Oral Answers to Questions Debate

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Department: Home Office

Oral Answers to Questions

Christine Jardine Excerpts
Monday 8th June 2026

(1 week ago)

Commons Chamber
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Danny Chambers Portrait Dr Danny Chambers (Winchester) (LD)
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1. What assessment she has made of the potential impact of planned changes to immigration rules on the economy.

Christine Jardine Portrait Christine Jardine (Edinburgh West) (LD)
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20. What assessment she has made of the impact on the economy of her proposed changes to immigration rules.

Shabana Mahmood Portrait The Secretary of State for the Home Department (Shabana Mahmood)
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Under the previous Government, net migration hit record highs after they lowered entry requirements and opened our borders. My definition of what is best for the UK economy is one where migration is controlled and where there is investment in skills and training for our home-grown workforce, not an overreliance on overseas recruitment.

Shabana Mahmood Portrait Shabana Mahmood
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No one disputes the tremendous contribution that international workers make to our NHS. The picture the hon. Gentleman describes is replicated in constituencies across the country, and we will always welcome that contribution. Overseas recruitment in the NHS is falling primarily because the NHS is leading by example and doing what we want all employers to do: look first at domestic recruitment to ensure that the skills and expertise of the health service are home-grown. I believe that those two systems can go hand in hand, but we have to make changes at the same time.

Christine Jardine Portrait Christine Jardine
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Hospitality, social care and the tech sector are all vital sources of employment and economic stability in my constituency. The companies in those sectors are telling me that, despite their efforts to recruit domestically first, the Home Secretary’s changes to indefinite leave to remain are making it very difficult for them to attract the skilled workforce from abroad that they need to keep the sector going. Will the Home Secretary reconsider the changes in the light of that impact and lighten the regulations to make it possible for these companies to survive?

Shabana Mahmood Portrait Shabana Mahmood
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We have to remember that currently in our country we have more than 1 million young people who are not in employment, education or training, and the hon. Lady and all Members should want us to turn that around and make sure that there are employment opportunities and a positive economic future in their own country for those young people in many of the sectors that she describes. We are the Government who have formalised that link between migration and skills reforms to make sure that companies are investing in the domestic workforce first and foremost before recruiting from abroad.