Oral Answers to Questions Debate

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Department: Home Office

Oral Answers to Questions

Karen Lumley Excerpts
Monday 19th March 2012

(12 years, 1 month ago)

Commons Chamber
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Theresa May Portrait Mrs May
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Police forces up and down the country are doing what is necessary to make the savings that we are asking them to make. They are transforming the way in which they provide policing and rightly looking to ensure that the private sector can be brought in where that will increase efficiency and save money. A Labour Government would have cut police spending and reduced police budgets. Nobody on the Labour Front Bench has said that they would intend to reverse the cuts in police spending. It is about time that the Opposition stopped opposing every opportunity that we are giving the police to ensure that they can save money from back offices and get the police out on the streets.

Karen Lumley Portrait Karen Lumley (Redditch) (Con)
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8. What steps she is taking to ensure that people applying to settle in the UK can contribute to the economy.

Damian Green Portrait The Minister for Immigration (Damian Green)
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On 29 February, we announced changes that will break the link between coming here to work and settling permanently and ensure that only those who make a significant economic contribution can stay. In future, most skilled workers will need to be paid a minimum salary of £35,000 to settle here.

Karen Lumley Portrait Karen Lumley
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I welcome the Minister’s comments. I am glad that settlement will no longer be an automatic consequence of long-term residence, but can he assure my constituents that that will be properly enforced?

Damian Green Portrait Damian Green
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I am grateful for my hon. Friend’s support, and I can give her that assurance. The new measures will be no different in this regard from any other immigration route. She and the House may be aware that we have now reached 11,000 arrests of criminals, including murderers, rapists and illegal immigrants, as a result of the processing of advance passenger information through e-borders. In 2011, in a clampdown on sham marriages, we carried out over 300 enforcement operations and prosecuted almost 230 people. That is the kind of tough enforcement that we need, and now have, to back up our immigration system.