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Temporary Work Visa Holders Shouldn’t Stay In UK Forever, Badenoch Tells Labour

Onuado Cynthia by Onuado Cynthia
6 seconds ago
in Foreign News
Kemi Badenoch

Kemi Badenoch

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Leader of the UK Conservative Party, Kemi Badenoch, has urged the Labour government to retain its proposed 10-year qualifying period for indefinite leave to remain (ILR), insisting that temporary work visa holders should not automatically qualify for permanent settlement in Britain.

Badenoch stated this in a post on her X handle while releasing a letter addressed to the UK Home Secretary, in which she criticised reported attempts by some Labour lawmakers to water down the government’s planned immigration reforms.

“People who come to Britain on temporary work visas should not automatically be able to stay forever,” she wrote.

“This Labour government was right to make that harder. Now their MPs want them to U-turn. Conservatives will back Labour’s original plan to help get it through Parliament.”

In the letter, jointly signed by Badenoch and Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp, the Conservatives warned against reports that the government was considering exempting about two million migrants who entered the UK on work visas between 2021 and the present from the proposed reforms.

Describing the reported exemption as “a grave mistake,” Badenoch argued that Britain had previously experienced the consequences of allowing migrants to secure permanent settlement too quickly.

“As Conservatives learned to our cost, five years is too short a time to obtain the indefinite right to remain in the UK,” the letter stated.

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Badenoch further argued that many migrants currently employed in low-paid and low-skilled jobs could be replaced by economically inactive British citizens if more employment opportunities were created.

According to her, migrants who fail to make what she described as a significant economic contribution over a 10-year period should return to their home countries when their temporary work visas expire.

“Individuals who are not making a significant economic contribution over a ten-year period should not be allowed to stay indefinitely. Those not working, or working in low-paid jobs, should be required to go home at the end of their temporary work visa,” she said.

The Conservative leader also maintained that granting indefinite leave to remain after five years places additional pressure on Britain’s welfare system because beneficiaries become eligible for social benefits and can subsequently apply for British citizenship.

She argued that extending the qualifying period to 10 years would not amount to changing the rules retrospectively, stressing that temporary work visas do not automatically confer the right to permanent residence.

“The government is perfectly entitled to decide at any time the rules on indefinite rights of settlement, including in relation to those here already,” Badenoch said.

Offering cross-party support, she said the Conservative Party would back Labour’s original immigration proposals if they were introduced without dilution.

“If you table the proposals set out last autumn in undiluted form, either in the Immigration Rules or as part of the Immigration and Asylum Bill, we will support them,” the letter stated.

Badenoch added that the Labour government’s handling of the proposed reforms would demonstrate whether it was genuinely committed to controlling immigration and strengthening the UK’s borders.

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Onuado Cynthia

Onuado Cynthia

Cynthia Onuado is a journalist with Leadership Newspaper & TV, reporting on social development, gender, governance, and human interest stories across print and broadcast platforms. She is committed to ethical, people-centred journalism that amplifies underrepresented voices. She can be reached at [email protected] or on X at @alwayscynthia0.

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