Information between 27th January 2026 - 6th February 2026
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Wednesday 4th February 2026 9:30 a.m. Home Affairs Committee - Oral evidence Subject: The work of the Home Office View calendar - Add to calendar |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026 2 p.m. Home Affairs Committee - Oral evidence Subject: Routes to Settlement View calendar - Add to calendar |
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Monday 2nd February 2026 Home Office Lord Hanson of Flint (Labour - Life peer) Legislation - Main Chamber Subject: Crime and Policing Bill - committee stage (day 14) - part two Crime and Policing Bill 2024-26 View calendar - Add to calendar |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026 Home Office Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle (Green Party - Life peer) Orders and regulations - Main Chamber Subject: Public Order Act 2023 (Interference With Use or Operation of Key National Infrastructure) Regulations 2025 - motion to decline Public Order Act 2023 (Interference With Use or Operation of Key National Infrastructure) Regulations 2025 View calendar - Add to calendar |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026 Home Office Lord Hanson of Flint (Labour - Life peer) Orders and regulations - Main Chamber Subject: Public Order Act 2023 (Interference With Use or Operation of Key National Infrastructure) Regulations 2025 - motion to approve Public Order Act 2023 (Interference With Use or Operation of Key National Infrastructure) Regulations 2025 View calendar - Add to calendar |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Home Office Lord Hanson of Flint (Labour - Life peer) Statement - Main Chamber Subject: Police Reform White Paper (dinner break business around 7.30pm) View calendar - Add to calendar |
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Digital Exploitation of Women and Girls
49 speeches (9,169 words) Tuesday 27th January 2026 - Westminster Hall Home Office |
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Crime and Policing Bill
64 speeches (18,125 words) Committee stage part one Tuesday 27th January 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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Crime and Policing Bill
39 speeches (7,157 words) Committee stage part three Tuesday 27th January 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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Crime and Policing Bill
111 speeches (30,583 words) Committee stage part two Tuesday 27th January 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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Asylum and Immigration: Children
21 speeches (1,731 words) Tuesday 27th January 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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Police and Criminal Evidence (Northern Ireland) Order 1989 (Application to Immigration Officers and Designated Customs Officials in Northern Ireland) and Consequential Amendments Regulations 2026
2 speeches (33 words) Tuesday 27th January 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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National Police Service
27 speeches (1,775 words) Wednesday 28th January 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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Animal Testing
17 speeches (3,061 words) Wednesday 28th January 2026 - Westminster Hall Home Office |
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Firearms Licence Holders: Mandatory Medical Markers
47 speeches (9,373 words) Wednesday 28th January 2026 - Westminster Hall Home Office |
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Police Funding Settlement 2026-27: England and Wales
1 speech (1,206 words) Wednesday 28th January 2026 - Written Statements Home Office |
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Town and City Centre Safety
87 speeches (14,138 words) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Westminster Hall Home Office |
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Animals in Science Regulation Unit: Annual Report 2024
33 speeches (7,348 words) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Westminster Hall Home Office |
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Police Reform White Paper
21 speeches (5,785 words) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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Shamima Begum
24 speeches (1,600 words) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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Indefinite Leave to Remain
193 speeches (27,520 words) Monday 2nd February 2026 - Westminster Hall Home Office |
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Crime and Policing Bill
187 speeches (42,503 words) Committee stage Thursday 5th February 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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Fast-Track Visas: Skilled US Citizens
16 speeches (3,166 words) Wednesday 4th February 2026 - Westminster Hall Home Office |
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Public Order Act 2023 (Interference With Use or Operation of Key National Infrastructure) Regulations 2025
35 speeches (11,344 words) Wednesday 4th February 2026 - Lords Chamber Home Office |
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Prostitution: Decriminalisation
Asked by: Neil Duncan-Jordan (Labour - Poole) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, if she will make it her policy to abolish laws which criminalise brothel keeping. Answered by Jess Phillips - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) Criminal justice is devolved to Scotland and Northern Ireland. The Home Office is responsible for legislation in England and Wales. Under the current law in England and Wales, the acts of buying and selling sex are not in themselves illegal. There are existing offences related to sexual exploitation in the Sexual Offences Act 2003 including causing or inciting prostitution for gain, controlling prostitution for gain, and paying for the services of a prostitute subjected to force, threats or any other form of coercion or deception.
On 18 December 2025, the Government published Freedom from violence and abuse: a cross-government strategy to build a safer society for women and girls, https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/freedom-from-violence-and-abuse-a-cross-government-strategy. In this strategy, the Government committed to reviewing how the law addresses prostitution (this includes brothel keeping legislation) to ensure it better protects women and girls. Further details will be set out in due course. The Home Office engages regularly with organisations that represent sex workers, sexually exploited adults, people trafficked for sex, the police and other relevant stakeholders. For example, on 16 July 2025, the Home Office launched a public call for evidence on how the Government can improve the process of identifying victims of modern slavery and human trafficking, including for victims of sexual exploitation. This call for evidence provided an opportunity to hear views of survivors, first responders, law enforcement and prosecution services, devolved administrations, non-governmental organisations and any groups or people with an interest in the modern slavery victim identification system. The call for evidence closed on 8 October 2025 and a report summarising the key findings and themes will be published early this year. |
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Prostitution: Decriminalisation
Asked by: Neil Duncan-Jordan (Labour - Poole) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, if her Department will take steps to decriminalise sex work throughout the UK. Answered by Jess Phillips - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) Criminal justice is devolved to Scotland and Northern Ireland. The Home Office is responsible for legislation in England and Wales. Under the current law in England and Wales, the acts of buying and selling sex are not in themselves illegal. There are existing offences related to sexual exploitation in the Sexual Offences Act 2003 including causing or inciting prostitution for gain, controlling prostitution for gain, and paying for the services of a prostitute subjected to force, threats or any other form of coercion or deception.
On 18 December 2025, the Government published Freedom from violence and abuse: a cross-government strategy to build a safer society for women and girls, https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/freedom-from-violence-and-abuse-a-cross-government-strategy. In this strategy, the Government committed to reviewing how the law addresses prostitution (this includes brothel keeping legislation) to ensure it better protects women and girls. Further details will be set out in due course. The Home Office engages regularly with organisations that represent sex workers, sexually exploited adults, people trafficked for sex, the police and other relevant stakeholders. For example, on 16 July 2025, the Home Office launched a public call for evidence on how the Government can improve the process of identifying victims of modern slavery and human trafficking, including for victims of sexual exploitation. This call for evidence provided an opportunity to hear views of survivors, first responders, law enforcement and prosecution services, devolved administrations, non-governmental organisations and any groups or people with an interest in the modern slavery victim identification system. The call for evidence closed on 8 October 2025 and a report summarising the key findings and themes will be published early this year. |
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Prostitution
Asked by: Neil Duncan-Jordan (Labour - Poole) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, whether she has held recent discussions with (a) sex workers and (b) representative organisations on the law on prostitution. Answered by Jess Phillips - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) Criminal justice is devolved to Scotland and Northern Ireland. The Home Office is responsible for legislation in England and Wales. Under the current law in England and Wales, the acts of buying and selling sex are not in themselves illegal. There are existing offences related to sexual exploitation in the Sexual Offences Act 2003 including causing or inciting prostitution for gain, controlling prostitution for gain, and paying for the services of a prostitute subjected to force, threats or any other form of coercion or deception.
On 18 December 2025, the Government published Freedom from violence and abuse: a cross-government strategy to build a safer society for women and girls, https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/freedom-from-violence-and-abuse-a-cross-government-strategy. In this strategy, the Government committed to reviewing how the law addresses prostitution (this includes brothel keeping legislation) to ensure it better protects women and girls. Further details will be set out in due course. The Home Office engages regularly with organisations that represent sex workers, sexually exploited adults, people trafficked for sex, the police and other relevant stakeholders. For example, on 16 July 2025, the Home Office launched a public call for evidence on how the Government can improve the process of identifying victims of modern slavery and human trafficking, including for victims of sexual exploitation. This call for evidence provided an opportunity to hear views of survivors, first responders, law enforcement and prosecution services, devolved administrations, non-governmental organisations and any groups or people with an interest in the modern slavery victim identification system. The call for evidence closed on 8 October 2025 and a report summarising the key findings and themes will be published early this year. |
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Repatriation
Asked by: James McMurdock (Independent - South Basildon and East Thurrock) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, pursuant to her Department publishing an open opportunity contract on 6 January 2026 entitled Home Office Returns Reintegration Programme (HORRP) - Phase 3 - 2026 – 2028, whether her Department plans to issue similar contracts to support deportations to other countries. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) This programme plays a crucial part in negotiating returns arrangements with other countries, which is essential to making returns of their citizens effective and sustainable, so we will continue working with countries worldwide to achieve this. |
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Homes for Ukraine Scheme
Asked by: Baroness Monckton of Dallington Forest (Conservative - Life peer) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask His Majesty's Government what steps they are taking to give Ukrainians who have come to the UK under the Homes for Ukraine Sponsorship Scheme clarity on their future immigration status. Answered by Lord Hanson of Flint - Minister of State (Home Office) Those who have been granted sanctuary in the UK under the Homes for Ukraine Scheme, are able to apply for further permission to stay through the Ukraine Permission Extension scheme (UPE). On 1 September, the Government announced in parliament that the UPE Scheme would be extended for an additional 24 months to enable those eligible to obtain a further period of permission following their initial permission under UPE. Individuals who currently have permission under the UPE scheme will be able to apply for the extension online, in advance of their current permission expiring. More detail on the application process will follow in due course. The UPE extension reflects a generous and meaningful commitment to support those displaced by the conflict, while also respecting the Ukrainian Government’s strong desire for the future return of its citizens when it is safe to do so. The Government will continue to monitor developments in Ukraine closely and act responsibly in its response. |
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Asylum: Cameron Barracks
Asked by: Chris Philp (Conservative - Croydon South) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what assessment she has made of the potential impact on the welfare of military families living in accommodation next to the Cameron Barracks, in light of the site now being used as asylum accommodation. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Consideration of this site is ongoing and any final decision to utilise any site for the intended purposes will be made once the relevant factors have been properly considered. The Home Office continues to engage regularly with representatives from the local authority, NHS, Police, and other local partners – via an Operational Working Group in addition to bi-lateral conversations. Safety and security of residents, staff and the neighbouring community will remain central to any decisions. We will ensure that any development is safe, appropriate, and compliant with planning regulations. |
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Asylum: Cameron Barracks
Asked by: Chris Philp (Conservative - Croydon South) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what formal process has been followed regarding the change of use of the Cameron Barracks. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Consideration of this site is ongoing and any final decision to utilise any site for the intended purposes will be made once the relevant factors have been properly considered. The Home Office continues to engage regularly with representatives from the local authority, NHS, Police, and other local partners – via an Operational Working Group in addition to bi-lateral conversations. Safety and security of residents, staff and the neighbouring community will remain central to any decisions. We will ensure that any development is safe, appropriate, and compliant with planning regulations. |
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Asylum: Housing
Asked by: Andrew Ranger (Labour - Wrexham) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, whether her Department has made an assessment of the adequacy of a five-day response window for community consultation on proposals for large-scale asylum accommodation; and whether guidance will be revised to ensure adequate time is provided for local residents and stakeholders to respond. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office remain committed to ensuring that any impact on local communities is kept to a minimum. Consultation with local authority officials forms a vital part of procurement of asylum accommodation. The Home Office and its accommodation providers operate a robust consultation process, which not only ensures that local authorities are aware of all ongoing procurement activity of Dispersed Accommodation in their respective areas but also allows them to share local expertise and intelligence at the earliest opportunity to inform procurement. However, to protect the safety and security of those being housed in Dispersal Accommodation (DA), we do not consult with local residents or publish details of DA address in the public domain. Our accommodation providers ensure that consultation with local authorities is carried out in accordance with the requirements and standards set out in the Asylum Accommodation and Support Contracts. We work closely with statutory partners throughout the process to ensure effective coordination and oversight. |
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Asylum: Housing
Asked by: Andrew Ranger (Labour - Wrexham) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what oversight her Department has of consultation processes undertaken by private asylum accommodation providers when proposing new accommodation sites; and what minimum standards are required to ensure engagement with local communities. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office remain committed to ensuring that any impact on local communities is kept to a minimum. Consultation with local authority officials forms a vital part of procurement of asylum accommodation. The Home Office and its accommodation providers operate a robust consultation process, which not only ensures that local authorities are aware of all ongoing procurement activity of Dispersed Accommodation in their respective areas but also allows them to share local expertise and intelligence at the earliest opportunity to inform procurement. However, to protect the safety and security of those being housed in Dispersal Accommodation (DA), we do not consult with local residents or publish details of DA address in the public domain. Our accommodation providers ensure that consultation with local authorities is carried out in accordance with the requirements and standards set out in the Asylum Accommodation and Support Contracts. We work closely with statutory partners throughout the process to ensure effective coordination and oversight. |
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Repatriation
Asked by: James McMurdock (Independent - South Basildon and East Thurrock) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, pursuant to her Department publishing an open opportunity contract on 6 January 2026 entitled Home Office Returns Reintegration Programme (HORRP) - Phase 3 - 2026 – 2028, what assessment her Department has made of the potential impact of this scheme on the future number of illegal migrants coming to the UK from (a) Algeria and (b) Sri Lanka. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Since 2021, the UK has seen record numbers of people arriving illegally and claiming asylum, with increasing pressure on public services and accommodation – this scheme is designed to improve returns cooperation with these countries, support those being returned to their country of origin, and ultimately remove more people. |
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Asylum: Cameron Barracks
Asked by: Chris Philp (Conservative - Croydon South) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what estimate she has made of the cost of providing recreational activities and health services to asylum seekers at the Cameron barracks. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Consideration of this site is ongoing and any final decision to utilise any site for the intended purposes will be made once the relevant factors have been properly considered. The Home Office continues to engage regularly with representatives from the local authority, NHS, Police, and other local partners – via an Operational Working Group in addition to bi-lateral conversations. Safety and security of residents, staff and the neighbouring community will remain central to any decisions. We will ensure that any development is safe, appropriate, and compliant with planning regulations. |
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Asylum: Cameron Barracks
Asked by: Chris Philp (Conservative - Croydon South) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what steps she is taking to engage with local communities in Inverness, in light of the decision to use the Cameron barracks as asylum accommodation. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Consideration of this site is ongoing and any final decision to utilise any site for the intended purposes will be made once the relevant factors have been properly considered. The Home Office continues to engage regularly with representatives from the local authority, NHS, Police, and other local partners – via an Operational Working Group in addition to bi-lateral conversations. Safety and security of residents, staff and the neighbouring community will remain central to any decisions. We will ensure that any development is safe, appropriate, and compliant with planning regulations. |
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Asylum: Cameron Barracks
Asked by: Chris Philp (Conservative - Croydon South) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, whether asylum seekers at the Cameron barracks will have access to publicly-funded therapists. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Consideration of this site is ongoing and any final decision to utilise any site for the intended purposes will be made once the relevant factors have been properly considered. The Home Office continues to engage regularly with representatives from the local authority, NHS, Police, and other local partners – via an Operational Working Group in addition to bi-lateral conversations. Safety and security of residents, staff and the neighbouring community will remain central to any decisions. We will ensure that any development is safe, appropriate, and compliant with planning regulations. |
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Female Genital Mutilation and Forced Marriage
