Tuesday briefing: The 20 years of failure that led to Starmer’s ‘island of strangers’ | Immigration and asylum

Good morning. On Monday, Keir Starmer added his name to the dubious list of prime ministers who have used very forceful language to describe the impact of migration on the UK. The UK is at risk of becoming an “island of strangers, not a nation that walks forward together”, he said; the system “seems almost designed to permit abuse”. But while the tone echoed much of the rhetoric of the last 20 years, Starmer insisted he was doing something different.

In his speech launching the government’s immigration white paper, he accused the Conservatives of a “one-nation experiment in open borders conducted on a country that voted for control”, and said that “the experiment is over”. He also claimed that his approach was not about politics. But with Reform UK on the march, this looks thoroughly political. And even to some of his own backbenchers, his approach looks very likely to fuel racism.

The Guardian has lots of coverage of Starmer’s announcement, including a policy rundown, a guide to the sectors most affected by the proposed changes, and Pippa Crerar’s analysis. Today’s newsletter situates all of that in the repetitive and unproductive history of the immigration debate over the last two decades – and the question of whether Starmer can really expect a different outcome this time. Here are the headlines.

Five big stories

  1. Middle East | Gaza is at “critical risk of famine”, food security experts have warned, 10 weeks after Israel imposed a blockade. The Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC) said there had been a “major deterioration” in the food security situation facing Palestinians living there since its last assessment in October 2024.

  2. Security | Counter-terrorism police are investigating after two properties linked to Keir Starmer were hit by suspected arson attacks. A blaze broke out at a home owned by Starmer in Kentish Town, London in the early hours of Monday morning, following two other fires within the last week.

  3. Trump administration | The first group of white South Africans granted refugee status by Donald Trump’s administration has arrived in the US, stirring controversy in South Africa as the US president declared the Afrikaners victims of a “genocide”. On the same day, Trump’s government ended legal protections that had temporarily protected Afghans from deportation.

  4. Armed forces | Former UK special forces personnel have accused colleagues of committing war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, including alleging that they executed civilians and a child. Graphic accounts of routine executions of handcuffed prisoners were handed to the BBC, which reported that weapons were planted during cover-ups.

  5. Crime | Six Bulgarians convicted of spying for Russia in Britain have been jailed at the Old Bailey. The ringleader, Orlin Roussev, was sentenced to 10 years and eight months for his role in executing six “sophisticated” operations that risked national security and the safety of the public.

In depth: From incendiary slogans to failed methods – two decades of rules and rhetoric

Targeted … migrants at the Manston processing centre in Kent in 2022. Photograph: Henry Nicholls/Reuters

In 2006, Tony Blair said that the rational response to globalisation was to “manage it, prepare for it, and roll with it” – but that “for the first time … a mindset of fear that is different and deep” was emerging. Meanwhile, the accession of eight eastern European countries to the EU saw about 1.3 million people arriving in the UK over five years. That set the stage for two decades of forceful and sometimes incendiary rhetoric on immigration that was accompanied by a steady, and then sudden, increase in overall numbers.


2008 | Net migration: 229,000

Gordon Brown’s government introduced a points-based system – first set out in a 2005 strategy document – for people coming to the UK from outside the EU. Immigration minister Liam Byrne said that “people want to know that only those who we need to come to Britain should be allowed to come”.


2010 | Net migration: 256,000

David Cameron promised voters that they would reduce net migration below 100,000. His intervention raised the statistic as a metric of government success in managing migration for the first time. Cameron said: “I don’t think that’s unrealistic; that’s the sort of figure there was in the 1990s, and I think we should see that again.”

After entering government in coalition with the Liberal Democrats, the Conservatives swiftly closed the Tier 1 visa route, for highly skilled workers without a job offer, with a new focus instead on “investors and entrepreneurs”. They also introduced the first ever cap on total work visas, increased salary requirements, created new eligibility requirements for the points-based system, and introduced new English language requirements for those on spousal visas. All of these changes applied only to prospective immigrants from outside the EU, with no impact on the much larger proportion of the overall numbers coming from Europe.


2012 | Net migration: 195,000

Shock and solidarity … a Windrush generation supporter rally in London in 2018. Photograph: Wiktor Szymanowicz/Rex/Shutterstock

As home secretary, Theresa May introduced the “hostile environment” approach, which was billed as focused on “illegal migration” but swiftly came to represent the government’s attitude to immigration in general. It mandated immigration status checks by doctors, landlords and others and came alongside the infamous “go home” billboard vans. The government also abolished post-study work visas for foreign students.

The most shocking example of the consequences of the approach came in the Windrush scandal, which broke in 2018. It saw thousands of people, mostly from Caribbean countries wrongly classified as illegal immigrants and detained, denied rights, threatened with deportation and even forced to leave the UK (pictured above, a Windrush solidarity rally).

There is no evidence that the strategy reduced legal or illegal migration numbers, and voluntary returns – a reasonable measure of the success of a policy aimed at persuading people to leave the country of their own accord – actually fell by two-thirds between 2013 and 2019.


2015 | Net migration: 333,000

With a European refugee crisis under way as a result of conflict in the Middle East, the Conservatives’ manifesto for the next election retained the “ambition” of reducing net migration to the tens of thousands. Meanwhile, under pressure from Ukip on the right, the Conservatives also promised an in/out referendum on EU membership. As you may remember, the Vote Leave campaign the next year repeatedly suggested that only Brexit could make the tens of thousands target achievable.


