logo
Keir Starmer to give urgent press conference on major plans

Keir Starmer to give urgent press conference on major plans

Daily Mirror12-05-2025
Keir Starmer will give a Downing Street press conference shortly as the Government unveils a major immigration crackdown.
The Prime Minister will promise a "clean break with the past" as he sets out sweeping reforms to reduce net migration. Addressing the nation, he will promise that "enforcement will be tougher than ever and migration numbers will fall".
He is expected to speak at around 8.30am ahead of the Government publishing its long-awaited immigration white paper. This will contain a string of measures to make it harder for people to permanently settle in the UK. Migrants will need to live in Britain for a decade before they can apply for citizenship - instead of the current five year period.
However, high-skilled workers such as nurses, doctors, engineers and AI leaders could be fast-tracked under the plans. English language requirements will be tightened across all visa routes - and all adult dependents will be required to demonstrate a basic understanding of English.
Skilled worker visas will require a university degree and a care visa route for overseas workers will be closed under the plans.
The Government is battling to slash net migration - the difference between people arriving in the UK and leaving it - which ballooned to 728,000 in 2024 despite a string of Tory PMs promising to get numbers down.
It comes as Labour seeks to neutralise the threat from Nigel Farage after Reform UK swept to power in 10 councils in England and snatched a by-election win in Labour-held Runcorn and Helsby by six votes.
But the crackdown is likely to be controversial - with care providers branding a ban on overseas recruitment "cruel".
The PM is expected to say: 'This is a clean break from the past and will ensure settlement in this country is a privilege that must be earned, not a right.
"And when people come to our country, they should also commit to integration and to learning our language. Lower net migration, higher skills and backing British workers – that is what this White Paper will deliver.'
* This is a breaking news story. Follow us on Google News, Flipboard, Apple News, Twitter, Facebook or visit The Mirror homepage.
We'll be bringing you the latest updates on this Breaking Politics News story.
Get all the big headlines, pictures, analysis, opinion and video on the stories that matter to you by following The Mirror every time you see our name.
You can sign up for Twitter alerts for breaking news here @MirrorBreaking_ and follow us https://twitter.com/MirrorPolitics for all the latest updates.
Keep up-to-date with your must-see news, features, videos and pictures throughout the day by following us on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/MirrorPolitics/. See all our social accounts you can follow here: mirror.co.uk/social
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rubbish collections delayed as binmen go on holiday
Rubbish collections delayed as binmen go on holiday

Telegraph

timea few seconds ago

  • Telegraph

Rubbish collections delayed as binmen go on holiday

Rubbish collections are being delayed in London because of a staff shortage fuelled by binmen going on holiday. Ealing council has declared a driver shortage and admitted it could start paying the remaining workers more to fill the gap. The Labour-run authority said that although some staff were off sick, it expected the disruption to continue until September once holidays had finished. On Sunday night, the Government warned the council that taxpayers 'rightly expect and rely on' regular waste collections and that it must continue to provide the 'vital' service. Council tax bills went up across the borough in April, with charges increasing from £1,948 to £2,041 for the average Band D home. Those living in Band H homes, meanwhile, are now paying more than £4,000 in council tax. The disruption comes as residents of Birmingham wait for a resolution to a dispute between the binmen's union and the council which has seen rubbish piling up for six months. Ealing council said bin collection services were being deployed later than usual in a statement first issued to the Chiswick Calendar, a local news website. It added that any bins not collected on schedule would be prioritised the following day. A council spokesman said: 'We are sorry about the delays that are occurring to bin collections due to driver shortage and the impact it is having on residents. 'This is because a number of staff are currently off sick and, in addition, as it is the summer holiday period many staff are on leave, which we anticipate lasting until September when the holidays have finished.' The council said it was 'actively recruiting more staff' and that it employed a number of HGV drivers, who were 'highly sought after' by businesses that could offer them more money. 'This is an ongoing issue and we are reviewing salaries and other incentives for staff,' it added. Susan Hall, leader of the London Assembly Conservatives, said bins going uncollected across the capital was 'absolutely outrageous'. Ms Hall told The Telegraph: 'When you're paid to do a job, damn well do it and the people in charge of them, they need to be talked to as well. 'When you're running a company or a business, you have to make sure you've got a certain amount of staff in order to deliver the service you're providing. 'Just because these people work for a council, they assume they can do what they like. It's not good enough.' A spokesman for the Ealing Conservatives said: 'Ealing Council should have foreseen driver shortages over the summer. 'We are monitoring the situation carefully, as it's critical that waste is promptly collected over the hot period.' Earlier in the summer, residents in Croydon complained that their borough was filled with the 'persistent smell of decay' after waste management company Veolia failed to empty bins. Veolia was given a £21.5m eight-year contract by the local authority in April but there have been complaints of bins going uncollected for as long as seven weeks. The company apologised for having to re-route all kerbside collections, which it insisted would lead to 'more efficient' service in the long run but at the expense of short-term operations. Rowena Davies, the Labour mayoral candidate in Croydon, said the service being provided was 'so shockingly disappointing'. In Birmingham, rubbish continues to pile up as the dispute between the Unite trade union and the council in England's second city runs into a sixth month. Talks between Unite and the Labour-run council are deadlocked, with the local authority having paid £8m in agency costs to keep a skeleton bin service running. A Government spokesman said: 'Taxpayers rightly expect and rely on regular waste collections, and the government expects councils to continue providing this vital service to residents. 'Local communities deserve good public services which is why we've already made over £69 billion available this year to boost council finances, alongside more than £1bn for councils to improve recycling services. 'We will go further to reform the outdated funding system ensuring councils are funded fairly.'

