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    How will Rachel Reeves’s pledge to end asylum hotels work?

    Rachel Reeves has pledged to end the use of asylum hotels by 2029 as part of a spending review that saw the Home Office budget cut. Speaking to MPs in the Commons on Wednesday, the chancellor said her plans to reform the asylum system would save £1bn a year. However, Treasury estimates show that the Home Office still expects the annual cost to be £2.5bn by the final year of this parliament. Labour had already made a manifesto commitment to end the use of hotels for migrants, but Ms Reeves has now committed to doing this within four years. Refugee charities welcomed the news, saying that hotels are “hugely expensive” and isolate asylum seekers from local communities, but urged ministers to move faster.Where will the government put asylum seekers instead? The Home Office has been exploring the use of medium-sized sites for asylum seekers instead of hotels, including former student accommodation. They are also working with local councils to try to house more people in flats and other accommodation within communities. Home Office minister Dame Angela Eagle has said empty tower blocks, former teacher-training colleges and disused student accommodation are being considered as alternatives.Joanna Rowland, a senior civil servant at the Home Office, told MPs on Tuesday that the government’s providers were clear “that we are exiting hotels and we need to do that rapidly due to cost”. But she added: “We need to do the hotel exit and the alternative accommodation in a highly controlled way. If it was just an edict to close hotels, get dispersed, then we would end up with uneven concentration – and some local authorities, I know, are feeling that acutely right now.”Labour has moved away from Conservative plans to repurpose former military bases for migrants, as these sites are expensive to run and very isolated, and are often not close to local services such as doctors’ surgeries and schools. The controversial Bibby Stockholm barge contract was ended, and officials axed plans to use the former RAF Scampton site in Lincolnshire. But the Home Office is yet to provide further details on whether they would buy the new required sites or rent them, or to disclose which sites they are looking at.What else is the government doing to reduce the need for hotels?Ministers are also putting more resources into processing asylum claims and asylum appeals in an effort to clear the backlog of people waiting to have their cases processed. The Home Office has recruited more staff to assess claims, which has resulted in an increase in asylum claims being rejected. Once their claims have been rejected, applicants no longer qualify for Home Office accommodation and must either support themselves or go to local councils for emergency housing support. The number of asylum applications in the UK has hit a new high of 109,343 in the year to March 2025, up 17 per cent from 93,150 in the year ending March 2024.But the backlog of cases waiting for a decision has fallen to its lowest level since 2021. Home Office figures show there were 109,536 people waiting for an initial decision at the end of March 2025 – down 12 per cent from 124,802 at the end of December 2024 and the lowest number since December 2021.How much money will be saved, and how much do we currently spend on hotels? Asylum seekers housed in hotels account for around 35 per cent of all people in asylum accommodation; however, the money spent on hotels makes up a much larger proportion of the overall spend. Around 76 per cent of asylum contract costs, or £1.3bn, was spent on hotels in 2024-25, the National Audit Office found. Around 110,000 people seeking asylum were being housed by the Home Office in December 2024, with some 38,000 in hotels, the watchdog said. New figures from March show that 32,345 asylum seekers were being housed in hotels at that time. Under spending plans published by the Treasury on Wednesday, officials estimated that they would still have to spend £2.9bn on the asylum system in 2027-28, and £2.5bn in 2028-29. This year, asylum costs are expected to total £3.9bn. Is 2029 a realistic target? The Home Office’s top civil servant told MPs earlier this year that the department is aiming to bring hotel use down to “zero” but that this would depend on any “ups and downs”. Sir Matthew Rycroft, who has now left the top job, said: “Ministers will want to keep the committee and parliament updated on the total numbers [of hotels], which have fallen from over 400 to 218, but I do not think you should expect a gradual decline of that number down to zero neatly by the end of this parliament. Our aim is to get to zero by the end of this parliament, but there will be ups and downs.”Why are politicians so keen to clear migrant hotels? Hotels are more costly than other forms of accommodation, and private companies are making significant profits from providing hotel rooms to the Home Office. The day-to-day running of these hotels is often subcontracted, and in some cases, Home Office officials in charge of large hotel contracts have been unaware of who is providing vital services. According to testimony provided to MPs, sexual assaults, threats, and prostitution have taken place inside hotels, and children have experienced malnutrition due to poor food. Hotels can also be isolating for asylum seekers who are keen to get to know people in the community, with sites often located away from city centres. Hotels have also been targeted by anti-migrant rioters and activists, with several being attacked during last summer’s rioting. YouTubers have also visited migrant hotels to film themselves intimidating residents. What has been the reaction to the pledge? Refugee charities have welcomed the news but urged the government to go further. Enver Solomon, CEO of the Refugee Council, said: “Asylum hotels have become a flashpoint for community tensions and cost billions to the taxpayer, so ending their use is good for refugees, the taxpayer and communities. The deadline of 2029 feels far away, and we urge government to make it happen before then.”He added that asylum seekers should be placed “within our communities not isolated in remote hotels”.Charity Care4Calais said moving asylum seekers from hotels to accommodation within communities would be welcome and called for an end to the “for-profit asylum accommodation model that has created billionaires”. Chief executive Steve Smith said: “Asylum accommodation should be provided based on the needs of people seeking asylum, not the profits of private owners and shareholders. Involving local authorities in the delivery of accommodation in their areas would be a first step in that direction.”Shadow chancellor Mel Stride said the Home Office is still squandering money on asylum costs “because this government simply doesn’t have a plan on illegal migration”. More

