UK's New Refugee Policies Spark Fury: Children Face Decade-Long Wait for Status

The UK Home Office is facing significant backlash and concerns over proposed changes to its immigration policies, specifically impacting "earned settlement" and family reunion rights. An analysis by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) reveals that over 300,000 children already residing in the UK, many as dependants on family work visas, could face a 10-year wait for settled status under the new proposals. This extends the qualifying period for most migrant workers from five to 10 years, and for those in below-graduate level jobs, to 15 years.
The retrospective application of these changes has drawn strong criticism from about 40 Labour MPs, who describe it as "un-British" and "moving the goalposts." They argue that penalizing individuals who made life-changing decisions based on previous rules is inherently unfair. The IPPR warns that such delays would prolong insecurity for families, leading to damaging consequences for integration, educational opportunities, and an increased risk of child poverty, as delayed settlement could restrict access to higher education, student finance, and stable employment. Marley Morris, IPPR associate director, emphasized the unfairness, stating that families "welcomed to the UK under one set of rules should not have the goalposts moved part way through their journey." Zayne, an 18-year-old on the five-year route facing a 10-year extension, highlighted the personal impact, noting his father's decision to work in the UK based on the promise of stability, now jeopardized, potentially preventing him from studying medicine.
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has defended the extension, stating that settlement in the UK is a "privilege not a right" and that a five-year period is "quite a short period" before permanent settlement and its associated benefits. She suggested that an extended period is appropriate to attract the "brightest and best" to the country.
Further controversy surrounds a major shake-up of asylum laws, which includes the suspension of family reunion visas. Veteran Labour peer Alf Dubs, himself a Kindertransport refugee who fled Nazi-occupied Czechoslovakia as a child, has accused Mahmood and other ministers of "pulling up the drawbridge once inside" and "kowtowing" to Nigel Farage’s Reform UK. Dubs specifically criticized the government's stance on preventing unaccompanied children from seeking refuge with UK-based family members, despite his past successful efforts, like the 2016 "Dubs amendment," which allowed 480 unaccompanied child refugees into the UK.
Dubs, a long-standing advocate for refugee children, argues that human rights principles should prevail and that the government should accept, in principle, that asylum-seeking children abroad with relatives settled in the UK should be allowed to join them. He drew parallels between the current rise of extremism and the 1930s, recalling Britain's compassionate action during the Kindertransport. The suspension of family reunion visas, which previously allowed adults with refugee status to sponsor spouses/partners and dependent children, took effect in September 2025 and is planned to last until "spring 2026," with new restrictions potentially including income thresholds and English-language tests.
Mahmood's position, supported by a source close to her, is that once order and control are restored to UK borders, safe and legal routes for genuine asylum seekers will open. She also reportedly believes that without significant changes to differentiate asylum seekers from "economic migrants," the government risks losing public consent for the entire asylum system, potentially leading to widespread divisions. A Home Office spokesperson affirmed that under new reforms, family reunion will "no longer be automatic," requiring stricter criteria, though other routes will be available for eligible individuals.
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