Home secretary Shabana Mahmood has promised the reform of the Migration Act, so people must prove that they will make social contribution before they can settle in the UK.
In his first major interview, after mastering the home office, Mahmood meant that he believed the migration was “too high”.
When talking to Sun on Sunday before Labor’s party conference in Liverpool, the home secretary added: “The pace of that migration has been very, very quickly. I fully understand why people are concerned about it.”
He told the newspaper that he wanted to tighten the rules on the remaining permission, a position that allows legal immigrants to settle in the United Kingdom without the need to renew the visa every few years.
MS Mahmood added: “We need legal immigration, that’s a good thing. We are a country that has always hoped for people who want to come here.
“But in my opinion, in addition to living and working here, it is also a bigger thing to make sure that people contribute to a broader community and a wider society.”
He went on to ensure that the ministers were trying to ensure that the indefinite permission to remain “not only for the work you do” but also “a broader contribution to our communities”.
The hint that the workforce could change the rules for staying on an indefinite holiday will come after the Nigel Farage Reform UK promised to ruin the established position of all non -EU migrants if it overcomes power.
Elsewhere in his sun, in an interview with Sunday, the home secretary made a decision to place illegal migrants in hotels “overall catastrophe”.
Securing the border is “essential to keeping the country together,” he added.
Mrs. Mahmood continued, “I know if I can’t get this clutter to sort, then there is more division in our country.
“The right is on the rise. I think it’s a dangerous moment to the ground.”
The Home Secretary also promised the Reforms of the Human Rights Act before Christmas to prevent it from stopping the expulsion of illegal immigrants.
The Convention on the European Human Rights and Other Conventions has been used “in a way that was never intended,” Mahmood said.