
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood has vowed reforms to migration law, so people must prove they are making a social contribution before they can settle in Britain.
In her first major interview since taking over the reins of the Home Office, Ms Mahmood signalled she believed migration âhas been too highâ.
Speaking to the Sun on Sunday ahead of Labourâs party conference in Liverpool, the Home Secretary added: âThe pace of that migration has been very, very fast. I totally understand why people have concerns about it.â
She told the newspaper she wanted to tighten rules around claiming indefinite leave to remain, the status which grants legal migrants the ability to settle in the UK without the need to renew a visa every few years.
Ms Mahmood added: âWe need legal migration, it is a good thing. We are a country that has always welcomed people who want to come and work here.
âBut I think in addition to living and working here there is a bigger thing to do as well which is to make sure that people are making a contribution to their wider community and wider society.â
She went on to say that ministers are looking at how to make sure indefinite leave to remain âis linked not just to the job you are doingâ, but also âthe wider contribution you are making to our communitiesâ.
The hint that Labour could change the rules for indefinite leave to remain comes after Nigel Farageâs Reform UK pledged to scrap the settled status for all non-EU migrants if it wins power.
Elsewhere in her Sun on Sunday interview, the Home Secretary branded the decision to house illegal migrants in hotels a âtotal disaster for the countryâ.
Securing the border is âfundamental to holding the country togetherâ, she added.
Ms Mahmood went on: âI know if Iâm not able to get this mess sorted out, then there will be more division in our country.
âThe far right is on the rise. I think thatâs a dangerous moment for the country.â
The Home Secretary also promised reforms to human rights law before Christmas in a bid to prevent its use in halting the deportation of illegal migrants.
The European Convention on Human Rights and other treaties have been âused in a way that was never intendedâ, Ms Mahmood said.