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    These unanswered questions could be Rachel Reeves’s downfall

    Even the UK’s leading economist was flummoxed.Minutes after Rachel Reeves had delivered her first spending review, Paul Johnson, the head of the influential Institute for Fiscal Studies, said he was not sure he had ever listened to a speech by a chancellor where it was “so hard to work out what is happening”. Her statement to the Commons had been “full of numbers, few of them useful”, he added. But one thing is sure – big problems are still to come down the line. The under-pressure chancellor had no choice but to come out fighting on Wednesday as she unveiled plans for government spending until the next election. She is facing criticism from all sides for a series of policy choices she has made since entering office, as well as poor economic growth. Just days before she unveiled her spending review, Labour’s first in a generation, she was forced to announce a massive U-turn on one of her earliest decisions in the Treasury – stripping the winter fuel allowance from millions of pensioners. Rachel Reeves is under growing pressure from her colleagues over her fiscal choices More

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    Reeves unveils record spending plans but experts warn of tax rises ahead

    Rachel Reeves cheered beleaguered Labour backbenchers with record investment in her spending plans as she unveiled major boosts for the NHS, social housing and defence.In her long-awaited spending review, the chancellor also promised to save £1bn by closing all asylum hotels as she took aim at Nigel Farage and Reform.But experts warned that she will have to break her manifesto pledge not to raise taxes or increase borrowing much further to pay for her promises.Reeves set out her spending plans for the rest of this parliament More

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    UK agrees post-Brexit deal with EU for ‘fluid’ border between Gibraltar and Spain

    The UK and the EU have agreed a post-Brexit deal to implement a “fluid” border between Gibraltar and Spain – which will not require checks on people crossing. The move marks a breakthrough in talks that have been ongoing since Britain left the European Union in 2020.Under the agreement, checks will not be required on those crossing the border between Spain and the British colony. More controversially, however, there will be “Eurostar-style” dual border control checks at Gibraltar airport, which will be carried out by both Gibraltar and Spanish officials.Operating in a similar way to the UK and French system for checking documents used at London’s St Pancras station, Britons arriving on the Rock will have to show their passports when they land.There will be dual border control checks for arrivals by air at Gibraltar airport More

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    Whitehall on lockdown while police investigate ‘abandoned vehicle’ near Downing Street

    Whitehall is currently cordoned off while police investigate an abandoned vehicle near Downing Street.The street is closed in both directions between Trafalgar Square and Parliament Square.The Metropolitan Police said in a statement on X, formally Twitter: “A cordon is in place at the southern end of Whitehall as a precautionary measure while officers investigate an abandoned vehicle in the vicinity of Downing Street.”It is understood civil servants working inside government buildings on the road are unable to leave the building, and no one is being allowed to enter.( More

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    Watch: Rachel Reeves delivers spending review as chancellor pledges to make working people ‘better off’