Asked by: Baroness Stedman-Scott (Conservative - Life peer) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask His Majesty's Government whether they will publish the feasibility study conducted by the University of Birmingham in 2023–24 on the possibility of developing prevalence estimates for female genital mutilation and forced marriage. Answered by Lord Hanson of Flint - Minister of State (Home Office) The violence against women and girls (VAWG) strategy committed to conducting an additional study, building on the University of Birmingham study, to explore the viability of the recommended approach in producing a national prevalence estimate for forced marriage and FGM. This study is due to conclude in March after which the Government will review the findings of both studies in the round and consider next steps, including publication. |
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Home Office: Mitie
Asked by: Charlie Dewhirst (Conservative - Bridlington and The Wolds) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for government’s most important contracts, Data for July to September 2025, published on 25 December 2025, how customer satisfaction with cultural sensitivity is monitored for the Security Guarding Services contract with MITIE SECURITY LIMITED. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Security Guarding Services contract KPI relating to cultural sensitivity is a qualitative KPI and is measured through a Customer Satisfaction evaluation survey completed on a quarterly basis. The KPI is monitored and reported through the contract management meetings held with Mitie Security Limited. |
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Repatriation
Asked by: James McMurdock (Independent - South Basildon and East Thurrock) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to her Department publishing an open opportunity contract on 6 January 2026 entitled Home Office Returns Reintegration Programme (HORRP) - Phase 3 - 2026 – 2028, how many additional removals does she estimate this scheme will result in. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) We have an ambitious target of continuously increasing returns in the coming years, and this contract will play an important supporting role in helping us deliver on that objective. |
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Asylum: Housing
Asked by: Andrew Ranger (Labour - Wrexham) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what assessment has been made of the (a) value for money and (b) adequacy of the performance of contracts held by private asylum accommodation providers under the asylum accommodation programme; and how her Department plans to ensure accountability for the use of public funds under these contracts. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Over the past year, the Home Office has significantly strengthened its approach to assuring Key Performance Indicator (KPI) data and applying service credits where providers fail to meet contractual obligations. Our inspection and assurance regime is risk-based and proportionate to contract value, combining scheduled and unannounced visits. As a result of reforms to its contract management capability, the Department has recovered £74 million in the current financial year through profit-share repayments and service credits. We will continue to strengthen transparency and oversight and enhance our MI platforms to optimise assurance and inspection activity. |
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Repatriation
Asked by: James McMurdock (Independent - South Basildon and East Thurrock) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, pursuant to her Department publishing an open opportunity contract on 6 January 2026 entitled Home Office Returns Reintegration Programme (HORRP) - Phase 3 - 2026 – 2028, whether there will be a cap on the quantity of financial assistance provided under the scheme to help migrants with setting up a business. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The in-kind (non-cash) provision to assist returning individuals to set up a business or access locally available educational or training opportunities through the programme is capped at £1500. The £1500 Returnee Educational and Entrepreneurship Fund (REEF) is a ring-fenced amount that those who signed-up to the programme can apply for following arrival. They will have to submit a business proposal to either set up a business, further education or vocational training. If the proposal is successful then the delivery partner procures everything in the individual's behalf so no funds are provided to the returnee. |
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Repatriation
Asked by: James McMurdock (Independent - South Basildon and East Thurrock) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, pursuant to her Department publishing an open opportunity contract on 6 January 2026 entitled Home Office Returns Reintegration Programme (HORRP) - Phase 3 - 2026 – 2028, whether the funding to support legal migration pathways and recruitment in third countries will include migration to Europe. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Support provided by the HO Returns Reintegration Programme is only in relation to potentially migrating to a third country and not back to the UK. |
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Police and Crime Commissioners
Asked by: James Cleverly (Conservative - Braintree) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the answer of 7 January 2026 to Question HL13000 on Police and Crime Commissioners, whether those savings include the operational costs of PCC functions being transferred to the offices of elected combined authority mayors. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) As set out in the government’s answer to Question HL13000, we expect to be able to save at least £20m per annum from 2028/29 as a result of aligning back office and support arrangements for policing governance with wider local government functions. This includes savings as a result of transferring PCC functions to combined authority mayors. |
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Home Office: Deloitte and LA International Computer Consultants
Asked by: Charlie Dewhirst (Conservative - Bridlington and The Wolds) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to the Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) for government’s most important contracts, Data for July to September 2025, published on 25 December 2025, what the Key Performance Indicators are for the (a) Digitise Delivery Support contract with DELOITTE MCS LTD and (b) QAT74 End to End Testing contract with LA International Computer Consultants Limited. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) For Digitise Delivery Support contract with DELOITTE MCS LTD performance is managed through Balanced score card performance process by the Migration Border Tech Portfolio business. Performance assessed the supplier against themes : - Performance to pay process - Service requests and onboarding - Delivery of the outcome of the various roles; project management, partnering behaviours and value add services and social value. For QAT74 End to End Testing contract with LA International Computer Consultants Limited, the KPIs are : - Partnering Behaviours - Delivery - Value Add |
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Electronic Cigarettes and Tobacco: Smuggling
Asked by: James Cartlidge (Conservative - South Suffolk) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what assessment she has made of the potential merits of extending to county councils the provisions of the Anti-social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 on issuing closure notices in cases of illegal trading of tobacco and vaping products on the high street. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) The closure power, under the Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014, enables police or local councils - including county councils where there is no district council - to close premises quickly which are being used to commit nuisance or disorder. The closure power, along with all the powers in the 2014 Act, is deliberately local in nature, and it is for local agencies to determine whether its use is appropriate and meets the legal test in the specific circumstances. The global supply of illicit tobacco is significant and the high profit margins continue to attract organised criminal networks. HMRC are fully aware of this threat and take robust, coordinated action in response. Working in close partnership across government, we target production at its source, intercept illicit products at the border and in retail environments, and pursue and prosecute those involved in the illicit tobacco trade. Stubbing out the problem: A new strategy to tackle illicit tobacco - GOV.UK sets out how HMRC, Border Force and partner agencies tackle illicit tobacco. It seeks to target loopholes at all stages of the supply chain, to keep ahead of the criminals. The strategy:
National Trading Standards plays a key part in tackling illicit tobacco at a local level. It provides both a visible and tangible deterrent that organised criminality and anti-social behaviour surrounding the supply of illicit tobacco will not be tolerated. HMRC values the close working partnership it has with National Trading Standards through Operation CeCe and is committed to building on its success by increasing the level of funding available to Trading Standards. This means that we can have an even greater impact in tackling the illicit tobacco trade, undertaking more visits, creating more disruption, detecting and seizing more illicit product, tackling underage sales and reducing community harm. HMRC is progressing preparations for the 1 October 2026 introduction of Vaping Products Duty with a strong focus on compliance readiness and illicit market risk. |
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Public Houses: Crime Prevention
Asked by: Andrew Snowden (Conservative - Fylde) Wednesday 28th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what guidance her Department issues to local authorities, police forces and licensed premises on the operation of Pubwatch schemes. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) Pubwatch schemes are voluntary, licensee-led local partnerships that operate independently of Government. Advice and practical resources for such schemes are provided by the National Pubwatch charity, which supports local groups across the country. Separately, the Home Secretary issues statutory section 182 guidance under the Licensing Act 2003 to licensing authorities in England and Wales on the discharge of their functions. Licensing authorities must have regard to this guidance, which supports partnership working between licensing authorities, the police and industry to promote the four licensing objectives. The section 182 guidance does not set operational requirements for Pubwatch schemes but does recognise and support industry led schemes such as Pubwatch as examples of good practice in promoting safer, well run licensed premises. |
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Entertainers: Migrant Workers
Asked by: Baroness Fraser of Craigmaddie (Conservative - Life peer) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask His Majesty's Government what steps they are taking to assess the importance of maintaining the temporary shortage list status of dancers and choreographers (standard occupational classification code 3414); and what assessment they have made of the impact of recent changes to salary thresholds and visa restrictions on professional dance companies and the UK performing arts industry. Answered by Lord Hanson of Flint - Minister of State (Home Office) We have commissioned the Migration Advisory Committee (MAC) to review the new Temporary Shortage List (TSL), which provides limited exemptions from the skills threshold. The MAC are due to report in the summer and we will consider their recommendations at that time. An impact assessment of changes to the Skilled Worker immigration route has been published alongside the statement of changes. There are also provisions within the immigration system for dancers to use the Temporary Work – Creative Worker and Visitor routes. |
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Animal Experiments
Asked by: Lord Clement-Jones (Liberal Democrat - Life peer) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask His Majesty's Government, with reference to the Animals in Science Regulation Unit Annual Report 2024, published in December 2025, what steps they are taking to prevent and sanction non-compliance to regulations including (1) the re-use of animals for testing without licence, (2) depriving animals used for testing of food and water and, (3) animals used for testing dying due to drowning or starvation. Answered by Lord Hanson of Flint - Minister of State (Home Office) The Government remains fully committed to continuous improvement in the regulation of the use of animals in science, and to strengthening the UK’s position as a global leader in science and innovation. As part of this, the Home Office is in the final stages of delivering a comprehensive programme of regulatory reform to further strengthen the Animals in Science Regulation Unit (ASRU), ensuring confidence in the regulatory system and maintaining robust compliance with the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 (ASPA). As part of the reform programme, the number of inspectors will increase from 14.5 full-time equivalent (FTE) positions at the end of 2017 to 22 FTE positions by March 2026. All licensed establishments must fully uphold the standards for animal welfare set out in ASPA and in the Code of Practice for the Housing and Care of Animals Bred, Supplied or Used for Scientific Purposes. ASRU conducts regular audits to assure compliance and takes any instance of non-compliance extremely seriously. ASRU’s published Compliance Policy (www.gov.uk/guidance/animal-testing-and-research-compliance-with-aspa) sets out how the regulator identifies, investigates and responds to potential incidents of non‑compliance, and how it applies appropriate and proportionate measures and sanctions where breaches are found. Through the delivery of this policy, the regulator aims to minimise the risk of future non‑compliance. The Government’s strategy Replacing Animals in Science: A strategy to support the development, validation and uptake of alternative methods sets out a long-term vision to accelerate the development and use of nonanimal approaches. The Home Office will continue to apply ASPA’s rigorous licensing framework, ensuring that animals are only used where no validated non-animal alternative exists. |
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Animal Experiments
Asked by: Baroness Bennett of Manor Castle (Green Party - Life peer) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask His Majesty's Government, with regard to the Animals in Science Regulation Unit Annual Report 2024, published in December 2025, what assessment they have made of the two incidents in which live animals were found to have been accidentally put into waste bags; whether they have considered the adequacy of 'letters of reprimand' being issued as a sanction in response; and what actions they will be taking to prevent such incidents from taking place in future. Answered by Lord Hanson of Flint - Minister of State (Home Office) All licensed establishments must fully uphold the required standards for animal welfare as set out in the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 (ASPA) and the Code of Practice for the Housing and Care of Animals Bred, Supplied or Used for Scientific Purposes. The Animals in Science Regulation Unit (ASRU) conducts audits to assure establishments’ compliance and takes matters of non-compliance very seriously. Regarding the incidents referenced, ASRU investigated the incidents and acted according to the published compliance framework (www.gov.uk/guidance/animal-testing-and-research-compliance-with-aspa) which explains how ASRU identifies and investigates potential incidents of non-compliance and decides on appropriate and proportionate measures and remedies where non-compliance has been found to occur. Through delivery of the compliance policy the Regulator aims to reduce the risk of future non-compliance. All cases of non-compliance are thoroughly investigated, and the outcomes are published in ASRU’s annual report. |
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Members: Correspondence
Asked by: Andrew Griffith (Conservative - Arundel and South Downs) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, when she plans to respond to correspondence of (a) 2 December 2025, (b) 2 January 2026 and (c) 20 January 2026 from the hon. Member for Arundel and South Downs. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) The Minister for Policing responded on 29 January. |
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British Nationals Abroad: USA
Asked by: Andrew Rosindell (Reform UK - Romford) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many people have been deported from the USA to the UK in each year since 2016. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) The UK and US have a bilateral arrangement to proactively share information about criminals being deported from the UK to US and the US to UK. This came into effect on 29 July 2020. International partners are not obliged to notify each other about the deportation or removal of individuals to another country. Notifications from the US to UK are received and processed by the ACRO Criminal Records Office (ACRO). ACRO has recorded receipt of the following number of notifications from the US since 29 July 2020:
The Home Office does not produce official statistics on this topic. |
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Asylum: Translation Services
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what is the total annual cost of interpretation and translation services for asylum seekers in each of the last three years. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The information requested is not centrally held and could only be collated and verified for the purpose of answering this question at disproportionate cost. |
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Asylum: Housing
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what steps her Department took in 2025 to help support scrutiny by (a) the Public Accounts Committee and (b) other hon. Members of the (i) costs and (ii) service content of asylum accommodation contracts; and whether any data was withheld. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office has published details of the AASC contracts, including the Statement of Requirements which gives a detailed breakdown of all the services to be undertaken by our accommodation providers and to the standards we expect. Full details of this can be found here: http://data.parliament.uk/DepositedPapers/Files/DEP2018-1112/AASC_-_Schedule_2_-_Statement_of_Requirements.pdf Information on asylum expenditure is published in the Home Office Annual Report and Accounts. In addition, the Home Office and Ministers have provided written and oral evidence about asylum support and accommodation to the Home Affairs Select Committee and to the Public Accounts Committee - copies and transcripts are available from the Committees’ websites. Data and information related to commercially sensitive information, performance management and other confidential aspects of the contracts and services are withheld to protect the commercial and legal position of the Home Office and its contracted Providers. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Leisure
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how much her Department spent on (a) recreational activities, (b) leisure provision and (c) community engagement activities for migrants who arrived in the UK illegally by (i) provider and (ii) type of activity in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office holds a contract with Changing Lives Ltd, now operating as Simply Active Group CIC, for the provision of a structured programme of recreational activity at Wethersfield. The contract commenced on 26 August 2024 and is scheduled to end on 19 February 2026. The original contract can be viewed on Contracts Finder: Recreational Activity Provision - Contracts Finder. The Home Office does not pay its Accommodation Providers to deliver recreational activities across the estate. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how much her Department spent on security provision at hotels and other accommodation sites housing migrants who arrived in the UK illegally by contractor, region, and cost per site in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) We do not report and hold data at this granularity and would only be obtainable at disproportionate cost. The Home Office publishes information on asylum expenditure in the Home Office annual report and accounts: 2024 to 2025 - GOV.UK. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how much her Department spent on cleaning, maintenance and repair services at hotel and contingency accommodation sites by supplier and cost per (a) room and (b) site in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) We do not report and hold data at this granularity and would only be obtainable at disproportionate cost. The Home Office publishes information on asylum expenditure in the Home Office annual report and accounts: 2024 to 2025 - GOV.UK. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how much her Department spent on (a) food provision, by dietary requirement and (b) catering by (i) supplier and (ii) cost per person per day for migrants who arrived in the UK illegally who are housed in (A) hotels and (B) other accommodation sites in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) We do not report and hold data at this granularity and would only be obtainable at disproportionate cost. The Home Office publishes information on asylum expenditure in the Home Office annual report and accounts: 2024 to 2025 - GOV.UK. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Cleaning Services
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how much her Department spent on (a) laundry services, including contracted laundries, (b) on-site services and (c) reimbursements by (i) supplier and (ii) accommodation site type in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) We do not report and hold data at this granularity and would only be obtainable at disproportionate cost. The Home Office publishes information on asylum expenditure in the Home Office annual report and accounts: 2024 to 2025 - GOV.UK. |
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Asylum: Housing