Sir Keir Starmer and EU leaders will join Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy at White House peace talks
Sir Keir Starmer and EU leaders will join Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy at White House peace talks

Sky News

time44 minutes ago

  • Sky News

Sir Keir Starmer and EU leaders will join Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy at White House peace talks

Sir Keir Starmer will be accompanying Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy to Washington tomorrow for his crunch meeting with Donald Trump. He will join European leaders including France's president Emmanuel Macron, Italy's PM Giorgia Meloni and Germany's Chancellor Friedrich Merz after the US president reportedly extended an invitation to them. Also set to attend the talk at the White House are NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte and Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European Commission. This comes after Vladimir Putin reportedly made demands to take control of the key eastern Donetsk and Luhansk regions of Ukraine during his summit with Mr Trump as a condition for ending the war. In exchange, Mr Putin would give up other Ukrainian territories held by his troops, according to several news reports citing sources close to the matter. Mr Trump is said to be planning to urge Mr Zelenskyy to agree to the conditions as part of a peace deal to end the war, despite the Ukrainian president previously ruling out formally handing any territory to Moscow, as such a move would deprive Ukraine of defensive lines and open the way for Moscow to conduct further offensives. Russia already controls a fifth of Ukraine, including about three-quarters of Donetsk province, which it first entered in 2014. European leaders who make up the "coalition of the willing" are set to hold a conference call today ahead of the crunch talks between Mr Trump and Mr Zelenskyy, which some coalition members are set to attend. They are expected to discuss how to bring Mr Zelenskyy into talks after Mr Trump and Mr Putin's meeting saw him left out in the cold. In coordinated statements following the Alaska summit, European leaders said Mr Zelenskyy must play a greater role in future talks, and that peace cannot be achieved without him. The US president said the Washington talk with Mr Zelenskyy could potentially pave the way for a three-way meeting with Mr Putin. On Saturday, Downing Street insisted Sir Keir and other allies stand ready to support the next phase of talks to end the war. "At the meeting that will take place at the White House tomorrow, the Prime Minister, with other European partners, stands ready to support this next phase of further talks and will reaffirm that his backing for Ukraine will continue as long as it takes," a statement from No 10 said.

Racing tax: What is it and why is the sport going on strike
Racing tax: What is it and why is the sport going on strike

North Wales Chronicle

timean hour ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Racing tax: What is it and why is the sport going on strike

For the first time in the modern history of the sport in Britain, its participants will voluntarily go on strike for a day. A day of protest will be held in Westminster. What does that mean? It means there will be no racing in Britain on September 10. The meetings scheduled for Lingfield, Carlisle, Uttoxeter and Kempton that day will not take place. They have been rescheduled to other dates. And why has all this come about? The strike announcement has come as part of British racing's 'Axe the Racing Tax' campaign, which is urging the Government to axe the Treasury's proposal to bring existing online betting duties into one single rate. Why would tax rises be so bad? Economic analysis commissioned by the British Horseracing Authority has shown that aligning the current tax rate paid by bookmakers on racing with that of online games of chance could see a £330 million revenue hit to the industry in the first five years, putting 2,752 jobs at risk in the first year alone. Strike action will surely cost the sport money? It will, it is estimated it will cost around £200,000 in lost revenue on the day. So does the racing industry support the strike move? In a word, yes. Racecourses, owners and trainers are all in agreement. The National Trainers Federation said cancelling fixtures was 'a huge sacrifice' which 'should serve as a stark reminder to the Government of the impact its tax raid will have on our sport'. Is this is a one-off, or will there be more strikes? No more strikes are planned, as things stand. Can I still have a bet anywhere that day? Yes, there will actually be one meeting in Ireland, at Cork. Irish racing is run completely separately to British racing.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store