Tag: Dominic Raab

  • Dominic Raab – 2022 Statement on Terrorism in Prisons

    Dominic Raab – 2022 Statement on Terrorism in Prisons

    The statement made by Dominic Raab, the Deputy Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 27 April 2022.

    In accordance with section 36 of the Terrorism Act 2006, Jonathan Hall QC, the independent reviewer of terrorism legislation (IRTL), has prepared a report on terrorism in prisons which was laid before the House today.

    Today, I am publishing our response to the IRTL’s report, setting out how we are implementing the changes that he has recommended. This will also be published on gov.uk.

    I welcome the IRTL’s review of terrorism in prisons, and thank him for carrying out such a detailed and thorough review. His findings present an invaluable opportunity for us to assess progress and further strengthen our approach in prisons, covering areas including terrorist risk behaviour, governor accountability, separation centres, joint working and legislation.

    In his report, the IRTL acknowledges the significant improvements made to the counter-terrorism system since the horrific terrorist attacks in 2019-20 at Fishmongers’ Hall, Streatham, Reading and in HMP Whitemoor. We have already strengthened the law through the Terrorist Offenders (Restriction of Early Release) Act 2020 and the Counter-Terrorism and Sentencing Act 2021, putting an end to the automatic early release of terrorist offenders and introducing tougher sentences for the most serious terrorist offences. We have also invested in our ambitious step-up programme which provides a step change in our counter-terrorism capabilities through a raft of improvements including a joint intelligence hub to boost information sharing between security partners, a counter-terrorism assessment and rehabilitation centre to research, implement and evaluate rehabilitative interventions, and overhauling our counter-terrorism training offer to frontline staff.

    These measures are critical to strengthening our approach to fighting terrorism in prisons, but we are determined to go further. That is why I have accepted 12 of the IRTL’s recommendations, partially accepted another, and in some areas propose going beyond them.

    We will invest an additional £1.2 million over three years to create a new separation centre and high-risk casework team. The specialised team will ensure that decisions to place prisoners in separation centres are taken in an effective and targeted way, in order to avoid the dissemination of poisonous ideology, prevent terrorist recruitment, and more generally protect the public.

    We will also invest £6.1 million over three years to create a new close supervision centre unit with an extra 10 cells, increasing our capacity by 20%. These will hold some of the most violent men in the prison system who pose a significant risk of harm to our staff and other prisoners.

    We have collaborated widely in considering each of Jonathan Hall’s recommendations, and I am grateful to the Home Secretary and partners across the criminal justice system for supporting this work. We honour the victims, families and communities that have been traumatised by terror by doing all we can to prevent future atrocities.

  • Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on Nightingale Courts

    Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on Nightingale Courts

    The comments made by Dominic Raab, the Secretary of State for Justice, on 21 April 2022.

    Getting the courts backlog down is a key priority for this Government so that we can ensure victims get the swift access to justice they deserve.

    Alongside the extension of Nightingale Courts, digital hearings and investing significantly in criminal legal aid, we are removing the limit on sitting days for a second year to boost capacity and help drive down the Crown Court backlog of cases.

  • Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on No Fault Divorce

    Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on No Fault Divorce

    The comments made by Dominic Raab, the Deputy Prime Minister, on 6 April 2022.

    The breakdown of a marriage can be agonising for all involved, especially children. We want to reduce the acrimony couples endure and end the anguish that children suffer.

    That’s why we are allowing couples to apply for divorce without having to prove fault, ending the blame game, where a marriage has broken down irretrievably, and enabling couples to move on with their lives without the bitter wrangling of an adversarial divorce process.

  • Dominic Raab – 2022 Statement on the Parole System and Public Protection

    Dominic Raab – 2022 Statement on the Parole System and Public Protection

    The statement made by Dominic Raab, the Secretary of State for Justice, in the House of Commons on 30 March 2022.

    Today, the Government are publishing the “Root and Branch Review of the Parole System: The Future of the Parole System in England and Wales”.

    As Secretary of State for Justice, I am committed to protecting the public and improving victims’ experience of the criminal justice system. The parole system has a critical part to play in ensuring both aims are met; it prevents criminals that continue to pose a threat from leaving prison and helps victims to feel they have the information they need and a voice in the process. So, it is paramount to maintaining public confidence that our parole process functions effectively. In recent years, a number of decisions to release offenders who have committed heinous crimes have led to a loss of public confidence in the parole system. People have questioned how safe it really is to release certain offenders and why those recalled to prison were allowed to leave in the first place. I share these concerns, which is why I am determined to refocus the system to put public protection at the forefront of all parole decisions.

    I want to see the parole process take a more precautionary approach when it comes to decisions affecting public protection. In particular, in cases which involve those who have committed the most serious crimes, it is right that Ministers should provide a measure of oversight and be able to intervene more directly in decisions on release. The key proposed reforms set out in this review will ensure public protection is the overriding consideration for release decisions.

    The current release test used by the parole board has moved away from Parliament’s original intention. A court judgment in the case of Bradley in 1991 stated that the role of the Board is to

    “carry out a balancing exercise between the legitimate conflicting interests of both prisoner and public”.