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, whether her Department plans to publish in full the service specifications, unit prices, and key performance indicators attached to asylum accommodation contracts that operated in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office’s asylum contracts are publicly available on Contracts Finder. Copies of the contracts, including redactions, are available at the below links. Commercially sensitive information (including pricing details) and information related to performance management of services (including service credits) are redacted to allow the Home Office to obtain maximum value during the lifetime of its contracts. The Home Office has no current plans to publish any further information related to its asylum contracts, other than the information already publicly available. Information on the requested contracts is available below: Serco - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NW - Contracts Finder, AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract MEE - Contracts Finder
Mears - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NEYH - Contracts Finder, AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Scotland - Contracts Finder, AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NI - Contracts Finder
CRH - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Wales - Contracts Finder, AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract South - Contracts Finder
CTM -CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract - Contracts Finder, Contract for the Provision of Asylum Accommodation and Travel Services - Contracts Finder
PFS - Support Payment Card - Contracts Finder
Migrant Help - AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Elligibility - Contracts Finder
Mitie Limited - Provision of Security Services at Home Office Contingency Accommodation - Contracts Finder
British Refugee Council - Independent Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children (UASCs) Support Service - Contracts Finder
thebigword Group Limited - Language Services - Translation & Interpretation - Contracts Finder
VF Services (UK) Limited - Contract for the provision of Home Office and Asylum Interviews - Contracts Finder |
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Asylum: Housing
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many and what proportion of her Department's asylum accommodation contract terms and schedules relating to services and unit costs were redacted; and on what grounds those redactions were made. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office’s asylum contracts are publicly available on Contracts Finder. Copies of the contracts, including redactions, are available at the below links. Commercially sensitive information (including pricing details) and information related to performance management of services (including service credits) are redacted to allow the Home Office to obtain maximum value during the lifetime of its contracts. The Home Office has no current plans to publish any further information related to its asylum contracts, other than the information already publicly available. Information on the requested contracts is available below: Serco - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NW - Contracts Finder, AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract MEE - Contracts Finder
Mears - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NEYH - Contracts Finder, AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Scotland - Contracts Finder, AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NI - Contracts Finder
CRH - AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Wales - Contracts Finder, AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract South - Contracts Finder
CTM -CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract - Contracts Finder, Contract for the Provision of Asylum Accommodation and Travel Services - Contracts Finder
PFS - Support Payment Card - Contracts Finder
Migrant Help - AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Elligibility - Contracts Finder
Mitie Limited - Provision of Security Services at Home Office Contingency Accommodation - Contracts Finder
British Refugee Council - Independent Unaccompanied Asylum-seeking Children (UASCs) Support Service - Contracts Finder
thebigword Group Limited - Language Services - Translation & Interpretation - Contracts Finder
VF Services (UK) Limited - Contract for the provision of Home Office and Asylum Interviews - Contracts Finder |
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Asylum: Housing
Asked by: Euan Stainbank (Labour - Falkirk) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what steps she is taking to help ensure that new asylum seeker accommodation is equitably dispersed between the regions and nations of the United Kingdom. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The department operates a Full Dispersal model which works to ensure that asylum accommodation is equitably and fairly spread out across regions and nations of the United Kingdom, meaning that a small number of local authorities are not unduly burdened. To facilitate this, we have developed Asylum Accommodation Plans in partnership with Local Government which set out our approach to the procurement and occupancy of Dispersal Accommodation across the UK. The Plans are underpinned by an indexing model which weights three key overarching factors. Indexing provides a flexible, transparent evidence-based for the dispersal of the national asylum-seeking population to ensure equity remains at the core. The overarching factors are:
These three factors ensure the plans are evidence- based and strike a balance between equity and availability, as well as for the first time considering various pressures in local areas which we have worked on with The Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government. The plans and indexing are reviewed regularly to ensure the plans are flexible to changing external factors. |
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Asylum: Housing
Asked by: John McDonnell (Labour - Hayes and Harlington) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what assessment she has made of the potential merits of the introduction of buffer zones around asylum accommodation. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office keeps the security of asylum accommodation sites under continual review, and the safety of asylum seekers and the local communities in which accommodation is located will always be our priority. While the Home Office recognises the merit in measures that help ensure safe access to accommodation, there are no clear powers within existing legislation that would enable the Secretary of State to create buffer zones around asylum accommodation. Local authorities may impose Public Spaces Protection Orders under section 59 of the Anti‑social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014, and the police have powers under section 14 of the Public Order Act 1986, but these powers do not extend to the Secretary of State. The Home Office continues to work closely with police, security teams, local authorities and other partners to ensure all accommodation sites are managed safely and securely. These stakeholders regularly attend Multi‑Agency Forums to provide updates and address concerns, including issues relating to protests or public order. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many hotels and other accommodation sites were used for illegal migrant accommodation in 2025; and what the average occupancy was across those sites. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) At its peak under the previous government, around 400 hotels were used to accommodate asylum seekers – costing £9 million per day. That figure is now under 200 - the government remains committed no longer using hotels to accommodate asylum seekers by the end of this Parliament. The Home Office does not publish data on the utilisation of asylum accommodation. We aim to utilise our estate as fully as possible, however, as with all types of accommodation properties may be temporarily vacant for a variety of operational reasons, including the need for maintenance or refurbishment work, or while awaiting allocation to new occupants following the departure of previous residents. Data on the number of supported asylum seekers in accommodation, including hotels, and by local authority can be found within the Asy_D11 tab for our most recent statistics release: Immigration system statistics data tables - GOV.UK. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the cost was of services provided (a) within and (b) alongside hotel accommodation in 2025 by provider and contract. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) We do not report and hold data at this granularity, including by method of arrival, and would only be obtainable at disproportionate cost. The Asylum Accommodation and Support Contract (AASC) Requirements below gives a detailed breakdown of all the services to be undertaken by our accommodation providers and to the standards we expect. Full details of this can be found here: http://data.parliament.uk/DepositedPapers/Files/DEP2018-1112/AASC_-_Schedule_2_-_Statement_of_Requirements.pdf. The Home Office publishes information on asylum expenditure in the: Home Office annual report and accounts: 2024 to 2025 - GOV.UK. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Health Services
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the spend was on private healthcare services provided to illegal migrants housed in hotels and other accommodation in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Healthcare for asylum seekers in Home Office accommodation including hotels and large, former military, sites is provided through the NHS in line with national guidance for newly arrived migrants. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the cost was of providing accommodation in hotels and other contingency accommodation to illegal migrants in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) We do not report and hold data at this granularity, including by method of arrival, and would only be obtainable at disproportionate cost. The Asylum Accommodation and Support Contract (AASC) Requirements below gives a detailed breakdown of all the services to be undertaken by our accommodation providers and to the standards we expect. Full details of this can be found here: http://data.parliament.uk/DepositedPapers/Files/DEP2018-1112/AASC_-_Schedule_2_-_Statement_of_Requirements.pdf. The Home Office publishes information on asylum expenditure in the: Home Office annual report and accounts: 2024 to 2025 - GOV.UK. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how much her Department spent on translation and interpretation services provided to migrants who arrived in the UK illegally who are in hotels and other accommodation by provider and language in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The information requested is not centrally held and could only be collated and verified for the purpose of answering this question at disproportionate cost. |
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Asylum: Great Yarmouth
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what was the cost to the public purse of translation and interpretation services by her Department for asylum seekers in Great Yarmouth constituency in each of the last five years. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The information requested is not centrally held and could only be collated and verified for the purpose of answering this question at disproportionate cost. |
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Automatic Number Plate Recognition
Asked by: Al Pinkerton (Liberal Democrat - Surrey Heath) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how inaccuracies in vehicle databases are accounted for when ANPR data is used in policing decisions. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) ANPR is a valuable tool to help the police tackle crime and keep the road safe. We keep the effectiveness of police and law enforcement use of ANPR under regular review, to ensure it remains a robust tool for identifying vehicles of interest to the police and drivers who break the law. Reads in the National ANPR Service are usually accompanied by a close-up image of the number plate (plate patch) and an overview image of the vehicle to enable users to corroborate the data. |
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Knives: Rural Areas
Asked by: Julian Smith (Conservative - Skipton and Ripon) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what steps she is taking to reduce knife crime in rural areas. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) We are already making clear progress against our ambition to halve knife crime. In our first year, police-recorded knife crime offences fell by 5%, the first reduction in four years. Knife homicides have also fallen by almost 20% over the last year, and we have seen a 10% reduction in hospital admissions for stabbings. Whilst most knife crime occurs in urban centres, our national target to halve knife crime and whole society approach will reach every area. Our approach to tackling knife crime is centred around targeted interventions and enforcement, tough new legislation to remove dangerous weapons from our streets and working across government to tackle the root causes of knife crime where they are needed most. We have banned zombie knives and ninja swords and are holding online sellers criminally responsible removing almost 60,000 knives from streets in England and Wales. We are taking a range of action in the Crime and Policing Bill to strengthen legislation on knives. New crime mapping tools are already allowing us to identify highly specific knife crime hotspots and focus police and community safety resources where they are needed most. Further investment in cutting-edge capabilities, such as knife detection technology, improved data platforms, and live facial recognition will further enhance our ability to target knife crime. Our Neighbourhood Policing Guarantee will deliver 13,000 additional neighbourhood policing personnel by the end of this Parliament, including up to 3,000 by March 2026. It will also ensure that every community, including rural communities, has named and contactable officers they can turn to. This Government is clear that when you report a crime, it should be properly investigated with victims having faith that justice will be delivered, and criminals will be punished – no matter where you live. Rural communities can be assured that visible, neighbourhood policing is returning to our communities. |
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Police: Finance
Asked by: Jo Platt (Labour (Co-op) - Leigh and Atherton) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, whether she plans to review the police funding formula before the next comprehensive spending review. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Secretary considers the distribution of funding each year to ensure decisions promote police efficiency, effectiveness and support the Government’s wider programme of reform. Further details regarding police funding for 2026-27 will be set out in the upcoming Final Police Funding Settlement. |
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Drugs: Smuggling
Asked by: Neil Coyle (Labour - Bermondsey and Old Southwark) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what steps she is taking to help tackle the use of Royal Mail to transport illegal drugs into the UK. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) Illegal drugs have a devastating impact on the health of individuals and communities. Deaths relating to drug misuse in England and Wales rose to 3,736 in 2024, with a total annual cost to society of over £20 billion. The Home Office and operational partners are working to disrupt the supply chain of illegal drugs across all trafficking modes into the UK. Our disruptive approach to illegal drug smuggling prioritises engagement with international partners, coupled with pursuing the criminals behind drug trafficking, and activity to seize drugs at the border. |
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Automatic Number Plate Recognition
Asked by: Al Pinkerton (Liberal Democrat - Surrey Heath) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what assessment she has made of the reliability of ANPR data in (a) preventing and (b) detecting (i) road traffic and (ii) wider criminal offences. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) ANPR is a valuable tool to help the police tackle crime and keep the road safe. We keep the effectiveness of police and law enforcement use of ANPR under regular review, to ensure it remains a robust tool for identifying vehicles of interest to the police and drivers who break the law. Reads in the National ANPR Service are usually accompanied by a close-up image of the number plate (plate patch) and an overview image of the vehicle to enable users to corroborate the data. |
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Home Office: Equality
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Thursday 29th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many civil servants employed by their Department work in roles primarily focused on (a) transgender policy, (b) diversity, (c) equity and (d) inclusion; and at what annual salary cost. Answered by Sarah Jones - Minister of State (Home Office) There are no roles primarily focused on transgender policy. Within central HR there are 18 roles primarily focused on Equality, Diversity and Inclusion (EDI) - a total of 16.06 FTE. The total aggregate annual salary cost based on the latest reporting period for Jan 25/26 is: £918,348.60. |
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Immigration: Artificial Intelligence
Asked by: Sarah Olney (Liberal Democrat - Richmond Park) Friday 30th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, whether her Department uses artificial intelligence for decision making on immigration applications. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) Where appropriate, we use AI to improve productivity and effectiveness in our public services. All applications made under the Immigration Rules are considered and decided by trained human decision-makers. |
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Animal Experiments: Shellfish
Asked by: Andrew Rosindell (Reform UK - Romford) Friday 30th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, whether she plans to phase out the use of crustaceans in scientific experimentation. Answered by Dan Jarvis - Minister of State (Cabinet Office) The Government is committed to non-animal alternatives in science and has published a strategy which sets out our long-term vision for a world where the use of animals in science is eliminated in all but exceptional circumstances. The strategy is available at: The strategy does not preclude the development of alternatives to the use of animal species not currently covered by the Animals (Scientific Procedures) Act 1986 (ASPA) protections, including decapod crustaceans. The Animal Welfare (Sentience) Act 2022 recognised decapod crustaceans as sentient beings. The Government remains committed to an evidence-based and proportionate approach to setting welfare standards for decapod crustaceans, both for those caught for human consumption and those used in scientific research. The Home Office is carefully considering next steps, in collaboration with other relevant departments, on whether decapod crustaceans should be brought within the scope of ASPA. |
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Vehicle Number Plates: Fraud
Asked by: Richard Holden (Conservative - Basildon and Billericay) Friday 30th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, pursuant to the answer of 15 January 2026 to Question 99931, whether her Department has made an assessment of the potential impact of illegal number plates on national security, serious organised crime, terrorism and the effectiveness of ANPR systems. Answered by Dan Jarvis - Minister of State (Cabinet Office) Vehicle registration marks are essential for identifying vehicles involved in crime. Individuals engaged in serious and organised crime, terrorism and other high‑harm offending often rely on the UK’s road network to facilitate their criminal activities. We work closely with policing partners, the DVLA and other agencies to understand and mitigate risks posed by illegal or obscured number plates. The Home Office supports efforts to prevent their use and to strengthen ANPR effectiveness through investment and enforcement activity. ANPR remains a valuable tool to help the police tackle crime and keep the road safe. We keep the effectiveness of ANPR use under regular review, to ensure it remains a robust tool for identifying vehicles of interest and those engaged in criminal activities. Comprehensive advice and guidance is available via the National Protective Security Authority (NPSA) and the National Counter Terrorism Security Office (NaCTSO), which includes signposting to a suite of Hostile Vehicle Mitigation (HVM) products and counter-measures. The specialist advice regarding HVM includes up-to-date technical resources and best practice advice regarding their deployment, and is available from these organisations. |
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Undocumented Migrants: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Friday 30th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how much her Department spent on (a) legal advice and (b) other support services for migrants who arrived in the UK illegally who are in accommodation by contract in 2025. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office does not hold the requested data on the provision of legal advice. Asylum seekers may be eligible for legal aid, which is administered by the Legal Aid Agency in the Ministry of Justice. Regarding other services, the Asylum Accommodation and Support Contract (AASC) Statement of Requirements provides a detailed breakdown of all services that accommodation providers must deliver, along with the standards expected of them. The full document is available here: The Home Office publishes information on asylum expenditure, including services such as AASC and AIRE, within its Annual Report and Accounts. These can be found on GOV.UK here: https://www.gov.uk/government/collections/ho-annual-reports-and-accounts |
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Undocumented Migrants: Hotels
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Friday 30th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what services were contracted and delivered on-site within hotels housing illegal migrants in 2025, including medical services, transport, catering, security, and welfare support. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office holds nine contracts for the provision of asylum accommodation and support services across the UK. Information related to these contracts, including the services delivered under them, is publicly available at the links below. Hotel accommodation is managed directly by the contracted providers. Services delivered on-site typically include food and catering, laundry, security, and basic welfare support. These services are provided to ensure safe and suitable living conditions for asylum seekers and to help manage pressures on local authorities and public services while individuals await a decision on their claim.
AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NW - Contracts Finder AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract MEE - Contracts Finder
Mears AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NEYH - Contracts Finder AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Scotland - Contracts Finder AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract NI - Contracts Finder
CRH AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract Wales - Contracts Finder AASC - Asylum Accommodation & Support Services Contract South - Contracts Finder
CTM CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract - Contracts Finder Contract for the Provision of Asylum Accommodation and Travel Services - Contracts Finder |
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Exclusion Orders
Asked by: Nick Timothy (Conservative - West Suffolk) Friday 30th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many foreign nationals have been excluded from the UK since 2010, broken down by type of grounds for refusal. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office publishes data on entry clearance visas in the ‘Immigration system statistics quarterly release - GOV.UK’. Data on visa applications are published in table ‘Vis_D01’ whilst data on outcomes of visa applications are published in table ‘Vis_D02’ of the detailed entry clearance visas dataset. Information on how to use the dataset can be found in the ‘Notes’ page of the workbook. The latest data is from January 2005 up to the end of September 2025. Please note that data on refusals by reason is not available from published statistics. |
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Drugs: Smuggling
Asked by: Gregory Campbell (Democratic Unionist Party - East Londonderry) Friday 30th January 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, if she will hold discussions with the Foreign Affairs Minister in the Irish Republic on joint action to tackle international drug trafficking into the UK via the Irish Republic. Answered by Dan Jarvis - Minister of State (Cabinet Office) The UK and Ireland have a strong relationship which includes joint action against criminals targeting both the UK and Ireland. In addition to these operational relationships, there is an annual security dialogue between the UK and Ireland to discuss key shared security issues faced. This includes discussions on international serious & organised crime, with the last one taking place in November 2025. In January 2026, the UK formally invited Ireland to join the North Sea Channel Maritime Information Group. This group facilitates the cooperation and exchanging of information about maritime border security topics, including information around the movement of drugs. Existing members include Belgium, France, Germany and the Netherlands. |
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Visas: Guantanamo Bay
Asked by: Chris Law (Scottish National Party - Dundee Central) Monday 2nd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, pursuant to the Answer of 23 October 2025 to Question 76596 and the Answer of 12 January 2023 to Question 119101 on Guantanamo Bay: Closures, whether her Department's policy on granting visas to former Guantanamo Bay detainees has changed following its decision to change its policy on the closure of the Guantanamo Bay Detention Facility. Answered by Dan Jarvis - Minister of State (Cabinet Office) The first priority of Government is protecting national security and the safety of UK citizens. The Home Office uses various tools to detect and disrupt travel by those posing a national security risk and all applications for visas or UK immigration status are subject to comprehensive checks. It would not be appropriate to comment in detail on operational security matters or specific cases. However, where an individual is assessed as presenting a risk to our country, we take swift and robust action. |
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Asylum
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Monday 2nd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what proportion of asylum seeker dates of birth are recorded as 1 January. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office does not currently publish data on the dates of birth of asylum seekers. The Home Office publishes data on asylum by age group in the ‘Immigration System Statistics Quarterly Release’. The latest data relates to the year ending September 2025. Official statistics published by the Home Office are kept under review in line with the Code of Practice for Statistics, taking into account a number of factors including user needs, the resources required to compile the statistics, as well as quality and availability of data. These reviews allow us to balance the production of our regular statistics whilst developing new statistics for future release. |
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Asylum
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Monday 2nd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many asylum seekers there are by (a) day and (b) month of birth. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Office does not currently publish data on the dates of birth of asylum seekers. The Home Office publishes data on asylum by age group in the ‘Immigration System Statistics Quarterly Release’. The latest data relates to the year ending September 2025. Official statistics published by the Home Office are kept under review in line with the Code of Practice for Statistics, taking into account a number of factors including user needs, the resources required to compile the statistics, as well as quality and availability of data. These reviews allow us to balance the production of our regular statistics whilst developing new statistics for future release. |
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Immigration: Children in Care
Asked by: Helen Hayes (Labour - Dulwich and West Norwood) Monday 2nd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what assessment her department has made of the impact of failing to resolve the immigration status of children in care before turning 18. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The Home Secretary set out in the Immigration White Paper published on 12 May 2025 that the Home Office will ensure children who have been in the UK for some time, turn 18 and discover they do not have status, are fully supported and able to regularise their status and settle where appropriate. This will also include a clear pathway for those children in care and care leavers. This commitment will be delivered primarily through an update to the ‘children in care policy’. As part of this, separate targeted engagement will take place with external stakeholders to help us to understand the challenges in this area and develop a policy solution which supports children in care without status while upholding the need to have a robust and coherent migration system. Children who have claimed asylum are dealt with under separate provisions. A range of reforms are underway across the immigration and asylum system, and the development of a clear pathway to settlement for children in care and care leavers must be considered alongside these changes. Further detail on this will be set out in due course. |
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Asylum: Crowborough Training Camp
Asked by: Mims Davies (Conservative - East Grinstead and Uckfield) Monday 2nd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, since the morning of Thursday 22nd January, how many asylum seekers have been moved into the accommodation in Crowborough; and how many asylum seekers since the aforementioned date have absconded from the site. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The first 27 migrants moved onto the site on 22nd January, and occupancy will be scaled up with total capacity over 500. Initial intakes will be low in numbers and gradual, taking a phased and incremental approach to full occupancy. Asylum seekers at the site are not detained, however the site is self-contained as essential services are provided on site to reduce the impact on local services through reducing the need for asylum seekers to leave the site. It is our longstanding policy not to comment on operational arrangements around sites. |
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Computer Misuse Act 1990
Asked by: Max Wilkinson (Liberal Democrat - Cheltenham) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, if she will update the Computer Misuse Act 1990 to give greater protection to cyber security professionals. Answered by Dan Jarvis - Minister of State (Cabinet Office) The Government is conducting an ongoing review of the Computer Misuse Act. As part of the review, we are reviewing how we can better support legitimate cybersecurity researchers so they can operate within a clear and supportive legal framework, while maintaining robust safeguards. |
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Private Life: Fraud
Asked by: Victoria Collins (Liberal Democrat - Harpenden and Berkhamsted) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many cases of Dating Scam Fraud were reported in 2025; and what the financial loss was. Answered by Dan Jarvis - Minister of State (Cabinet Office) The Home Office does not collect information on Dating Scam Fraud. City of London Police are the national lead force for fraud and operate the Report Fraud (formerly Action Fraud) reporting service which collects data on Dating Scam Fraud. The below data was collected from the reports made to Action Fraud (now Report Fraud) that amounted to a crime under the Home Office crime recording rules. In the first 10 months of 2025, there were 9,305 dating scam reports to Action Fraud (now ‘Report Fraud’). Losses for these reports totalled £90.9m. Source: Report Fraud Analysis Services (Public) |
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Visas: Ukraine
Asked by: Simon Hoare (Conservative - North Dorset) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what resource has been allocated to administer the Ukraine Permission Extension scheme in financial year (a) 2025-26 and (b) 2026-27. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) UKVI are currently assessing Ukraine Permission Extension Scheme (UPE) visas within the published processing times. Information on visa processing times can be found at Visa processing times: applications inside the UK - GOV.UK Average processing times do not form part of any current transparency data for Ukraine Extension Permission applications and are not published. A range of processing data including case outcomes on Ukraine visa applications, can be found at: Immigration system statistics data tables - GOV.UK and Migration transparency data - GOV.UK Resourcing arrangements are flexible across all visa routes, with decision-makers deployed to different areas at different times of the year. This enables UKVI to meet peaks in demand and operate efficiently throughout the operational year. |
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Immigration Controls
Asked by: Liz Jarvis (Liberal Democrat - Eastleigh) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, with reference to her Department's document entitled A Fairer Pathway to Settlement: statement and accompanying consultation on earned settlement, updated on 28 November 2025, what assessment she has made of the potential impact of a retrospective application of the proposed changes to settlement rules on people currently on a five-year settlement pathway, including on lower income households and groups with protected characteristics. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) The earned settlement model, proposed in ‘A Fairer Pathway to Settlement’, is currently subject to a public consultation, running until 12 February 2026. The consultation seeks views on whether there should be transitional arrangements for those already on a pathway to settlement. Transitional arrangements refer to temporary measures or rules put in place to manage the shift from one system, or policy framework, to another. Details of the earned settlement model, including any transitional arrangements for those already in the UK, will be finalised following that consultation. The final model will also be subject to economic and equality impact assessments, which we have committed to publish in due course. |
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Electronic Travel Authorisations: Prosecutions
Asked by: Gregory Campbell (Democratic Unionist Party - East Londonderry) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many court cases there have been relating to not having a valid electronic travel authorisation. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) The Home Office is yet to commence the legislative provision that will make it an offence to knowingly arrive in the UK without an Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA). Accordingly, there have been no cases in the courts brought on this basis. Further details of how the ETA requirement is being enforced will be published in due course. |
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Immigration: Syria
Asked by: Claire Hanna (Social Democratic & Labour Party - Belfast South and Mid Down) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what assessment she has made of the potential merits of recommencement of processing settlement applications from Syrians. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) On 14 July 2025, we published updated country information which enabled decision making to resume on Syrian asylum and settlement protection claims. Where an applicant arrived in the UK via the Vulnerable Persons Resettlement Scheme, we will proceed straight to considering a grant of indefinite leave to remain in the UK. Claimants will be required to meet the relevant validity (i.e. apply on the relevant form and establish their identity) and suitability requirements (i.e. consideration of any criminals' convictions) of the settlement protection policy. |
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Refugees: Syria
Asked by: Claire Hanna (Social Democratic & Labour Party - Belfast South and Mid Down) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what her Department’s policy is on managing applications from Syrians who entered the UK under the Syrian Vulnerable Persons Resettlement Scheme. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) On 14 July 2025, we published updated country information which enabled decision making to resume on Syrian asylum and settlement protection claims. Where an applicant arrived in the UK via the Vulnerable Persons Resettlement Scheme, we will proceed straight to considering a grant of indefinite leave to remain in the UK. Claimants will be required to meet the relevant validity (i.e. apply on the relevant form and establish their identity) and suitability requirements (i.e. consideration of any criminals' convictions) of the settlement protection policy. |
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Eva Vlaardingerbroek
Asked by: Lord Pearson of Rannoch (Non-affiliated - Life peer) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask His Majesty's Government what they mean by "not considered to be conducive to the public good" in relation to the blocking of Eva Vlaardingerbroek from entering the United Kingdom; whether they will reverse this decision; and, if not, why not. Answered by Lord Hanson of Flint - Minister of State (Home Office) It is our long-standing policy that we do not comment on individual cases. I can advise you that following the refusal or cancellation of an Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) document; the customer may still apply for the appropriate UK visa. This allows for a full consideration of their circumstances and may provide an alternative avenue to travel. |
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Visas: Ukraine
Asked by: Simon Hoare (Conservative - North Dorset) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many and what proportion of visa applications under the Ukraine Permission Extension scheme are determined within eight weeks in the latest period for which data is available. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) UKVI are currently assessing Ukraine Permission Extension Scheme (UPE) visas within the published processing times. Information on visa processing times can be found at Visa processing times: applications inside the UK - GOV.UK Average processing times do not form part of any current transparency data for Ukraine Extension Permission applications and are not published. A range of processing data including case outcomes on Ukraine visa applications, can be found at: Immigration system statistics data tables - GOV.UK and Migration transparency data - GOV.UK Resourcing arrangements are flexible across all visa routes, with decision-makers deployed to different areas at different times of the year. This enables UKVI to meet peaks in demand and operate efficiently throughout the operational year. |
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Visas: Ukraine
Asked by: Simon Hoare (Conservative - North Dorset) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the average time taken is to determine a visa extension under the Ukraine Permission Extension scheme. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) UKVI are currently assessing Ukraine Permission Extension Scheme (UPE) visas within the published processing times. Information on visa processing times can be found at Visa processing times: applications inside the UK - GOV.UK Average processing times do not form part of any current transparency data for Ukraine Extension Permission applications and are not published. A range of processing data including case outcomes on Ukraine visa applications, can be found at: Immigration system statistics data tables - GOV.UK and Migration transparency data - GOV.UK Resourcing arrangements are flexible across all visa routes, with decision-makers deployed to different areas at different times of the year. This enables UKVI to meet peaks in demand and operate efficiently throughout the operational year. |
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Migrant Help: Contracts
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, which (a) Ministers and (b) Senior Civil Servants approved the award of the contract titled AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility to Migrant Help and CCTM22A01 Provision of Bridging Accommodation and Travel Services Contract - Contracts Finder Contract, with a start date of 26 February 2023; and on what date that approval was given. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) This information cannot be disclosed as the detailed financial breakdown of the AIRE contract is commercially sensitive. This contract was approved by the Commercial Approval Board where it gained approval within Home Office. It was also approved by Cabinet Office Spend Controls and HMT approvals. The AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility was procured as part of a restricted procedure under the PCR15 regulations. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and service standards are contained within the contract titled AIRE publicly available information: AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Elligibility - Contracts Finder |
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Asylum: Advisory Services
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what Key Performance Indicators and service standards are contained within the contract titled AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility, including any KPIs relating to call handling times, resolution rates, and complaint outcomes. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) This information cannot be disclosed as the detailed financial breakdown of the AIRE contract is commercially sensitive. This contract was approved by the Commercial Approval Board where it gained approval within Home Office. It was also approved by Cabinet Office Spend Controls and HMT approvals. The AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility was procured as part of a restricted procedure under the PCR15 regulations. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and service standards are contained within the contract titled AIRE publicly available information: AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Elligibility - Contracts Finder |
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Asylum: Advisory Services
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the cost of the 24-hour service provision under the contract titled AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility is; and what assessment was made of the value for money of providing a 24-hour service. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) This information cannot be disclosed as the detailed financial breakdown of the AIRE contract is commercially sensitive. This contract was approved by the Commercial Approval Board where it gained approval within Home Office. It was also approved by Cabinet Office Spend Controls and HMT approvals. The AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility was procured as part of a restricted procedure under the PCR15 regulations. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and service standards are contained within the contract titled AIRE publicly available information: AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Elligibility - Contracts Finder |
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Asylum: Advisory Services
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what procurement route was used for the contract titled AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility; and whether it was awarded via open tender. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) This information cannot be disclosed as the detailed financial breakdown of the AIRE contract is commercially sensitive. This contract was approved by the Commercial Approval Board where it gained approval within Home Office. It was also approved by Cabinet Office Spend Controls and HMT approvals. The AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility was procured as part of a restricted procedure under the PCR15 regulations. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and service standards are contained within the contract titled AIRE publicly available information: AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Elligibility - Contracts Finder |
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Derwentside Immigration Removal Centre: Transport
Asked by: Luke Akehurst (Labour - North Durham) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how the siting and operation of the proposed new vehicle base will improve the logistical servicing of Derwentside IRC; and what interim arrangements are being made to improve escorting and transport moves to and from Derwentside IRC. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) The current service delivery model for immigration escorting is to locate vehicle bases at or near Immigration Removal Centres, where most escorting movements begin and end. The nearest vehicle base to Derwentside IRC is currently more than 100 miles away, which makes servicing the centre logistically challenging. Once operational, the new vehicle base is expected to improve escorting efficiency for that location.
