UK says EU immigrants won't get priority after Brexit

AP  |  Birmingham 

Britain will not offer citizens preferential status after Brexit, the government said Tuesday, announcing a system designed to give migrants with skills the UK needs priority over low-skilled migrants.

At present, all EU nationals can live and work in Britain under the bloc's free-movement rules, but that will change after the UK leaves next year.

Announcing Britain's biggest changes in a generation, said that the new system "ends freedom of movement once and for all" a key government promise on

"For the first time in decades, it will be this country that controls and chooses who we want to come here," May said.

Under the proposals announced at the conference in Birmingham, applicants from any country wanting to settle in Britain will have to meet a salary threshold, and will only be able to bring their family to live with them if they are sponsored by their employers.

The government confirmed its previous commitment that all the 3 million EU citizens currently living in Britain can stay, even if the UK leaves the bloc without an agreement on future relations.

Despite the government's assertion that all countries will be treated the same, ministers and business groups have said the UK could offer preferential access in return for free-trade deals including one with the EU.

The announcement includes a plan to speed up entry for short-term tourists and business visitors with a system of "visa checks" at airports.

is a divisive issue in Britain, and reducing the number of newcomers was a major factor for many who voted in 2016 to leave the

More than 1 million EU citizens have settled in Britain since eight formerly Communist eastern European nations joined the EU in 2004.

May said that "for too long people have felt they have been ignored on immigration and that politicians have not taken their concerns seriously enough."

The has a longstanding goal of reducing net immigration below 100,000 people a year, which it has never come close to meeting. The current level is more than double that.

The government's post-plan does not mention a figure, but says immigration will be set at "sustainable" levels.

Julia Onslow-Cole, at PwC, said businesses regarded the 100,000 target as "very unhelpful."

Former Amber Rudd, who was in charge of immigration policy until earlier this year, said the target had not been officially dropped, "but I don't think you'll find many secretaries of state championing it ever-louder."

Businesses in areas such as farming, food manufacturing, hotels and domestic care, which rely heavily on workers from the EU, warned they could face employee shortages under the proposals.

said the immigration system should be "demand-led" rather than based on a "cut-off line somewhere arbitrarily on salary or types of skills."

Pro-lawmaker said ending free movement from the EU was "an act of national self-sabotage that will lock us out of the world's largest single trading bloc that happens to be on our doorstep.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Tue, October 02 2018. 19:00 IST