    Watch again as Rachel Reeves delivered her much-anticipated spending review on Wednesday (11 June) as the chancellor pledged to make working people “better off”.The spending review came after the government announced a massive expansion of who will receive winter fuel payments in a major U-turn following months of backlash.After weeks of speculation over what the changes would look like, it has now been confirmed that 9 million pensions will be eligible for the payment – a huge uplift from the 1.5 million pensioners who received the payment in winter 2024-25.The chancellor stood in the Commons to deliver the government’s spending review on Wednesday.Some of the announcements have already been made over the last few weeks, but were formally presented to parliament.Reeves was expected to announce:A £30 billion increase in NHS funding, a rise of around 2.8 per cent in real terms. An extra £4.5 billion for schools. A rise in defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP. £39 billion for social and affordable housing over the next decade as the Government aims to meet its target of building 1.5 million new homes by the next election. £15.6 billion of spending on public transport in England’s city regions £16.7 billion for nuclear power projects, the bulk of which will fund the new Sizewell C plant in Suffolk. An extension of the £3 bus fare cap until March 2027. An extra £445 million for upgrading Welsh railways. The Government has also promised £750 million for a new supercomputer – the UK’s most powerful – in Edinburgh. More

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    Spending review 2025 – live: Reeves criticised for ‘fantasy’ plan as economists warn tax hikes ‘very likely’

    Reeves delivers spending review key aimsTax rises are now “very likely” following a raft of spending announcements by Rachel Reeves, a former government economist has warned.In a speech to the Commons on Wednesday, the chancellor laid out the government’s updated spending plans across all government departments for the next four years.She said her proposal was focused on “Britain’s renewal”, as she announced big funding boosts to defence, nuclear energy projects, the NHS and transport in England’s city regions.Shadow chancellor Mel Stride branded the spending review as a “fantasy”, while financial experts have warned that it could prompt future tax raises.“Obviously things can and will change between now and October – but at present it looks very likely indeed that the spending totals today will mean that taxes need to go up in October so that the Chancellor can meet the fiscal rules,” former government and now Kings College London economist, Jonathan Portes, told The Independent.In last year’s Autumn Budget, taxes were raised including a hike in National Insurance payments paid by employers and capital gains tax. But speaking in the Commons on Wednesday, Ms Reeves said she would never “have to repeat a budget like that again”. Starmer set to be biggest cutter of overseas aid everThe Independent’s Political Correspondent Archie Mitchell reports:Sir Keir Starmer is on course to become the biggest cutter of overseas aid on record.The prime minister slashed the international development budget to fund his plans to hike defence spending.And now campaigners are warning it could land him with the damning legacy.Adrian Lovett, executive director of the ONE Campaign, said: “Not only is Keir Starmer the first Labour Prime Minister on record not to increase aid spending, but he is on course to deliver the most severe cut to aid investment in other countries in decades – going further than Thatcher, Major, Johnson or Sunak ever did.“These aren’t just numbers on a spreadsheet. This will lead to preventable deaths, diseases spreading faster and children going without vaccines. Some of the world’s most vulnerable people will pay the price for this decision, and it makes Britain less safe and strong, too.”( More

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    Rachel Reeves pledges to end use of asylum hotels by end of this parliament

    Rachel Reeves has pledged that the government will no longer house migrants in asylum hotels by 2029. Outlining her spending review plans to MPs on Wednesday, Ms Reeves said that ministers would end “the costly use of hotels to house asylum seekers in this parliament”. She said she was working with Home Secretary Yvette Cooper to end the costly scheme, which sees “billions of pounds of taxpayers’ money spent on housing asylum seekers in hotels, leaving people in limbo and shunting the cost of failure onto local communities”. Ms Reeves told MPs that plans to cut the asylum backlog, hear more asylum appeal cases, and return people to their home countries would save £1bn per year. Under spending plans published by the Treasury on Wednesday, officials estimated that they would still be spending £2.9bn on asylum costs in 2027-28 and £2.5bn in 2028-29. This year asylum costs are expected to be £3.9bn. In Labour’s manifesto, the party pledged to end the use of asylum hotels and it has been looking at medium-sized sites, such as student accommodation blocks and former care homes, as alternative sources of accommodation. The public spending watchdog recently predicted that the cost of asylum accommodation would triple to £15.3bn over 10 years. Original estimates on the cost totalled £4.5bn for 2019-2029, but the National Audit Office (NAO) revised this up to £15.3bn. The NAO said that around 110,000 people seeking asylum were housed by the Home Office in December 2024 – with some 38,000 of these living in hotels. The most senior civil servant in the Home Office said earlier this year that the department was aiming to get asylum hotel use down “to zero” by the end of this parliament. However, Sir Matthew Rycroft, who has now left the top job, predicted that “ups and downs” might affect that promise. Chancellor of the Exchequer Rachel Reeves delivers her government’s spending review to MPs in the House of Commons More