    The statutory test has therefore changed over time to become a “balancing exercise” between public protection and the rights of the prisoner. We will revise the test to reinforce it, so its overriding focus is on public protection.

    At present, 5% of all parole board members come from a law enforcement background. We will increase substantially that number, because those with operational law enforcement experience have greater first-hand experience in dealing with serious offenders and the risk they present. This will ensure a greater focus on public protection.

    The review also announces our intention to introduce ministerial oversight over parole decisions to release serious offenders in the top-tier of higher risk cases. That top-tier will be defined as offenders serving sentences for murder, rape, terrorism and causing or allowing the death of a child. Where the parole board has directed release, the Secretary of State will be able to review the release decision of any “top-tier” cohort offender. We will further consider the details of the procedural mechanism and set out two options in this review for how this power could operate in practice.

    Alongside this is the Government commitment to increase victim participation in the parole process. For the first time, we will allow victims to attend a parole hearing in full should they wish to do so. In addition, we will require the board to take account of submissions made by victims and allow for victims to ask questions in those submissions.

    The review also outlines the new process on the transfer of life and other indeterminate sentenced prisoners to open prison conditions. Similar considerations of risk and public concern arise here, and in December 2021,1 changed the process to introduce a ministerial check on such decisions, delivering greater oversight to the process in the interests of public protection and public confidence.

    Protecting the public is this Government’s top priority and the proposals in this review will reinforce public safety and increase confidence in our justice system. As we continue to develop policy and begin legislating, we will consider fully the impact of the proposals and have due regard to the requirements of section 149 of the Equality Act 2010.

  • Dominic Raab – 2022 Statement on the Parole System

    Dominic Raab – 2022 Statement on the Parole System

    The statement made by Dominic Raab, the Secretary of State for Justice, in the House of Commons on 30 March 2022.

    Today I am publishing the root and branch review of the parole system, and copies have been deposited in the Library.

    I start by paying tribute to the chief executive officer and the chair of the Parole Board for England and Wales, Martin Jones and Caroline Corby, and to all the staff who work so tirelessly to discharge their important responsibilities. They are dedicated and committed public servants.

    Before I address the detail of the statement, and with your forbearance, Madam Deputy Speaker, I will update the House on this morning’s news. In the light of the Parole Board’s direction to release Tracey Connelly, and having carefully read the decision, I have decided to apply to the Parole Board seeking its reconsideration.

    More generally, the role of the Parole Board in deciding on the appropriateness of releasing a criminal offender from prison, including many convicted of very serious violent and sexual offences, is clearly of paramount importance to protecting the public and to maintaining and sustaining public confidence in our justice system. It is the first duty of Government to protect the public.

    In recent years, a number of decisions to release offenders who committed heinous crimes have led to disquiet, concern and, regrettably, an erosion of public confidence. Take the case of John Worboys, who is serving a discretionary life sentence for rape and other sexual offences. The Parole Board’s decision in January 2018 to release him on licence caused deep concern among his victims and the wider public. It was subject to a successful legal challenge, after which the Crown Prosecution Service successfully prosecuted him for attacking four further women.

    I know that hon. Members on both sides of the House have raised the case of Colin Pitchfork, who was convicted of the rape and murder of Lynda Mann and Dawn Ashworth. The Parole Board decided to release Pitchfork in 2021, and it rejected the challenge by the then Justice Secretary, my right hon. and learned Friend the Member for South Swindon (Sir Robert Buckland). The understandable public anxiety was further compounded when Pitchfork was recalled to prison just two months after release for approaching women in breach of his licence conditions.

    I make a broader point that in these kinds of cases, and in many others that do not attract the same level of media attention or public interest, victims feel their trauma and raw fear are neither recognised nor understood. Likewise, the public inevitably begin to question the reliability of decision making when serious offenders are recalled to prison for breaches of their licence or for committing further offences on release.

    To give the House a sense of scale, in 2020-21 the Parole Board’s annual report stated that 27 offenders went on to be charged with a serious further offence following release directed by the Parole Board panel. There were 40 cases of serious further offences being charged in each of the preceding two years. Placed in context, it is fair to say this is only a fraction of all cases, but more than once a fortnight an offender goes on to commit a serious offence while subject to supervision.

    At present, victims who wish to challenge a decision by the Parole Board to release a prisoner have the option of asking the Justice Secretary to apply for the decision to be reconsidered, which is an important innovation that I exercised today for a person convicted in the harrowing case of Baby P. There have been 39 interventions since the challenge mechanism was set up two years ago, with four leading to a change in the release decision.

    Following the review published today, I believe the case for reform is clear and made out. In arriving at this conclusion, it is worth pausing to acknowledge the shift in the Parole Board’s approach over time. The statutory test was established in 1991 and states

    “The Parole Board must not give a direction”—

    for release—

    “unless the Board is satisfied that it is no longer necessary for the protection of the public that the person should be confined.”

    It is clear from this that the overriding test focuses on public protection. However, in the absence of further guidance from Parliament, the way in which the release test has been interpreted and applied over time has shifted, moving away from Parliament’s original intention. In fact, as early as the Bradley judgment in 1991, the High Court concluded:

    “The Parole Board have to carry out a balancing exercise between the legitimate conflicting interests of both prisoner and public.”

