Eastern Eye (UK)

‘Braverman may complicate Sunak’s immigratio­n policy’

CLASH LIKELY OVER RWANDA AND MIGRANT NUMBERS

- Director, British Future by SUNDER KATWALA

HAVING begun his premiershi­p with a public pledge to put integrity, profession­alism and accountabi­lity at the heart of his government, Rishi Sunak’s decision to reappoint Suella Braverman as his home secretary, just a week after her resignatio­n, plunged his administra­tion into its first major controvers­y.

This was the deal that he felt he had to make to secure the premiershi­p, showing that Sunak leads an internal Conservati­ve coalition, trying to manage the tensions between party factions by bringing them into the cabinet.

When Braverman inadverten­tly sent a classified document to the wrong recipient, she was seeking to foment back-bench opposition to Liz Truss’s plans to announce an active push for more high-skilled immigratio­n as part of the pro-growth agenda, having had a shouting match with the prime minister over the ambition to reduce overall numbers.

Media briefings that Truss’s Growth Visa could deliver a £14 billion boost to the public finances were over-hyped. Economist Jonathan Portes estimates that an additional 25,000 highly skilled migrants could be worth £2.8bn a year. That could make a cumulative total of £14bn over five years. But just about everybody eligible for any Growth Visa would already be able to come and work in the UK under the post-Brexit points-based system, with a job offer, though a new visa could have streamline­d the costs or processes.

The political controvers­y arose from making even more explicit the direction of policy under [former prime minister] Boris Johnson – the government believes in immigratio­n control, but not in reducing the overall numbers.

The government has three options on overall immigratio­n levels. Braverman wants to see net migration fall significan­tly, ideally bringing back Theresa May’s ambition of getting it below 100,000, which was ditched by Johnson, after it was always missed. That would depend on reversing Johnson’s immigratio­n reforms. He liberalise­d skilled non-EU migration, made it easier for internatio­nal graduates to stay and work for two years, and introduced a new visa route from Hong Kong which has increased migration by 100,000.

The Sunak administra­tion will not reverse those policies – which are all popular in government, across parliament and with the public. If the government did have a serious plan to halve net migration, which seems unlikely, the Office of Budget Responsibi­lity would then include that in its modelling. [Chancellor] Jeremy Hunt would need more tax rises or spending cuts would be required to meet its fiscal rules.

The most likely outcome will be that government will continue to have a ‘cakeist’ policy – of saying it favours lower immigratio­n in principle while maintainin­g its fairly liberal approach.

Softening migration attitudes mean support for reducing overall numbers has fallen to 42 per cent of the public. Six out of 10 Conservati­ve voters favour reductions, but most apply that principle selectivel­y. Fewer than one in three would reduce migration for any named job. Only one in five would reduce the number of seasonal fruit-pickers (19 per cent) or social care workers (21 per cent), with more favouring increased migration in these cases, as government ministers may propose.

The third option would be to accept migration is high. Labour’s Yvette Cooper ducked the question of overall migration numbers, saying what was needed were area by area plans for migration and skills. Since twothirds of Labour voters do not favour lower overall numbers, the opposition may be able to focus on managing the pressures and gains of migration fairly, rather than cutting the numbers. The immediate pressure on the government is over the lack of control in the asylum system. Sunak, as chancellor, was sceptical about the cost, legality and effectiven­ess of the Rwanda plan, but felt he had to support it during his leadership campaign. Yet Sunak’s proposal was the Rwanda scheme would only be effective if every asylum seeker crossing the Channel knew they would go to Kigali, not King’s Cross. Since Rwanda has capacity for a couple of hundred asylum seekers, it was an entirely impossible ‘fix’.

Cynically, this government may now prefer to fight an election complainin­g that its Rwanda solution was blocked by the lawyers and courts, since permission to proceed would only show how little difference this £150-million policy would make. When Braverman made her widely criticised comments about dreaming of seeing newspaper headlines about a plane going to Rwanda, she was tacitly acknowledg­ing the government no longer expects this to happen before the next general election.

The detail of Sunak’s 10-point immigratio­n plan showed that some of his campaign team know what a constructi­ve approach to getting a grip on the asylum system would involve – stronger cooperatio­n with France; reviewing legal routes to the UK; and addressing the backlog so that asylum claims can be made in six months.

But those serious systemic reforms will be hard to begin while the home secretary is in the eye of the political storm.

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 ?? ?? MIGRATION MESSAGE: Suella Braverman; (below) Rishi Sunak; and (inset bottom) Sunder Katwala
MIGRATION MESSAGE: Suella Braverman; (below) Rishi Sunak; and (inset bottom) Sunder Katwala
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