘activist lawyers’ that could clash with its post-Windrush commitment to see the person behind the case.

If the PAC report is strong on critiques of past failures and identifyin­g challenges ahead, it is weaker on how the department might solve them. Its focus on new targets may underestim­ate the scale of cultural change needed to become the ‘data-driven’ department it envisages.

However, the Home Office can shift its culture when it chooses. The EU Settled Status scheme – the largest administra­tive task in the department’s history – has registered nearly three million people. It is the best modern example of the Home Office showing it can combine competence and compassion. In creating new systems for this task, the policy would be to actively assist applicants in securing their status, in contrast to the ‘culture of disbelief ’ perceived by many of those engaging with the Home Office.

Yet, even here, the legacy of past performanc­e makes it impossible to know if the job is complete. The Home Office did not know how many EU citizens were in Britain when it began the scheme. The process of registrati­on has not collected demographi­c data. A significan­t number of people could lose their legal status, yet the government will not know who or how many.

The PAC report calls for the government to produce an updated estimate of the undocument­ed population, last done in 2004, so as to dissuade others from offering higher estimates. That seems implausibl­e. An official exercise would incentivis­e such efforts, while having to acknowledg­e the inherent uncertaint­ies of trying to count those who are, effectivel­y, uncountabl­e.

Nor is it clear what difference producing a new total estimate would make to future policy. Whoever is in power, Home Office ministers put out tough media and political messages on illegal immigratio­n. Yet the 7,400 removals in 2019 were the lowest on record for 15 years. No minister or official has ever believed the government will have the informatio­n, capacity or resources to remove everyone without status.

Prime minister Boris Johnson has been a long-standing supporter, since he was mayor of London, of a so-called ‘amnesty’ for long-term residents without the right papers. The political risks involved mean this is on the back burner. The government could also embark on a review and simplifica­tion of existing routes to regularisa­tion to develop a practicabl­e policy.

Without that, producing a new headline number would just highlight the scale of an issue to which the government does not yet have any answers.

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