2017 | Net migration: 208,000

Theresa May’s manifesto again retained the tens of thousands pledge; May said that leaving the European Union “enables us to control our borders in relation to people coming from the EU, as well as those who are coming from outside”. With the flow of immigrants from the EU sharply declining and a spike in arrivals from the rest of the world not yet in full swing, the net migration number temporarily dropped.


2019 | Net migration: 184,000

Amid significant shortages of workers in social care and agriculture, among other sectors, Boris Johnson dropped the tens of thousands pledge, and introduced an “Australian-style points-based system”. He drew a distinction between “unskilled immigrants” coming from the EU and the need to “be much more open to high-skilled immigration”. The Home Office claimed that the new system would reduce unskilled EU migration by 90,000, but increase skilled migration by 65,000 a year. It swiftly stopped using that figure, which appeared to have no substantial basis.


2020 | Net migration: 94,000

With severe labour shortages as a result of the end to free movement now biting, particularly in social care, the government launched a new health and care visa. Thresholds on salaries and skills were reduced, and the following year, with empty shelves in supermarkets and fuel delivery shortages, seasonal visas for poultry workers and HGV drivers were increased to “save Christmas”. The government also reintroduced the post-study work visa abolished when Theresa May was home secretary.


2023 | Net migration: 906,000

With net migration at its highest-ever level, some 807,000 above the Cameron government’s defunct target, Rishi Sunak’s government now set out plans to increase the salary threshold for workers to be able to bring family to the UK from £18,600 to £38,700. But much of the rhetoric – particularly on the Rwanda scheme – continued to centre around illegal migration and Channel crossings, a vastly smaller contributor to total arrivals.

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2025 | Net migration (last year): 728,000

Keir Starmer’s government promises to raise the level of qualification needed to secure a skilled work visa; end all overseas recruitment for social care work after a transition period; require all adult dependents coming to the UK to demonstrate basic English skills; tighten up assessments of institutions granting student visas; and make people wait longer to seek permanent settlement in the UK. (Peter Walker has a full rundown here.) Starmer insists that this will lead to a significant fall in overall numbers by the end of this parliament. But mindful of the history of bold claims and reversals by previous governments, he declines to set an overall target.

Figures are drawn from a Migration Observatory briefing in December 2024, using International Passenger Survey-based ONS data until 2010, and Office for National Statistics experimental data thereafter. All figures are estimates with substantial uncertainty, the Migration Observatory notes.

What else we’ve been reading

‘The real problem is the oligarchy’ … Zack Polanski, the deputy leader of the Green party. Photograph: Sam Frost/The Guardian

Sport

Kieffer Moore of Sheffield United celebrates scoring his team’s first goal against Bristol City. Photograph: Carl Recine/Getty Images

Football | Sheffield United secured a comfortable 3-0 victory against Bristol City, giving them a 6-0 aggregate win and a place in the Championship play-off final. The goals came from Kieffer Moore, Gustavo Hamer and Callum O’Hare.

Football | Carlo Ancelotti has been confirmed as the new manager of Brazil’s men’s national team, the first foreign national to take sole charge of the world’s most successful side since 1925.

Cricket | After 14 years dazzling in whites, Virat Kohli has announced his retirement from Test cricket, prompting a collective sigh around English grounds. India are the headline visitors this summer – Kohli’s brooding features have long been on the posters – but instead he will be watching on like the rest of us.

The front pages

Photograph: Guardian

“PM accused of echoing far-right rhetoric in immigration speech” says the Guardian while the Express complains: “We have heard it all before … But now it is time to deliver!”. The Mail says nothing new is on offer and “Labour’s taking us all for fools”. Unintended consequences are predicted in the i: “‘Grenade in the room’: Care homes warn of closure over Home Office migrant visa ban”.

“Terror probe into arson at PM’s home” is the Telegraph’s lead. Also running with that are the Times – “Starmer house fires mystery” – and the Mirror, which says “Terror cops probe blaze at PM home”. “50 years for Putin’s ‘minions’” – the Metro (slightly meaninglessly) totals the individual sentences given to members of the Bulgarian spy ring. Top story in the Financial Times is “China and US call truce in trade war with deal to slash punishing tariffs”.

Today in Focus

An armed soldier stands on the banks of a lake. Photograph: Mukhtar Khan/AP

Back from the brink: India and Pakistan’s uneasy truce over Kashmir

The Guardian’s south Asia correspondent Hannah Ellis-Petersen reports on the spiralling conflict between India and Pakistan over Kashmir, and how the two nuclear powers agreed a fragile ceasefire. Azhar Qadri, a journalist, explains what the conflict looks like from inside Kashmir

Cartoon of the day | Ben Jennings

Illustration: Ben Jennings/The Guardian

The Upside

A bit of good news to remind you that the world’s not all bad

Fanny Johnstone, who took up drawing in an effort to spend less time on her phone. Photograph: Jonny Weeks/The Guardian

Like most of us, Fanny Johnstone (pictured above) had reached a doomscrolling low. Then, she happened on a simple but powerful resolution: “I decided to do a sketch every day.”

“One day I grabbed one of the notebooks and a pencil and went out to the Cornish cliffs. I spent 10 minutes hastily drawing some cows and wild ponies … I felt like an idiot and an impostor, but I had started.” From that inspiring outing grew a new passion that Johnstone hopes will redefine her relationship with her phone – but also redefine her life. “I lose myself in the act of drawing … It makes me happier and more patient,” she writes in this week’s One change that worked column.

Bored at work?

And finally, the Guardian’s puzzles are here to keep you entertained throughout the day. Until tomorrow.