Until the vehicle base is operational, escorting requirements will continue to be met through other vehicle bases, supported by the flexible deployment of staff / vehicles and close coordination with our contracted escorting provider to ensure movements are carried out safely and securely and in a timely manner. |
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Asylum: Temporary Accommodation
Asked by: Euan Stainbank (Labour - Falkirk) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, whether per capita share of asylum accommodation across regions is a criteria in deciding asylum hotel closure priority. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Hotel closure will be prioritised based on a wide range of criteria. The hotel exit plan will continue to be carefully managed to ensure that all supported asylum seekers are accommodated in suitable alternative accommodation. The department operates a Full Dispersal model which works to ensure that asylum accommodation is equitably and fairly spread out across the country, meaning that a small number of local authorities are not unduly burdened. |
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Migrant Help: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the (a) contractual value, (b) annual spend to date and (c) forecast annual spend are for her Department's contract with Migrant Help between 2019 and 2029. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Information on the overall contract value is available publicly: AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility - Contracts Finder Annual spend and forecast spend are considered commercially sensitive and cannot be disclosed. |
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Diplomatic Service
Asked by: Andrew Rosindell (Reform UK - Romford) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, how many exempt vignettes issued to diplomats posted in the UK were granted between 2020 and 2025; and for what reasons those vignettes were issued. Answered by Mike Tapp - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Home Office) The information requested is not centrally held and could only be collected and verified for the purpose of answering this question at disproportionate cost. |
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Migrant Help: Contracts
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the breakdown of costs by financial year is for the contract with Migrant Help entitled AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility since 1 March 2019. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) This information cannot be disclosed as the detailed financial breakdown of the AIRE contract is commercially sensitive. This contract was approved by the Commercial Approval Board where it gained approval within Home Office. It was also approved by Cabinet Office Spend Controls and HMT approvals. The AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Eligibility was procured as part of a restricted procedure under the PCR15 regulations. Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) and service standards are contained within the contract titled AIRE publicly available information: AIRE - Advice Issue Reporting and Elligibility - Contracts Finder |
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Asylum: Housing
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Home Office: To ask the Secretary of State for the Home Department, what the value, annual spend to date and forecast annual spend are for the contract entitled Provision of Security Services at Home Office Contingency Accommodation held with Mitie Limited with contract start date 16 September 2022; and what sites are covered by that contract. Answered by Alex Norris - Minister of State (Home Office) Security services under this contract are provided at the Scampton and Wethersfield sites. Information on the overall contract value is available publicly: Provision of Security Services at Home Office Contingency Accommodation - Contracts Finder Annual spend and forecast spend are considered commercially sensitive and cannot be disclosed. |
| Department Publications - Guidance |
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Wednesday 28th January 2026
Home Office Source Page: Operating within counter-terrorism legislation Document: Operating within counter-terrorism legislation (webpage) |
| Department Publications - Policy paper |
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Wednesday 28th January 2026
Home Office Source Page: Police grants in England and Wales: 2026 to 2027 Document: (PDF) |
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Wednesday 28th January 2026
Home Office Source Page: Police grants in England and Wales: 2026 to 2027 Document: Police grants in England and Wales: 2026 to 2027 (webpage) |
| Department Publications - Statistics |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Home Office Source Page: Review of English language assessment methods Document: Review of English language assessment methods (webpage) |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Home Office Source Page: Serious Violence Duty evaluation Document: (ODS) |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Home Office Source Page: Serious Violence Duty evaluation Document: Serious Violence Duty evaluation (webpage) |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Home Office Source Page: Police protest powers, June 2022 to March 2025 Document: (ODS) |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Home Office Source Page: Police protest powers, June 2022 to March 2025 Document: Police protest powers, June 2022 to March 2025 (webpage) |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Home Office Source Page: National Fraud Squad (NFS) process evaluation Document: (ODS) |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Home Office Source Page: National Fraud Squad (NFS) process evaluation Document: National Fraud Squad (NFS) process evaluation (webpage) |
| Department Publications - News and Communications |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Home Office Source Page: Wales receives record funding increase to boost neighbourhood policing Document: Wales receives record funding increase to boost neighbourhood policing (webpage) |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Home Office Source Page: Government leads global fight against deepfake threats Document: Government leads global fight against deepfake threats (webpage) |
| Calendar |
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Tuesday 10th February 2026 9 a.m. Science, Innovation and Technology Committee - Oral evidence Subject: Innovation showcase At 9:30am: Oral evidence Ridha Bentiba - Joint Chief Executive Officer at HR Wallingford At 9:45am: Oral evidence Dan Jarvis MP - Minister for Security at Home Office Rt Hon Ian Murray MP - Minister for Digital Government and Data at Department for Science, Innovation and Technology Aimee Smith - Government Chief Data Officer at Department for Science, Innovation and Technology Vincent Devine - Government Chief Security Officer at Cabinet Office View calendar - Add to calendar |
| Parliamentary Debates |
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Cyber Security and Resilience (Network and Information Systems) Bill (Third sitting)
80 speeches (11,190 words) Committee stage: 3rd sitting Thursday 5th February 2026 - Public Bill Committees Department for Science, Innovation & Technology Mentions: 1: Kanishka Narayan (Lab - Vale of Glamorgan) Government made a clear commitment in our manifesto to introduce a new fraud strategy, and the Home Office - Link to Speech |
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Road Safety
68 speeches (11,486 words) Thursday 5th February 2026 - Commons Chamber HM Treasury Mentions: 1: Greg Smith (Con - Mid Buckinghamshire) It would be useful to know what discussions the Department has had with the Home Office to ensure that - Link to Speech |
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Oral Answers to Questions
146 speeches (10,022 words) Thursday 5th February 2026 - Commons Chamber Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Mentions: 1: Ellie Reeves (Lab - Lewisham West and East Dulwich) I will happily speak to colleagues across the Home Office and Ministry of Justice to ensure that her - Link to Speech |
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Civil Service Pension Scheme: Administration
85 speeches (14,154 words) Wednesday 4th February 2026 - Westminster Hall Cabinet Office Mentions: 1: Anna Turley (LAB - Redcar) of Members’ Financial Interests: I have a civil service pension, having started my career in the Home Office - Link to Speech |
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Nurseries and Early Years Providers: CCTV
20 speeches (4,192 words) Wednesday 4th February 2026 - Westminster Hall Department for Education Mentions: 1: Olivia Bailey (Lab - Reading West and Mid Berkshire) of representatives from both the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology and from the Home Office - Link to Speech |
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English Devolution and Community Empowerment Bill
87 speeches (24,642 words) Committee stage Wednesday 4th February 2026 - Grand Committee Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government Mentions: 1: None The Minister is aware that there are a host of departments involved—the Home Office, the Department for - Link to Speech |
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Lord Mandelson
523 speeches (54,989 words) Wednesday 4th February 2026 - Commons Chamber Cabinet Office Mentions: 1: Christopher Chope (Con - Christchurch) there was no truth in it whatsoever.At the time, Mandelson denied that he had any dealings with the Home Office - Link to Speech |
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Cyber Security and Resilience (Network and Information Systems) Bill (Second sitting)
125 speeches (27,382 words) Committee stage: 2nd sitting Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Public Bill Committees Department for Science, Innovation & Technology Mentions: 1: David Chadwick (LD - Brecon, Radnor and Cwm Tawe) enforcement powers to take action to address some of it.With a recent pilot in the City funded by the Home Office - Link to Speech 2: Kanishka Narayan (Lab - Vale of Glamorgan) know that those services are there.For those who are not familiar with Police CyberAlarm, it is a Home Office-funded - Link to Speech |
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Cyber Security and Resilience (Network and Information Systems) Bill (First sitting)
62 speeches (17,167 words) Committee stage:Commitee Debate: 1st sitting Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Public Bill Committees Department for Science, Innovation & Technology Mentions: 1: Chris Vince (LAB - Harlow) It also covers things like ransomware, which we know the UK Home Office is looking at, and Internet of - Link to Speech |
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Taxation: Small and Medium-sized Enterprises
26 speeches (4,636 words) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Westminster Hall HM Treasury Mentions: 1: Dan Tomlinson (Lab - Chipping Barnet) Yes, the Treasury will be involved, but so will Departments such as the Home Office, so that we can support - Link to Speech |
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Separation Centres Review
18 speeches (4,018 words) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Commons Chamber Ministry of Justice Mentions: 1: David Lammy (Lab - Tottenham) counter-terrorism work in prison, some of which he will have commissioned during his time in the Home Office - Link to Speech |
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Oral Answers to Questions
161 speeches (10,897 words) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Commons Chamber Ministry of Justice Mentions: 1: Alex Davies-Jones (Lab - Pontypridd) The Sentencing Minister is meeting colleagues in the Home Office today to discuss this case, and I will - Link to Speech 2: Alex Davies-Jones (Lab - Pontypridd) She will know that the Home Office is consulting on proposals to ensure that we maximise police efficiency - Link to Speech |
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Iran
61 speeches (6,185 words) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Commons Chamber Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office Mentions: 1: Catherine West (Lab - Hornsey and Friern Barnet) Could the Minister speak with Home Office officials or his ministerial counterparts about the sophistication - Link to Speech 2: Hamish Falconer (Lab - Lincoln) It is Home Office legislation, and it will need to go through the House in the usual way, but we are - Link to Speech |
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Two-child Benefit Cap: Foreign-born Children
17 speeches (1,877 words) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 - Lords Chamber Department for Work and Pensions Mentions: 1: Baroness Sherlock (Lab - Life peer) before they can apply for settlement and, therefore, even be eligible for public funds, and the Home Office - Link to Speech |
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Arrangement of Business
29 speeches (5,131 words) Friday 30th January 2026 - Lords Chamber Mentions: 1: Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon (Con - Life peer) on the receiving end for a very long time, with 12 years in Government across communities, the Home Office - Link to Speech |
| Select Committee Documents |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Report - 5th Report - UK-EU agritrade: making an SPS agreement work Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee Found: Biosecurity at the border: Britain’s illegal meat crisis, HC1926, 8 September 202524 made up of Defra, Home Office |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026
Correspondence - Correspondence to Minister for Policing and Crime relating to proposed offence of concealing identity at protests, 05 February 2026 Human Rights (Joint Committee) Found: privacy, safety or political expression” and stated that Addressed to Minister Sarah Jones MP Home Office |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026
Written Evidence - HM Official Opposition WRP0014 - Written Parliamentary Questions Written Parliamentary Questions - Procedure Committee Found: being refused, we sought to ask Ministers: “whether TheCityUK has made representations to the Home Office |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026
Written Evidence - Shelter Blh0009 - Black homelessness Black homelessness - Women and Equalities Committee Found: This is why we’re very concerned about the recent Home Office announcements on ‘earned settlement’, |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Director of Fujitsu relating to government contract extensions, 19 January 2026 Business and Trade Committee Found: before the end of the contract is the Service Desk contract that we delivered on behalf of the Home Office |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026
Correspondence - Government Response dated 9 January 2026 to the Justice and Home Affairs Committee investigation into Electronic Monitoring Justice and Home Affairs Committee Found: Reoffending Ministry of Justice Minister Norris Minister for Border Security and Asylum Home Office |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026
Report - 65th Report - Efficiency and resilience of the Probation Service Public Accounts Committee Found: the retail sector HC 355 8th Carbon Capture, Usage and Storage HC 351 7th Asylum accommodation: Home Office |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026
Correspondence - 4 February 2026, Letter from Lord Hanson of Flint European Affairs Committee Found: Lord Hanson of Flint Minister of State 2 Marsham Street London SW1P 4DF www.gov.uk/home-office |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter to the (then) Chair from Alex Norris MP, Minister for Border Security and Asylum at the Home Office, follow-up to the Committee’s evidence session on 16 December 2025 (22 January 2026) International Agreements Committee Found: Letter to the (then) Chair from Alex Norris MP, Minister for Border Security and Asylum at the Home Office |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Correspondence - Letter from the Minister for Migration and Citizenship relating to mobility provisions in the UK-India Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, 20 January 2026 Business and Trade Committee Found: Minister for Migration & Citizenship 2 Marsham Street London SW1P 4DF www.gov.uk/home-office |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Written Evidence - UK Finance FIS0094 - Financial Inclusion Strategy Treasury Committee Found: and regulatory environment and a new approach is urgently needed if we are to ensure that the Home Office |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Written Evidence - Mastercard FIS0054 - Financial Inclusion Strategy Treasury Committee Found: and the third sector as well as other government departments, including but not limited to the Home Office |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Written Evidence - Citizens Advice Scotland FIS0015 - Financial Inclusion Strategy Treasury Committee Found: Refugees who are provided with settlement status are urged by the Home Office to open a bank account |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Written Evidence - Office of Qualifications and Examinations Regulation (Ofqual) RAG0023 - Regulators and growth Regulators and growth - Industry and Regulators Committee Found: Ofqual maintains an effective working relationship with the Home Office, in its regulatory role, regarding |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Written Evidence - Computer and Communications Industry Association RAG0020 - Regulators and growth Regulators and growth - Industry and Regulators Committee Found: The Home Office has done this, for example, by creating obstacles to improvements in security features |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Oral Evidence - The Home Office, The National Audit Office, and The National Audit Office Settlement, Citizenship and Integration - Justice and Home Affairs Committee Found: The Home Office, The National Audit Office, and The National Audit Office Oral Evidence |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Government Response - Government response to Financing and Scaling UK S&T Inquiry Report - Bleeding to death: the science and technology growth emergency Science and Technology Committee Found: It should include the Prime Minister, Chancellor, DSIT, DBT, the Home Office, MoD, DHSC, DESNZ, DWP |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Government Response - Minister of State for Science, Innovation, Research and Nuclear response to Financing and Scaling UK S&T Inquiry Report - Bleeding to death: the science and technology growth emergency Science and Technology Committee Found: Cabinet Office, the Department for Work and Pensions, the Department for Business and Trade, the Home Office |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Report - 13th Report - Priorities of the Business and Trade Committee for 2026 Business and Trade Committee Found: transparent and secure. 101 Qq 1–20 102 Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 103 Home Office |
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Monday 2nd February 2026
Written Evidence - Spotlight AEU0001 - State of Play: Performing arts touring in the EU Culture, Media and Sport Committee Found: part of the application for a Creative Visit visa the applicant will also need to satisfy the Home Office |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Report - Forty-sixth Report - 3 Statutory Instruments Reported Statutory Instruments (Joint Committee) Found: Justice 7 S.I. 2025/1231 7 The Parole Board (Amendment) Rules 2025 Appendix 2: Memorandum from the Home Office |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Special Report - 6th Special Report - The UK contribution to European Security: Government Response Defence Committee Found: In addition, the Security Minister’s role is split across the Cabinet Office and the Home Office, the |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Special Report - 4th Special Report - Ending the cycle of reoffending – part one: rehabilitation in prisons: Government Response Justice Committee Found: practice on workforce planning across government and are engaging closely with colleagues in the Home Office |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Report - 64th Report - Costs of clinical negligence Public Accounts Committee Found: the retail sector HC 355 8th Carbon Capture, Usage and Storage HC 351 7th Asylum accommodation: Home Office |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Report - Large Print – 10th Report – Discrimination, harassment and abuse against Muslim women Women and Equalities Committee Found: Dr Irene Zempi, Associate Professor of Criminology at Nottingham Trent University (GIS0006) 8 Home Office |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Report - 10th Report – Discrimination, harassment and abuse against Muslim women Women and Equalities Committee Found: Dr Irene Zempi, Associate Professor of Criminology at Nottingham Trent University (GIS0006) 8 Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Correspondence - Correspondence from the Minister of State for Policing to the Joint Committee on Human Rights and Crime regarding the Crime and Policing Bill, 20 January 2026 Human Rights (Joint Committee) Found: Minister of State for Policing and Crime 2 Marsham Street London SW1P 4DF www.gov.uk/home-office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Correspondence - Letter from Sarah Jones MP, Minister of State for Policing and Crime, Home Office, ref Forensic Science Inquiry Follow-Up Science and Technology Committee Found: Letter from Sarah Jones MP, Minister of State for Policing and Crime, Home Office, ref Forensic Science |
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Courts and Tribunals
Asked by: Paul Kohler (Liberal Democrat - Wimbledon) Friday 6th February 2026 Question to the Ministry of Justice: To ask the Secretary of State for Justice, how many sitting days each (a) court and (b) tribunal in England and Wales has been allocated in the 2025–26 financial year. Answered by Sarah Sackman - Minister of State (Ministry of Justice) The Ministry of Justice interprets this question as referring to the total allocations for each court and tribunal jurisdiction for the FY 2025/26. As part of this Government’s commitment to transparency, we began publishing total sitting‑day allocations by jurisdiction last year. The table below sets out the total allocations for FY2025/26 by jurisdiction. The Government has funded each jurisdiction to sit at or close to maximum capacity.
* This figure represents the total number of days funded from both Ministry of Justice and Home Office budgets. However, in order to maximise overall sittings within this funding, the total number of days allocated across the First Tier Tribunal and Upper Tribunal in aggregate was slightly higher, at 23,450. ** This figure includes days funded from both Ministry of Justice and Department for Work and Pensions budgets. *** This figure only represents the sitting days included in the Ministry of Justice's baseline funding. There are long-standing agreements with several other government departments whereby they provide funding for capacity in specific tribunals. Additional days will be sat as a result of this additional funding. |
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Social Media: Children
Asked by: Will Forster (Liberal Democrat - Woking) Wednesday 4th February 2026 Question to the Department for Science, Innovation & Technology: To ask the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, what discussions she has had with the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care on the potential impact of social media use on children’s mental health. Answered by Kanishka Narayan - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Science, Innovation and Technology) I share the worries of parents and many of those in the medical profession; the question is not whether the government will act, but how. These are nuanced issues on which there are a diverse range of views; that is why we are launching a consultation and national conversation on next steps. We are also working closely across government on these topics, with DHSC, as well as Ofcom, DfE, and the Home Office. Furthermore, the Department for Education will be producing guidance on screentime. |
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Animal Experiments
Asked by: Laura Kyrke-Smith (Labour - Aylesbury) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Science, Innovation & Technology: To ask the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, what steps she is taking to ensure regulators, industry, academia, civil society and NGOs can contribute on equal terms to shaping and overseeing delivery of the strategy entitled, Replacing animals in science: A strategy to support the development, validation and uptake of alternative methods. Answered by Kanishka Narayan - Parliamentary Under Secretary of State (Department for Science, Innovation and Technology) The Government consulted regulators, industry, academia and civil society during the development of the Replacing Animals in Science strategy and will continue to do so during strategy implementation, including via the Home Office-led forums. This includes collaboration with civil society organisations with expertise in this area, including animal welfare organisations and learned societies, and other interested groups. We will also include regulators within our governance, given the importance of regulatory acceptance. Any work to phase out animal testing and regulatory procedures, must be science-led and in lock step with partners. |
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Universal Credit: Foreign Nationals
Asked by: Helen Whately (Conservative - Faversham and Mid Kent) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Work and Pensions: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, what estimate his Department has made of the amount paid in Universal Credit to claimants recorded as non-UK nationals by month since 1 July 2024. Answered by Andrew Western - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Work and Pensions) Non-British and Irish nationals typically cannot access Universal Credit until they have been granted settlement after 5 years of lawful residence in the UK. The Home Office are consulting on doubling the standard qualifying period for settlement from 5 to 10 years. Exceptionally, some groups can access sooner, including people protected by the Withdrawal Agreement and Afghans and Ukrainians who have fled those countries.
