LONDON, March 4 (Reuters) - Britain plans to strip accommodation and financial support from asylum seekers who work illegally, break the law or can support themselves, under measures it said on
Britain to cut support for some asylum seekers in tougher migration overhaul
Overview of New Asylum Policies and Political Context
By Sam Tabahriti and Alistair Smout
LONDON, March 4 (Reuters) - Britain will withdraw accommodation and financial support from asylum seekers who break the law, work illegally or can support themselves, under measures aimed at tightening the system amid rising pressure from Reform UK and internal Labour tensions.
The changes come as Prime Minister Keir Starmer's Labour government comes under pressure in opinion polls from Nigel Farage's anti-immigration party, Reform UK.
The new measures by interior minister Shabana Mahmood draw on Denmark's approach and form part of a wider overhaul that includes closing asylum hotels, tightening removals and creating a one-stop appeals system.
Financial Incentives and Removal Policies
The government would launch a pilot programme, Mahmood said, offering failed asylum seekers 10,000 pounds ($13,345.00) per family member - up to 40,000 pounds in total - to leave the country, or face forcible removal.
Legal Duty to Support Refugees to Be Scrapped
Changes to Refugee Support and Leave to Remain
LEGAL DUTY TO SUPPORT REFUGEES TO BE SCRAPPED
Mahmood said Britain would scrap the legal duty to support refugees and halve the initial leave to remain for refugees to 2-1/2 years, in efforts to make the system conditional. It will also introduce an "emergency brake" on some study and work visas.
Conditional Support for Asylum Seekers
"Those who require it, and play by the rules, will rightly continue to receive asylum support, but those who do not will have their support removed," Mahmood said on Thursday.
"The generosity of the British people will become conditional on those seeking asylum to following the law, living by our rules and not working illegally."
Political Reactions and Party Positions
Labour's Position Between Greens and Reform UK
CHARTING PATH BETWEEN THE GREENS AND REFORM
The Labour government is doubling down on a tougher approach on immigration as it faces dissent from the left of the party that it should change tack after losing a by-election to the left-wing Greens last week.
Mahmood warned against both Farage's plan to pull up the drawbridge on asylum seekers and limit legal migration, and the Green Party's "fairy-tale of open borders," saying Britain should have a fair but firm asylum system.
Responses from Reform UK and Green Party
In response to the announcement, Reform said Labour were "taking the British people for mugs" and vowed to deport every illegal migrant. Green Party leader Zack Polanski said it would "always support fair and managed migration."
($1 = 0.7493 pounds)
(Reporting by Sam Tabahriti and Alistair Smout; editing by William James and Bernadette Baum)






