A passenger at Heathrow Airport in London. The UK government wants to slash immigration levels.Credit:Bloomberg
The plan comes after official figures last month showed net migration had risen to a record 745,000 last year. MPs from the ruling Conservative Party have since piled pressure on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and his government to bring it down.
According to the plan designed to give Sunak a grip on the politically charged issue ahead of an election year,people seeking to obtain a visa to work in the UK would need a job that pays at least £38,700 ($73,837) annually,up from £26,200,while care workers would be barred from bringing their families into the country.
British citizens and residents who want to bring their foreign spouse to Britain will have to earn the same amount – almost double the current threshold. Some fields with a shortage of workers,such as health and social care,would be exempt from the higher threshold.
A YouGov poll last week found that 41 per cent of voters said immigration was one of the three biggest issues facing the country,up from 14 per cent in 2020. Only the economy and the National Health Service (NHS) are seen as more pressing problems.
British Home Secretary James Cleverly.Credit:Bloomberg
The sharp increase represents a huge political challenge for the Conservatives,whose successive governments have repeatedly promised to reduce net migration since winning power in 2010,and vowed to “take back control” of the country’s borders since the Brexit vote.