Universal Credit awards are paid to households, so it is not possible to break payments down to individual members of a household. |
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NHS: Migrant Workers
Asked by: Gideon Amos (Liberal Democrat - Taunton and Wellington) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department of Health and Social Care: To ask the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, whether he has had discussions with the Secretary of State for the Home Department on the potential merits of including individuals on spouse visas who have the right to work and contribute to the NHS among the priority groups for NHS specialty training offers. Answered by Karin Smyth - Minister of State (Department of Health and Social Care) The Medical Training (Prioritisation) Bill was introduced to Parliament on 13 January 2026. The bill delivers the Government’s commitment in the 10-Year Health Plan for England, published in July 2025, to prioritise United Kingdom medical graduates for foundation training, and to prioritise UK medical graduates and other doctors who have worked in the National Health Service for a significant period for specialty training. For specialty training places starting in 2026, NHS experience is being represented by immigration status as people with a settled immigration status are more likely to have worked in the NHS for longer. For specialty training posts starting from 2027 onwards, this provision will not apply automatically. Instead, it will be possible to make regulations to specify additional groups who will be prioritised, where they are likely to have significant experience working as a doctor either in the NHS in England, Scotland, or Wales, or in health and social care in Northern Ireland, or by reference to their immigration status. Individuals on spouse visas are not included in the prioritised group for specialty training posts starting in 2026, because it is not a good indicator of likely NHS experience. The Department of Health and Social Care worked closely with the Home Office on the development of the bill. Applicants on spouse visas will still be able to apply and will be offered places if vacancies remain after prioritised applicants have received offers. |
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Social Security Benefits: Gaza
Asked by: Helen Whately (Conservative - Faversham and Mid Kent) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Work and Pensions: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, how many people brought to the United Kingdom under the Gaza scholarship students route claim (a) Universal Credit, (b) PIP and (c) other benefits. Answered by Andrew Western - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Work and Pensions) The majority of migrants on temporary, time-limited visas (such as for work or study) are subject to a No Recourse to Public Funds (NRPF) condition for at least 5 years. This restricts them from accessing certain public funded benefits and services. DWP cannot pay public funds benefits (such as Universal Credit) to individuals where the Home Office has applied an NRPF condition to their immigration status.
Students who are supported to exit Gaza are still required to meet all of the requirements of the student route, and are subject to the same No Recourse to Public Funds (NRPF) conditions. |
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Students: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many investigations are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) We are resolute in our commitment to protecting public money in higher education and are taking firm action to address serious concerns about exploitation of the student funding system. Eligibility for student finance is not based solely on nationality, but on a person’s immigration status and residency. To be eligible, a student must be ordinarily resident in England and be settled or have a recognised connection with the UK. Students must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK and Islands (Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and/or the British Overseas Territories) for the three years prior to the first day of the first academic year of their course. There are exceptions to these requirements for some individuals. For example, there is an exception to the requirement to be settled for those who are covered by the EU Withdrawal Agreement. To qualify for support, applicants must provide the Student Loans Company (SLC) with evidence of their eligibility. This includes evidence of their identity, immigration status and ordinary residence. SLC have robust procedures in place to check student finance eligibility, including data-sharing with Home Office and HM Passport Office. When required, the SLC will contact the Home Office to confirm an applicant’s immigration status and ordinary residence. Nationality is an optional field when creating a student finance account, however, it is mandatory for the full application for support to be processed. Nationality will always be checked as part of verifying a person’s identity and where appropriate as part of verifying their immigration status. Applications that are incomplete for any of SLC’s identity, immigration status or residence history checks are not approved for student finance. A student does not qualify for student finance if they have shown themselves by their conduct to be ‘unfitted’ to receive support, such as providing falsified documents. Depending on the nature of being found unfitted, the student’s details may be added to the Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System (CIFAS) database. SLC does record details of students who have been made ineligible for student finance. However, the data is not readily available and could only be obtained at disproportionate cost. The department does not hold the data in a format that can provide information on investigations that are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. SLC has advised the department that it has strengthened its integration with Home Office systems for the purposes of establishing eligibility for student finance. Table 1: Number of cases of misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years.
Table 1 shows data for undergraduate applications which have been found to warrant sanctions for false evidence on application. Applications with residency fraud have failed checks for UK nationals, Irish citizens or ‘settled status’ in the UK to verify information on the following eligibility criteria: their home is in England, they’ve been continuously living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for three years before the first day of the first academic year (apart from temporary absences such as holidays). Applications with migrant worker fraud have failed checks or submitted false evidence to claim migrant worker status and access student finance. From 2022 onwards the number of cases linked to migrant worker students increased, initially due to a law enforcement referral and then due to collective and increased focus on fraud. Table 2: Value and volume of income-contingent repayment loans due for repayment from Student Finance England (SFE) borrowers who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income is not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book as at 10/12/2025.
Table 2 shows the value and volume of all SFE income-contingent repayment loans for students who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income was not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book. The main reasons for income which is not verified is that they have been matched by HMRC but have no employment details recorded or they have moved overseas and are no longer part of the UK tax system. SLC proactively attempt to trace and contact all borrowers whose income is not verified to correctly classify the situation and take the required action. The department does not hold the data to provide accurate loan write-off rates (the proportion of loans which have been written off) in the form requested. Due to the way in which the data is held, analysts in the department would not be able to provide this information you have requested without exceeding the disproportionate cost threshold. Table 3 shows the number of full-time undergraduate students who were domiciled in England who received their first loan payment whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last ten years.
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Students: Loans
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, what estimate she has made of the value of student loans for which accurate income data is not currently held; and what proportion of the loan book this represents. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) We are resolute in our commitment to protecting public money in higher education and are taking firm action to address serious concerns about exploitation of the student funding system. Eligibility for student finance is not based solely on nationality, but on a person’s immigration status and residency. To be eligible, a student must be ordinarily resident in England and be settled or have a recognised connection with the UK. Students must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK and Islands (Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and/or the British Overseas Territories) for the three years prior to the first day of the first academic year of their course. There are exceptions to these requirements for some individuals. For example, there is an exception to the requirement to be settled for those who are covered by the EU Withdrawal Agreement. To qualify for support, applicants must provide the Student Loans Company (SLC) with evidence of their eligibility. This includes evidence of their identity, immigration status and ordinary residence. SLC have robust procedures in place to check student finance eligibility, including data-sharing with Home Office and HM Passport Office. When required, the SLC will contact the Home Office to confirm an applicant’s immigration status and ordinary residence. Nationality is an optional field when creating a student finance account, however, it is mandatory for the full application for support to be processed. Nationality will always be checked as part of verifying a person’s identity and where appropriate as part of verifying their immigration status. Applications that are incomplete for any of SLC’s identity, immigration status or residence history checks are not approved for student finance. A student does not qualify for student finance if they have shown themselves by their conduct to be ‘unfitted’ to receive support, such as providing falsified documents. Depending on the nature of being found unfitted, the student’s details may be added to the Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System (CIFAS) database. SLC does record details of students who have been made ineligible for student finance. However, the data is not readily available and could only be obtained at disproportionate cost. The department does not hold the data in a format that can provide information on investigations that are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. SLC has advised the department that it has strengthened its integration with Home Office systems for the purposes of establishing eligibility for student finance. Table 1: Number of cases of misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years.
Table 1 shows data for undergraduate applications which have been found to warrant sanctions for false evidence on application. Applications with residency fraud have failed checks for UK nationals, Irish citizens or ‘settled status’ in the UK to verify information on the following eligibility criteria: their home is in England, they’ve been continuously living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for three years before the first day of the first academic year (apart from temporary absences such as holidays). Applications with migrant worker fraud have failed checks or submitted false evidence to claim migrant worker status and access student finance. From 2022 onwards the number of cases linked to migrant worker students increased, initially due to a law enforcement referral and then due to collective and increased focus on fraud. Table 2: Value and volume of income-contingent repayment loans due for repayment from Student Finance England (SFE) borrowers who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income is not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book as at 10/12/2025.
Table 2 shows the value and volume of all SFE income-contingent repayment loans for students who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income was not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book. The main reasons for income which is not verified is that they have been matched by HMRC but have no employment details recorded or they have moved overseas and are no longer part of the UK tax system. SLC proactively attempt to trace and contact all borrowers whose income is not verified to correctly classify the situation and take the required action. The department does not hold the data to provide accurate loan write-off rates (the proportion of loans which have been written off) in the form requested. Due to the way in which the data is held, analysts in the department would not be able to provide this information you have requested without exceeding the disproportionate cost threshold. Table 3 shows the number of full-time undergraduate students who were domiciled in England who received their first loan payment whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last ten years.
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Students: Loans
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many students agreed to receive a student loan whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last 10 years. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) We are resolute in our commitment to protecting public money in higher education and are taking firm action to address serious concerns about exploitation of the student funding system. Eligibility for student finance is not based solely on nationality, but on a person’s immigration status and residency. To be eligible, a student must be ordinarily resident in England and be settled or have a recognised connection with the UK. Students must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK and Islands (Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and/or the British Overseas Territories) for the three years prior to the first day of the first academic year of their course. There are exceptions to these requirements for some individuals. For example, there is an exception to the requirement to be settled for those who are covered by the EU Withdrawal Agreement. To qualify for support, applicants must provide the Student Loans Company (SLC) with evidence of their eligibility. This includes evidence of their identity, immigration status and ordinary residence. SLC have robust procedures in place to check student finance eligibility, including data-sharing with Home Office and HM Passport Office. When required, the SLC will contact the Home Office to confirm an applicant’s immigration status and ordinary residence. Nationality is an optional field when creating a student finance account, however, it is mandatory for the full application for support to be processed. Nationality will always be checked as part of verifying a person’s identity and where appropriate as part of verifying their immigration status. Applications that are incomplete for any of SLC’s identity, immigration status or residence history checks are not approved for student finance. A student does not qualify for student finance if they have shown themselves by their conduct to be ‘unfitted’ to receive support, such as providing falsified documents. Depending on the nature of being found unfitted, the student’s details may be added to the Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System (CIFAS) database. SLC does record details of students who have been made ineligible for student finance. However, the data is not readily available and could only be obtained at disproportionate cost. The department does not hold the data in a format that can provide information on investigations that are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. SLC has advised the department that it has strengthened its integration with Home Office systems for the purposes of establishing eligibility for student finance. Table 1: Number of cases of misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years.
Table 1 shows data for undergraduate applications which have been found to warrant sanctions for false evidence on application. Applications with residency fraud have failed checks for UK nationals, Irish citizens or ‘settled status’ in the UK to verify information on the following eligibility criteria: their home is in England, they’ve been continuously living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for three years before the first day of the first academic year (apart from temporary absences such as holidays). Applications with migrant worker fraud have failed checks or submitted false evidence to claim migrant worker status and access student finance. From 2022 onwards the number of cases linked to migrant worker students increased, initially due to a law enforcement referral and then due to collective and increased focus on fraud. Table 2: Value and volume of income-contingent repayment loans due for repayment from Student Finance England (SFE) borrowers who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income is not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book as at 10/12/2025.
Table 2 shows the value and volume of all SFE income-contingent repayment loans for students who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income was not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book. The main reasons for income which is not verified is that they have been matched by HMRC but have no employment details recorded or they have moved overseas and are no longer part of the UK tax system. SLC proactively attempt to trace and contact all borrowers whose income is not verified to correctly classify the situation and take the required action. The department does not hold the data to provide accurate loan write-off rates (the proportion of loans which have been written off) in the form requested. Due to the way in which the data is held, analysts in the department would not be able to provide this information you have requested without exceeding the disproportionate cost threshold. Table 3 shows the number of full-time undergraduate students who were domiciled in England who received their first loan payment whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last ten years.
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Students: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, what checks are undertaken to verify eligibility for student finance among applicants who have recently entered the UK. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) We are resolute in our commitment to protecting public money in higher education and are taking firm action to address serious concerns about exploitation of the student funding system. Eligibility for student finance is not based solely on nationality, but on a person’s immigration status and residency. To be eligible, a student must be ordinarily resident in England and be settled or have a recognised connection with the UK. Students must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK and Islands (Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and/or the British Overseas Territories) for the three years prior to the first day of the first academic year of their course. There are exceptions to these requirements for some individuals. For example, there is an exception to the requirement to be settled for those who are covered by the EU Withdrawal Agreement. To qualify for support, applicants must provide the Student Loans Company (SLC) with evidence of their eligibility. This includes evidence of their identity, immigration status and ordinary residence. SLC have robust procedures in place to check student finance eligibility, including data-sharing with Home Office and HM Passport Office. When required, the SLC will contact the Home Office to confirm an applicant’s immigration status and ordinary residence. Nationality is an optional field when creating a student finance account, however, it is mandatory for the full application for support to be processed. Nationality will always be checked as part of verifying a person’s identity and where appropriate as part of verifying their immigration status. Applications that are incomplete for any of SLC’s identity, immigration status or residence history checks are not approved for student finance. A student does not qualify for student finance if they have shown themselves by their conduct to be ‘unfitted’ to receive support, such as providing falsified documents. Depending on the nature of being found unfitted, the student’s details may be added to the Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System (CIFAS) database. SLC does record details of students who have been made ineligible for student finance. However, the data is not readily available and could only be obtained at disproportionate cost. The department does not hold the data in a format that can provide information on investigations that are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. SLC has advised the department that it has strengthened its integration with Home Office systems for the purposes of establishing eligibility for student finance. Table 1: Number of cases of misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years.
Table 1 shows data for undergraduate applications which have been found to warrant sanctions for false evidence on application. Applications with residency fraud have failed checks for UK nationals, Irish citizens or ‘settled status’ in the UK to verify information on the following eligibility criteria: their home is in England, they’ve been continuously living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for three years before the first day of the first academic year (apart from temporary absences such as holidays). Applications with migrant worker fraud have failed checks or submitted false evidence to claim migrant worker status and access student finance. From 2022 onwards the number of cases linked to migrant worker students increased, initially due to a law enforcement referral and then due to collective and increased focus on fraud. Table 2: Value and volume of income-contingent repayment loans due for repayment from Student Finance England (SFE) borrowers who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income is not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book as at 10/12/2025.
Table 2 shows the value and volume of all SFE income-contingent repayment loans for students who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income was not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book. The main reasons for income which is not verified is that they have been matched by HMRC but have no employment details recorded or they have moved overseas and are no longer part of the UK tax system. SLC proactively attempt to trace and contact all borrowers whose income is not verified to correctly classify the situation and take the required action. The department does not hold the data to provide accurate loan write-off rates (the proportion of loans which have been written off) in the form requested. Due to the way in which the data is held, analysts in the department would not be able to provide this information you have requested without exceeding the disproportionate cost threshold. Table 3 shows the number of full-time undergraduate students who were domiciled in England who received their first loan payment whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last ten years.
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Students: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, what assessment she has made of the compliance rates with the three-year UK residency requirement among student finance applicants. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) We are resolute in our commitment to protecting public money in higher education and are taking firm action to address serious concerns about exploitation of the student funding system. Eligibility for student finance is not based solely on nationality, but on a person’s immigration status and residency. To be eligible, a student must be ordinarily resident in England and be settled or have a recognised connection with the UK. Students must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK and Islands (Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and/or the British Overseas Territories) for the three years prior to the first day of the first academic year of their course. There are exceptions to these requirements for some individuals. For example, there is an exception to the requirement to be settled for those who are covered by the EU Withdrawal Agreement. To qualify for support, applicants must provide the Student Loans Company (SLC) with evidence of their eligibility. This includes evidence of their identity, immigration status and ordinary residence. SLC have robust procedures in place to check student finance eligibility, including data-sharing with Home Office and HM Passport Office. When required, the SLC will contact the Home Office to confirm an applicant’s immigration status and ordinary residence. Nationality is an optional field when creating a student finance account, however, it is mandatory for the full application for support to be processed. Nationality will always be checked as part of verifying a person’s identity and where appropriate as part of verifying their immigration status. Applications that are incomplete for any of SLC’s identity, immigration status or residence history checks are not approved for student finance. A student does not qualify for student finance if they have shown themselves by their conduct to be ‘unfitted’ to receive support, such as providing falsified documents. Depending on the nature of being found unfitted, the student’s details may be added to the Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System (CIFAS) database. SLC does record details of students who have been made ineligible for student finance. However, the data is not readily available and could only be obtained at disproportionate cost. The department does not hold the data in a format that can provide information on investigations that are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. SLC has advised the department that it has strengthened its integration with Home Office systems for the purposes of establishing eligibility for student finance. Table 1: Number of cases of misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years.
Table 1 shows data for undergraduate applications which have been found to warrant sanctions for false evidence on application. Applications with residency fraud have failed checks for UK nationals, Irish citizens or ‘settled status’ in the UK to verify information on the following eligibility criteria: their home is in England, they’ve been continuously living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for three years before the first day of the first academic year (apart from temporary absences such as holidays). Applications with migrant worker fraud have failed checks or submitted false evidence to claim migrant worker status and access student finance. From 2022 onwards the number of cases linked to migrant worker students increased, initially due to a law enforcement referral and then due to collective and increased focus on fraud. Table 2: Value and volume of income-contingent repayment loans due for repayment from Student Finance England (SFE) borrowers who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income is not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book as at 10/12/2025.
