The Daily Telegraph

Visa cap on foreign doctors to be lifted

May to ease curbs on medics from outside the EU after NHS warned of staff shortages

- By Steven Swinford Deputy political editor

THERESA MAY is expected to lift the cap on doctors from outside the EU within weeks, after the NHS warned that it was leading to staff shortages, The Daily Telegraph has learnt.

Government discussion­s are at a “fairly developed stage” after Jeremy Hunt, the Health Secretary, and Sajid Javid, the Home Secretary, persuaded the Prime Minister to relax restrictio­ns.

Mrs May previously blocked plans to water down the visa rules when pleas were made by Amber Rudd, Mr Javid’s predecesso­r in the Home Office.

The number of non-eu highly skilled workers who can move to the UK on “tier 2” visas in any one year, including doctors, is capped at 20,700.

Government sources said discussion­s were focusing on how to lift the cap, with the number of foreign doctors allowed into the UK likely to be tied to the needs of the NHS.

Mr Hunt has argued that doctors and nurses should be temporaril­y exempted from the cap until the Government’s planned 25 per cent increase in training places starts to have an effect.

Health chiefs have called the cap “absolutely barmy” after official figures revealed that 1,518 bids for visas by foreign doctors were turned down in the four months to March.

The move represents a significan­t softening of the Prime Minister’s tough line on immigratio­n and comes ahead of the 70th anniversar­y of the NHS next month. Mrs May is likely to face pres- sure from other members of her Cabinet to exempt other foreign workers in highly skilled profession­s from the cap.

Between December and March, more than 6,000 visa applicatio­ns were turned down from workers including doctors and scientists.

The Prime Minister has faced a series of challenges over her approach to immigratio­n, with ministers urging her to drop her target to reduce the number of people coming to the UK to “tens of thousands”. She has also faced mounting criticism of the “hostile environmen­t” for illegal immigrants in the wake of the Windrush scandal.

Mr Javid yesterday confirmed that the Government would take a “fresh look” at the overall cap on “tier 2” visas for highly-skilled workers. He also repeatedly refused to endorse the Prime Minister’s target for net migration.

He said that “a number of doctors that are qualified, that our NHS needs, are being turned away”.

The Home Secretary also echoed Ruth Davidson, the Scottish Conservati­ve leader, in suggesting that students should be removed from the net migration target.

On the Windrush immigratio­n scandal, Mr Javid said that 32 of the 63 people who were wrongly deported under the policy were convicted criminals who would not be allowed to return to the UK. The remaining 31 were being located and would be compensate­d, he said, as he confirmed that he would review “aspects” of the Mrs May’s “hostile environmen­t” strategy.

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