Table 2 shows the value and volume of all SFE income-contingent repayment loans for students who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income was not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book. The main reasons for income which is not verified is that they have been matched by HMRC but have no employment details recorded or they have moved overseas and are no longer part of the UK tax system. SLC proactively attempt to trace and contact all borrowers whose income is not verified to correctly classify the situation and take the required action. The department does not hold the data to provide accurate loan write-off rates (the proportion of loans which have been written off) in the form requested. Due to the way in which the data is held, analysts in the department would not be able to provide this information you have requested without exceeding the disproportionate cost threshold. Table 3 shows the number of full-time undergraduate students who were domiciled in England who received their first loan payment whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last ten years.
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Students: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many applications for student finance have been refused due to insufficient residency evidence in each of the last ten years. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) We are resolute in our commitment to protecting public money in higher education and are taking firm action to address serious concerns about exploitation of the student funding system. Eligibility for student finance is not based solely on nationality, but on a person’s immigration status and residency. To be eligible, a student must be ordinarily resident in England and be settled or have a recognised connection with the UK. Students must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK and Islands (Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and/or the British Overseas Territories) for the three years prior to the first day of the first academic year of their course. There are exceptions to these requirements for some individuals. For example, there is an exception to the requirement to be settled for those who are covered by the EU Withdrawal Agreement. To qualify for support, applicants must provide the Student Loans Company (SLC) with evidence of their eligibility. This includes evidence of their identity, immigration status and ordinary residence. SLC have robust procedures in place to check student finance eligibility, including data-sharing with Home Office and HM Passport Office. When required, the SLC will contact the Home Office to confirm an applicant’s immigration status and ordinary residence. Nationality is an optional field when creating a student finance account, however, it is mandatory for the full application for support to be processed. Nationality will always be checked as part of verifying a person’s identity and where appropriate as part of verifying their immigration status. Applications that are incomplete for any of SLC’s identity, immigration status or residence history checks are not approved for student finance. A student does not qualify for student finance if they have shown themselves by their conduct to be ‘unfitted’ to receive support, such as providing falsified documents. Depending on the nature of being found unfitted, the student’s details may be added to the Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System (CIFAS) database. SLC does record details of students who have been made ineligible for student finance. However, the data is not readily available and could only be obtained at disproportionate cost. The department does not hold the data in a format that can provide information on investigations that are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. SLC has advised the department that it has strengthened its integration with Home Office systems for the purposes of establishing eligibility for student finance. Table 1: Number of cases of misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years.
Table 1 shows data for undergraduate applications which have been found to warrant sanctions for false evidence on application. Applications with residency fraud have failed checks for UK nationals, Irish citizens or ‘settled status’ in the UK to verify information on the following eligibility criteria: their home is in England, they’ve been continuously living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for three years before the first day of the first academic year (apart from temporary absences such as holidays). Applications with migrant worker fraud have failed checks or submitted false evidence to claim migrant worker status and access student finance. From 2022 onwards the number of cases linked to migrant worker students increased, initially due to a law enforcement referral and then due to collective and increased focus on fraud. Table 2: Value and volume of income-contingent repayment loans due for repayment from Student Finance England (SFE) borrowers who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income is not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book as at 10/12/2025.
Table 2 shows the value and volume of all SFE income-contingent repayment loans for students who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income was not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book. The main reasons for income which is not verified is that they have been matched by HMRC but have no employment details recorded or they have moved overseas and are no longer part of the UK tax system. SLC proactively attempt to trace and contact all borrowers whose income is not verified to correctly classify the situation and take the required action. The department does not hold the data to provide accurate loan write-off rates (the proportion of loans which have been written off) in the form requested. Due to the way in which the data is held, analysts in the department would not be able to provide this information you have requested without exceeding the disproportionate cost threshold. Table 3 shows the number of full-time undergraduate students who were domiciled in England who received their first loan payment whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last ten years.
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Students: Loans
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, whether her Department collects data on loan write-off rates broken down by borrower residency status at the time of issuing the loan. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) We are resolute in our commitment to protecting public money in higher education and are taking firm action to address serious concerns about exploitation of the student funding system. Eligibility for student finance is not based solely on nationality, but on a person’s immigration status and residency. To be eligible, a student must be ordinarily resident in England and be settled or have a recognised connection with the UK. Students must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK and Islands (Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and/or the British Overseas Territories) for the three years prior to the first day of the first academic year of their course. There are exceptions to these requirements for some individuals. For example, there is an exception to the requirement to be settled for those who are covered by the EU Withdrawal Agreement. To qualify for support, applicants must provide the Student Loans Company (SLC) with evidence of their eligibility. This includes evidence of their identity, immigration status and ordinary residence. SLC have robust procedures in place to check student finance eligibility, including data-sharing with Home Office and HM Passport Office. When required, the SLC will contact the Home Office to confirm an applicant’s immigration status and ordinary residence. Nationality is an optional field when creating a student finance account, however, it is mandatory for the full application for support to be processed. Nationality will always be checked as part of verifying a person’s identity and where appropriate as part of verifying their immigration status. Applications that are incomplete for any of SLC’s identity, immigration status or residence history checks are not approved for student finance. A student does not qualify for student finance if they have shown themselves by their conduct to be ‘unfitted’ to receive support, such as providing falsified documents. Depending on the nature of being found unfitted, the student’s details may be added to the Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System (CIFAS) database. SLC does record details of students who have been made ineligible for student finance. However, the data is not readily available and could only be obtained at disproportionate cost. The department does not hold the data in a format that can provide information on investigations that are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. SLC has advised the department that it has strengthened its integration with Home Office systems for the purposes of establishing eligibility for student finance. Table 1: Number of cases of misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years.
Table 1 shows data for undergraduate applications which have been found to warrant sanctions for false evidence on application. Applications with residency fraud have failed checks for UK nationals, Irish citizens or ‘settled status’ in the UK to verify information on the following eligibility criteria: their home is in England, they’ve been continuously living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for three years before the first day of the first academic year (apart from temporary absences such as holidays). Applications with migrant worker fraud have failed checks or submitted false evidence to claim migrant worker status and access student finance. From 2022 onwards the number of cases linked to migrant worker students increased, initially due to a law enforcement referral and then due to collective and increased focus on fraud. Table 2: Value and volume of income-contingent repayment loans due for repayment from Student Finance England (SFE) borrowers who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income is not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book as at 10/12/2025.
Table 2 shows the value and volume of all SFE income-contingent repayment loans for students who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income was not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book. The main reasons for income which is not verified is that they have been matched by HMRC but have no employment details recorded or they have moved overseas and are no longer part of the UK tax system. SLC proactively attempt to trace and contact all borrowers whose income is not verified to correctly classify the situation and take the required action. The department does not hold the data to provide accurate loan write-off rates (the proportion of loans which have been written off) in the form requested. Due to the way in which the data is held, analysts in the department would not be able to provide this information you have requested without exceeding the disproportionate cost threshold. Table 3 shows the number of full-time undergraduate students who were domiciled in England who received their first loan payment whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last ten years.
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Students: Finance
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many cases of suspected misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years; and what proportion of these involved applicants providing insufficient or unverifiable residency documentation. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) We are resolute in our commitment to protecting public money in higher education and are taking firm action to address serious concerns about exploitation of the student funding system. Eligibility for student finance is not based solely on nationality, but on a person’s immigration status and residency. To be eligible, a student must be ordinarily resident in England and be settled or have a recognised connection with the UK. Students must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK and Islands (Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and/or the British Overseas Territories) for the three years prior to the first day of the first academic year of their course. There are exceptions to these requirements for some individuals. For example, there is an exception to the requirement to be settled for those who are covered by the EU Withdrawal Agreement. To qualify for support, applicants must provide the Student Loans Company (SLC) with evidence of their eligibility. This includes evidence of their identity, immigration status and ordinary residence. SLC have robust procedures in place to check student finance eligibility, including data-sharing with Home Office and HM Passport Office. When required, the SLC will contact the Home Office to confirm an applicant’s immigration status and ordinary residence. Nationality is an optional field when creating a student finance account, however, it is mandatory for the full application for support to be processed. Nationality will always be checked as part of verifying a person’s identity and where appropriate as part of verifying their immigration status. Applications that are incomplete for any of SLC’s identity, immigration status or residence history checks are not approved for student finance. A student does not qualify for student finance if they have shown themselves by their conduct to be ‘unfitted’ to receive support, such as providing falsified documents. Depending on the nature of being found unfitted, the student’s details may be added to the Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System (CIFAS) database. SLC does record details of students who have been made ineligible for student finance. However, the data is not readily available and could only be obtained at disproportionate cost. The department does not hold the data in a format that can provide information on investigations that are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. SLC has advised the department that it has strengthened its integration with Home Office systems for the purposes of establishing eligibility for student finance. Table 1: Number of cases of misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years.
Table 1 shows data for undergraduate applications which have been found to warrant sanctions for false evidence on application. Applications with residency fraud have failed checks for UK nationals, Irish citizens or ‘settled status’ in the UK to verify information on the following eligibility criteria: their home is in England, they’ve been continuously living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for three years before the first day of the first academic year (apart from temporary absences such as holidays). Applications with migrant worker fraud have failed checks or submitted false evidence to claim migrant worker status and access student finance. From 2022 onwards the number of cases linked to migrant worker students increased, initially due to a law enforcement referral and then due to collective and increased focus on fraud. Table 2: Value and volume of income-contingent repayment loans due for repayment from Student Finance England (SFE) borrowers who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income is not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book as at 10/12/2025.
Table 2 shows the value and volume of all SFE income-contingent repayment loans for students who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income was not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book. The main reasons for income which is not verified is that they have been matched by HMRC but have no employment details recorded or they have moved overseas and are no longer part of the UK tax system. SLC proactively attempt to trace and contact all borrowers whose income is not verified to correctly classify the situation and take the required action. The department does not hold the data to provide accurate loan write-off rates (the proportion of loans which have been written off) in the form requested. Due to the way in which the data is held, analysts in the department would not be able to provide this information you have requested without exceeding the disproportionate cost threshold. Table 3 shows the number of full-time undergraduate students who were domiciled in England who received their first loan payment whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last ten years.
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Students: Loans
Asked by: Rupert Lowe (Independent - Great Yarmouth) Tuesday 3rd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, how many student-loan recipients are recorded with incomplete or inaccurate residency or nationality data. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) We are resolute in our commitment to protecting public money in higher education and are taking firm action to address serious concerns about exploitation of the student funding system. Eligibility for student finance is not based solely on nationality, but on a person’s immigration status and residency. To be eligible, a student must be ordinarily resident in England and be settled or have a recognised connection with the UK. Students must also have been ordinarily resident in the UK and Islands (Channel Islands, the Isle of Man and/or the British Overseas Territories) for the three years prior to the first day of the first academic year of their course. There are exceptions to these requirements for some individuals. For example, there is an exception to the requirement to be settled for those who are covered by the EU Withdrawal Agreement. To qualify for support, applicants must provide the Student Loans Company (SLC) with evidence of their eligibility. This includes evidence of their identity, immigration status and ordinary residence. SLC have robust procedures in place to check student finance eligibility, including data-sharing with Home Office and HM Passport Office. When required, the SLC will contact the Home Office to confirm an applicant’s immigration status and ordinary residence. Nationality is an optional field when creating a student finance account, however, it is mandatory for the full application for support to be processed. Nationality will always be checked as part of verifying a person’s identity and where appropriate as part of verifying their immigration status. Applications that are incomplete for any of SLC’s identity, immigration status or residence history checks are not approved for student finance. A student does not qualify for student finance if they have shown themselves by their conduct to be ‘unfitted’ to receive support, such as providing falsified documents. Depending on the nature of being found unfitted, the student’s details may be added to the Credit Industry Fraud Avoidance System (CIFAS) database. SLC does record details of students who have been made ineligible for student finance. However, the data is not readily available and could only be obtained at disproportionate cost. The department does not hold the data in a format that can provide information on investigations that are currently open into incorrect residency claims for student finance. SLC has advised the department that it has strengthened its integration with Home Office systems for the purposes of establishing eligibility for student finance. Table 1: Number of cases of misrepresentation in student finance applications have been identified in each of the last five years.
Table 1 shows data for undergraduate applications which have been found to warrant sanctions for false evidence on application. Applications with residency fraud have failed checks for UK nationals, Irish citizens or ‘settled status’ in the UK to verify information on the following eligibility criteria: their home is in England, they’ve been continuously living in the UK, Channel Islands or Isle of Man for three years before the first day of the first academic year (apart from temporary absences such as holidays). Applications with migrant worker fraud have failed checks or submitted false evidence to claim migrant worker status and access student finance. From 2022 onwards the number of cases linked to migrant worker students increased, initially due to a law enforcement referral and then due to collective and increased focus on fraud. Table 2: Value and volume of income-contingent repayment loans due for repayment from Student Finance England (SFE) borrowers who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income is not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book as at 10/12/2025.
Table 2 shows the value and volume of all SFE income-contingent repayment loans for students who were domiciled in England at the time of the loan whose income was not verified, as a proportion of the total loan book. The main reasons for income which is not verified is that they have been matched by HMRC but have no employment details recorded or they have moved overseas and are no longer part of the UK tax system. SLC proactively attempt to trace and contact all borrowers whose income is not verified to correctly classify the situation and take the required action. The department does not hold the data to provide accurate loan write-off rates (the proportion of loans which have been written off) in the form requested. Due to the way in which the data is held, analysts in the department would not be able to provide this information you have requested without exceeding the disproportionate cost threshold. Table 3 shows the number of full-time undergraduate students who were domiciled in England who received their first loan payment whilst they were under the age of 18 in each of the last ten years.
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Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government: Repairs and Maintenance
Asked by: Rachel Blake (Labour (Co-op) - Cities of London and Westminster) Monday 2nd February 2026 Question to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government: To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, what assessment his Department has made of the value for money delivered through the 2003 - 2005 redevelopment of 2 Marsham Street. Answered by Samantha Dixon - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Housing, Communities and Local Government) The Department has not undertaken a dedicated, standalone assessment of the value for money delivered specifically through the 2003–2005 redevelopment of 2 Marsham Street. However, the National Audit Office reviewed the associated Private Finance Initiative arrangements for the new Home Office headquarters in 2003. The NAO concluded that the Home Office had secured a good price through a well‑run competition, with risks appropriately allocated and favourable financing obtained. The report indicated that the project was expected to deliver value for money, provided the remaining accommodation and property‑related risks were managed effectively.
The Public Accounts Committee’s Eighteenth Report (2003–04) further found that commissioning a new building rather than refurbishing the three former Marsham Towers offered better value for money, avoided the business disruption and costs of temporary accommodation, and supported the consolidation of government estate functions. The Committee noted that the redevelopment contract, valued at £311 million (net present cost), was selected as the most cost‑effective option following full competition.
These independent assessments confirmed that the redevelopment represented value for money for the taxpayer at the point the investment decision was taken. The Treasury has made no subsequent assessment that contradicts these findings. |
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Teachers and Voluntary Work: Offences against Children
Asked by: Sarah Champion (Labour - Rotherham) Monday 2nd February 2026 Question to the Department for Education: To ask the Secretary of State for Education, with reference to the Crime and Police Bill 2024-26, what assessment her Department has made of the adequacy of training for reporting child sexual abuse for (a) school teachers and (b) people who volunteer to deliver services for children. Answered by Josh MacAlister - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Education) The government already sets clear expectations through statutory and non-statutory guidance that those engaging with children should make an immediate referral to the relevant local authority children’s social care or police if they are concerned about a child, including the reporting of child sexual abuse. Recognising that support is necessary, the Home Office provides funds to the independent Centre for Expertise on Child Sexual Abuse to further strengthen the ability of professionals to understand, identify and respond appropriately to concerns of child sexual abuse through the provision of evidence-based training and practice resources. Everyone who is responsible for the safety and wellbeing of children should receive appropriate training on such referral processes. Mandatory reporting introduces a legal duty for those who work with children in a relevant activity to report child sexual abuse to the police or social services. We have committed to delaying commencement of the duty to ensure sectors are prepared for its introduction. The government will set out clear guidance on the operation of the duty. We will work with regulators and professional standards-setting bodies to ensure the requirements of the new duty are clearly communicated ahead of implementation.
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Immigration: English Language
Asked by: Daniel Zeichner (Labour - Cambridge) Monday 2nd February 2026 Question to the Department for Science, Innovation & Technology: To ask the Secretary of State for Science, Innovation and Technology, whether she has had recent discussions with the Secretary of State for the Home Department on proposals to move English language testing for immigration purposes to a digital by default approach. Answered by Ian Murray - Minister of State (Department for Science, Innovation and Technology) The Home Office English Language Testing (HOELT) programme team have had preliminary scoping conversations with the Department of Science, Innovation and Technology (DSIT) Commercial Innovation Hub, including the Government Digital Service prior to launch of the live procurement. |
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Speed Limits: Fines
Asked by: Luke Evans (Conservative - Hinckley and Bosworth) Friday 30th January 2026 Question to the Department for Transport: To ask the Secretary of State for Transport, pursuant to WPQ 103428 answered on 19 January 2026 on Speed Limit: Fines, what National Highways' planned timescale is for the implementation of the solution to the speed camera anomaly. Answered by Simon Lightwood - Parliamentary Under-Secretary (Department for Transport) As set out in response to WPQ 103428 on 19 January, a Home Office approved solution to this issue has been agreed, and National Highways and the police are continuing to work together to implement this as a priority.
In the meantime, National Highways has put in place measures including increased Traffic Patrol Officers, alongside the existing tactics that the police use to enforce speed limits on the Strategic Road Network including mobile camera deployments, roads policing patrols and average speed sites.
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| National Audit Office |
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Feb. 04 2026
Report - The costs of tackling drug harms in prisons (PDF) Found: Out of scope of this report Home Office ● Leads national drugs policy and enforcement strategy. |
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Jan. 30 2026
Report - The MoD’s management of its losses from fraud and other economic crime (PDF) Found: Uses Home Office definitions for both. Uses Home Office definitions for both. |
| Department Publications - Policy paper |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Neurodiversity in the CJS action plan: final update Document: (PDF) Found: To give the leadership and direction needed, the Ministry of Justice should work with the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Annual Statement on Prison Capacity: 2025 Document: (PDF) Found: population-projections-2025-to-2030--2 For these projections, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ), the Home Office |
| Department Publications - Guidance |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office Source Page: AI for climate-smart agriculture and food security in Kenya Document: Volume 5.2: Contract section 2, standard terms and conditions (webpage) Found: any time prior to the Commencement Date and/or during the term of this Contract appeared on the Home Office |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Ministry of Defence Source Page: Countering Illegal Use of UAS Around Prisons and Sensitive Sites Document: Countering Illegal Use of UAS Around Prisons and Sensitive Sites (webpage) Found: Probation Service (HMPPS), Ministry of Defence (MOD), the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA), Home Office |
| Department Publications - Research |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Department for Transport Source Page: The Report of the Cranston Inquiry Document: (PDF) Found: Therefore, the Home Office led the policy response to small boats, with input and, where necessary, |
| Department Publications - Transparency |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Report on the implementation of Law Commission proposals: January 2025 to January 2026 Document: (PDF) Found: It included a recommendation that the Home Office should overhaul the Immigration Rules and redraft |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Report on the implementation of Law Commission proposals: January 2025 to January 2026 Document: (PDF) Found: It included a recommendation that the Home Office should overhaul the Immigration Rules and redraft |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Report on the implementation of Law Commission proposals: January 2025 to January 2026 Document: (PDF) Found: It included a recommendation that the Home Office should overhaul the Immigration Rules and redraft |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Department for Digital, Culture, Media & Sport Source Page: FOI2024 /07615 : Government Art Collection - Installed and De-Installed Artworks Document: (webpage) Found: Revenue & Customs 17851 Juan Bolivar Circus Boy HM Treasury 18258 Grayson Perry Map of Nowhere Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Defence Source Page: Atomic Weapons Establishment (AWE) annual report and accounts 2024-25 Document: (PDF) Found: Our engagement with the Home Office and other government agencies is instrumental in ensuring that we |
| Department Publications - News and Communications |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Department for Business and Trade Source Page: Andy King appointed as Regulator of Community Interest Companies Document: Andy King appointed as Regulator of Community Interest Companies (webpage) Found: Andy started his career at the Home Office where he was also seconded to a development agency. |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Department for Work and Pensions Source Page: The Timms Review: Co-Chair Update, February 2026 Document: (PDF) Found: Equality and Human Rights Commission, the NHS Advisory Board, the Crown Prosecution Service, the Home Office |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Department for Work and Pensions Source Page: The Timms Review: Co-Chair Update, February 2026 Document: (PDF) Found: Equality and Human Rights Commission, the NHS Advisory Board, the Crown Prosecution Service, the Home Office |
| Department Publications - Consultations |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: A new Victims’ Code Document: (PDF) Found: Gambling Commission • The Health and Safety Executive • His Majesty’s Revenue and Customs • The Home Office |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: A new Victims’ Code Document: (PDF) Found: manslaughter abroad guidance in collaboration with the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC), the Home Office |
| Department Publications - Statistics |
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Thursday 5th February 2026
Department for Energy Security & Net Zero Source Page: Final UK greenhouse gas emissions statistics: 1990 to 2024 Document: (Excel) Found: 2006WasteWasteAccidental fires5C2biiEmission factor * activityCR,OTHDCLG fire statistics, FSGB, Home Office |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Independent Review of the Criminal Courts: Part 2 Document: (PDF) Found: Finally, investment will be needed by the Home Office and the police in facilities to enable police |
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Wednesday 4th February 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Independent Review of the Criminal Courts: Part 2 Document: (PDF) Found: I have met with Ministers from the MoJ, as well as two former Lord Chancellors, and the Home Office |
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Tuesday 3rd February 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Response to the Independent Review of Separation Centres Document: (PDF) Found: v Secretary of State for the Home Department [2001] 2 AC 532 at para 5, per Lord Bingham. 23 Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Justice data lab statistics: January 2026 Document: (ODS) Found: individuals which matched to treatment group units and were then weighted. 1 2 Index Offence is based on Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Justice data lab statistics: January 2026 Document: (ODS) Found: individuals which matched to treatment group units and were then weighted. 2 Index Offence is based on Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Offender management statistics quarterly: July to September 2025 Document: (ODS) Found: Home Office counting rules for recorded crime -data.gov.uk (opens in a new window) [note 8] Recall reasons |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Proven reoffending statistics: January to March 2024 Document: (PDF) Found: range of agencies (His Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service8, the Youth Justice Board and the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: Criminal Justice System Statistics publication: Proceedings and Outcomes by Home Office Code 2010 to |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: Note 10The offence groupings used in this tool broadly align with the groups presented by the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: Note 10The offence groupings used in this tool broadly align with the groups presented by the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (ODS) Found: Notes Offence group classification - Q3 2025 This classification document is used to define the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (ODS) Found: [note 19] The Home Office collates and publishes recorded crime data supplied by the 43 territorial police |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: more detailed offence groups shown in this table broadly align with the groups presented by the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: Note 10The offence groupings used in this tool broadly align with the groups presented by the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: Note 10The offence groupings used in this tool broadly align with the groups presented by the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: Note 10The offence groupings used in this tool broadly align with the groups presented by the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: Criminal Justice System Statistics publication: Proceedings and Outcomes by Home Office Code 2017 to |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (PDF) Found: It broadly aligns with the classification used by the Home Office for crime statistics, although there |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: Note 10The offence groupings used in this tool broadly align with the groups presented by the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: more detailed offence groups shown in this table broadly align with the groups presented by the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Criminal Justice Statistics Quarterly: September 2025 Document: (Excel) Found: more detailed offence groups shown in this table broadly align with the groups presented by the Home Office |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Ministry of Justice Source Page: Safety in custody: quarterly update to September 2025 Document: (PDF) Found: HMPPS does not use the Home Office counting rule definitions of Actual Bodily Harm (ABH), Grievous Bodily |
| Non-Departmental Publications - Guidance and Regulation |
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Feb. 05 2026
HM Passport Office Source Page: Nationality: diplomatic privileges: caseworker guidance Document: (PDF) Guidance and Regulation Found: Page 1 of 13 Published for Home Office staff on 23 June 2025 |
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Feb. 03 2026
Innovate UK Source Page: Countering Illegal Use of UAS Around Prisons and Sensitive Sites Document: Countering Illegal Use of UAS Around Prisons and Sensitive Sites (webpage) Guidance and Regulation Found: Probation Service (HMPPS), Ministry of Defence (MOD), the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA), Home Office |
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Feb. 02 2026
HM Passport Office Source Page: Historic passport information: caseworker guidance Document: (PDF) Guidance and Regulation Found: Page 1 of 40 Published for Home Office staff on 13 October 2025 |
| Non-Departmental Publications - News and Communications |
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Feb. 05 2026
Immigration Advice Authority Source Page: Over 900 advisers join IAA's annual online conference Document: Over 900 advisers join IAA's annual online conference (webpage) News and Communications Found: Immigration Services Commissioner, detailed information on the IAA’s enforcement powers, and key Home Office |
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Feb. 05 2026
Companies House Source Page: Andy King appointed as Regulator of Community Interest Companies Document: Andy King appointed as Regulator of Community Interest Companies (webpage) News and Communications Found: Andy started his career at the Home Office where he was also seconded to a development agency. |
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Feb. 04 2026
Security Industry Authority Source Page: Building Martyn's Law regulation together Document: Building Martyn's Law regulation together (webpage) News and Communications Found: week in post, I’m incredibly grateful for the warm welcome I’ve received from SIA colleagues, the Home Office |
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Feb. 03 2026
Independent Adviser on Ministerial Standards Source Page: Tom Tugendhat - Minister of State (Minister for Security) at the Home Office - advice under the Business Appointment Rules Document: Tom Tugendhat - Minister of State (Minister for Security) at the Home Office - advice under the Business Appointment Rules (webpage) News and Communications Found: Tom Tugendhat - Minister of State (Minister for Security) at the Home Office - advice under the Business |
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Feb. 03 2026
UK Defence Innovation Source Page: £1.85 million competition launched to counter illegal UAS use around prisons and sensitive sites Document: £1.85 million competition launched to counter illegal UAS use around prisons and sensitive sites (webpage) News and Communications Found: Majesty’s Prison and Probation Service (HMPPS), the Nuclear Decommissioning Authority (NDA), the Home Office |
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Jan. 29 2026
Migration Advisory Committee Source Page: The government's response to the MAC's Seasonal Worker review Document: The government's response to the MAC's Seasonal Worker review (webpage) News and Communications Found: The Home Office partially agreed to this recommendation and intends to reduce the cooling-off period |
| Non-Departmental Publications - Policy paper |
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Feb. 05 2026
HM Prison and Probation Service Source Page: Neurodiversity in the CJS action plan: final update Document: (PDF) Policy paper Found: To give the leadership and direction needed, the Ministry of Justice should work with the Home Office |
| Non-Departmental Publications - Transparency |
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Jan. 29 2026
Government People Function Source Page: State of the Estate in 2024/25 Document: (PDF) Transparency Found: , DfT Central, the Government Property Agency, the Driver and Vehicle Standards Agency and the Home Office |
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Jan. 29 2026
Immigration Advice Authority Source Page: Annual Report and Accounts 2024/2025 Document: (PDF) Transparency Found: Full GGC disclosures are published by the Home Office in its Annual Report and Accounts. |
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Jan. 29 2026
Care Quality Commission Source Page: Monitoring the Mental Health Act: 2024 to 2025 Document: (PDF) Transparency Found: It sets out a national commitment from the Home Office, the Department of Health and Social Care, the |
| Non-Departmental Publications - Statistics |
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Jan. 29 2026
HM Prison and Probation Service Source Page: Offender management statistics quarterly: July to September 2025 Document: (ODS) Statistics Found: Home Office counting rules for recorded crime -data.gov.uk (opens in a new window) [note 8] Recall reasons |
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Jan. 29 2026
HM Prison and Probation Service Source Page: Safety in custody: quarterly update to September 2025 Document: (PDF) Statistics Found: HMPPS does not use the Home Office counting rule definitions of Actual Bodily Harm (ABH), Grievous Bodily |
| Scottish Cross Party Group Publications |
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Annual Return 2024 to 2025
(PDF) Source Page: Cross-Party Group in the Scottish Parliament on Animal Welfare Found: However, it was suggested that we also invite a representative from the Home Office/legislative side |
| Scottish Parliamentary Debates |
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First Minister’s Question Time
73 speeches (40,582 words) Thursday 5th February 2026 - Main Chamber Mentions: 1: Swinney, John (SNP - Perthshire North) has been a 77 per cent drop in the number of health and care visas that have been granted by the Home Office - Link to Speech |
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Portfolio Question Time
106 speeches (45,340 words) Wednesday 28th January 2026 - Main Chamber Mentions: 1: Constance, Angela (SNP - Almond Valley) Any additional resources required for the proposed use of Cameron barracks are for the Home Office to - Link to Speech 2: Mountain, Edward (Con - Highlands and Islands) My problem is not only that the Home Office is not talking to the cabinet secretary; it is not talking - Link to Speech 3: Constance, Angela (SNP - Almond Valley) I appreciate the member’s frustration about the lack of communication from the Home Office. - Link to Speech |
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Natural Environment (Scotland) Bill: Stage 3
520 speeches (728,752 words) Tuesday 27th January 2026 - Main Chamber Mentions: 1: Mountain, Edward (Con - Highlands and Islands) The Home Office has already noted that the bill would require amendments to its firearms licensing guide - Link to Speech |
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Budget Scrutiny 2026-27
224 speeches (126,309 words) Tuesday 27th January 2026 - Committee Mentions: 1: Robison, Shona (SNP - Dundee City East) First, as you have alluded to, all roads lead to the Home Office on that issue in relation to the policy - Link to Speech 2: Robison, Shona (SNP - Dundee City East) It has not happened by accident; there is an inadequate level of support from the Home Office for the - Link to Speech 3: Robison, Shona (SNP - Dundee City East) happy to keep the member appraised of the outcomes of those discussions.However, we cannot let the Home Office - Link to Speech |
| Welsh Committee Publications |
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PDF - Welsh Government response to the Equality and Social Justice Committee's scrutiny of the Welsh Government Draft Budget 2026-2027 Inquiry: Welsh Government Draft Budget 2026-27 Found: I offered clarity that Clearsprings Ready Homes were not able, under Home Office contract terms and |
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PDF - responded Inquiry: Welsh Government Draft Budget 2026-27 Found: I offered clarity that Clearsprings Ready Homes were not able, under Home Office contract terms and |
| Welsh Government Publications |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Source Page: Police settlement: final 2026 to 2027 Document: Final police finance report 2026 to 2027 (PDF) Found: ensures every local policing body in England and Wales receives the same percentage increase in Home Office |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Source Page: Police settlement: final 2026 to 2027 Document: Final letter to police and crime commissioner (PDF) Found: The Home Office has confirmed that all Welsh police forces will receive an increase of 4.022% in core |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Source Page: Police settlement: final 2026 to 2027 Document: Final police settlement 2026 to 2027 tables (PDF) Found: Police Revenue Funding Notes: 1.Following the 2015 Comprehensive Spending Review, the Home Office |
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Friday 30th January 2026
Source Page: Written Statement: Final Police Settlement 2026-27 (30 January 2026) Document: Written Statement: Final Police Settlement 2026-27 (30 January 2026) (webpage) Found: Today, the Home Office published the final Police Grant allocations for policing bodies in England and |
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Thursday 29th January 2026
Source Page: Workforce equality standard: integrated impact assessment Document: Workforce equality standard: integrated impact assessment (webpage) Found: GOV.UK; Home Office. Welsh Government. (2022, May 24). |
| Welsh Senedd Debates |
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1. Questions to the First Minister
Tuesday 27th January 2026 Mentions: 1: Rhun ap Iorwerth (Plaid Cymru - Ynys Môn) What has she done since the announcement yesterday to take the case directly to the Home Office that - Link to Speech |
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3. Business Statement and Announcement
Tuesday 27th January 2026 Mentions: 1: Jane Hutt (Welsh Labour - Vale of Glamorgan) so, what we have been looking to is a Welsh Government influencing a form of governance with the Home Office - Link to Speech |