    To summarise, the statutory test has morphed over time from a strict public protection test to a balancing exercise between, on the one hand, the responsibility of the state to protect the public and, on the other hand, the rights of the prisoner. Whatever the rights and wrongs, that was palpably not the original intention of Parliament.

    I make it clear that I am not criticising the courts, which have sought to apply a generic statutory test without more prescriptive guidance from Parliament, nor am I criticising members of the Parole Board, as I hope I have made clear. It is worth saying that, contrary to public perception, it is often fiendishly difficult to come to a reliable assessment of an offender’s risk many years after their original crimes. Although psychiatric assessments and social science can offer guidance, risk assessments in such cases are inherently uncertain and imprecise. We need to be more honest and open about that in our public debate.

    In any case, I believe the focus in this critical decision making has become adrift from its original moorings. This Government will again anchor Parole Board decision making on the cardinal principle of public protection. When it comes to assessing the risk to victims and public safety, we will introduce a precautionary principle to reinforce public confidence in the system. In cases involving those who have committed the most serious crimes, we will introduce a ministerial check on release decisions, exercised by the Justice Secretary.

    The package of reforms published today will strengthen the focus on public protection at every stage. First, we will revise the statutory test for release and replace the current approach that balances the rights of dangerous offenders against public safety with an overriding focus on public protection, by providing in primary legislation further detailed criteria for the application of the statutory test.

    Secondly, we will make sure that the Parole Board is better equipped to make credible and realistic assessments of risk. It is striking that, as of last year, only 5% of all Parole Board panel members come from a law enforcement background. Again, I make no criticism of the current panel members, but that is a significant deficit. I believe the deficit is wrong, and our reforms will ensure that the people we charge with making finely balanced assessments of future risk have greater first-hand operational experience of protecting the public from serious offenders. We will change this imbalance by mandating the Parole Board to recruit more members with operational law enforcement experience, and the Ministry of Justice will run a recruitment campaign to bolster its numbers. Critically, in Parole Board cases involving the top-tier cohort of serious violent and sexual offenders, we will require by law that at least one of the three panel members has a law enforcement background.

    The third key reform is that, for the top-tier cohort of high-risk offenders who have committed the most serious offences, we will introduce ministerial oversight of Parole Board decisions to release such offenders back into the community, based on our assessment of the dangerousness of the offender, the risk of serious further offending and public confidence. These top-tier offenders will comprise those serving sentences for murder, rape, terrorism and causing or allowing the death of a child. In those cases, we will make two specific changes. The Parole Board will be able to refer a case to the Justice Secretary if it cannot confidently conclude whether, on the evidence, the statutory test for release has been met. In addition, we will introduce ministerial oversight over any decision to release any offender in the top-tier cohort of serious offenders. Under our reforms, in that top tier of cases the Justice Secretary will have the power to refuse release, subject to judicial challenge, on very clearly prescribed grounds, in the upper tribunal. I believe that is warranted as an extra check and safeguard to protect the public. I have not yet ruled out entirely an alternative model that could establish a three-person panel chaired by the Justice Secretary with the same power to refuse release, subject to judicial review in the normal way. We will consider further detail of the mechanism in order to strike the most effective balance.

    We are making these reforms because the concept of risk is notoriously difficult to assess in these kinds of cases. We are doing it because the public expect their safety to be the overriding consideration and because, ultimately, it involves a judgment call about public protection, and the public expect Ministers to take responsibility for their safety. Let me be equally clear that there is no such thing as a risk-free society; we cannot guarantee that no one released from prison will go on to commit a serious crime. Let us be very clear about that as we have a more honest debate about the assessment of risk. Nevertheless, I believe that these measures are necessary to reinforce public safety and public confidence, and we will legislate for them as soon as possible. I should also say that we will do so alongside our proposed Bill of Rights, to ensure that the will of Parliament and that focus on public protection is not undermined by the Human Rights Act. Indeed, our reforms to parole yet again highlight the compelling case for a Bill of Rights.

    Our fourth reform will increase victim participation in parole hearings, thereby delivering on this Government’s manifesto commitment. I recognise that parole decisions will be immensely and acutely traumatic moments for many victims, as they are forced to remember, go through and revisit the ordeal and suffering that they have already been though. Some will not wish to be involved, whereas others will want their voices to be heard, and I believe they should have that right. So we will give victims the right to attend a parole hearing in full, for the first time, should they wish to do so. In addition, we will require the board to take into account submissions made by victims and allow victims to ask questions through those submissions. The voice of victims will be at the centre of the process, not just some lingering afterthought.

    Finally, although separate from parole decision making, similar considerations of risk and public concern have arisen in the context of decisions to transfer prisoners to prisons in open conditions. That is why in December 2021 I changed the process to introduce a ministerial check on such decisions, guided by similar principles to those that I have already set out. That is what led to my decision this month to reject the Parole Board’s recommendation to move Steven Ling, who raped and killed a woman, to an open prison. I declined the move in the interest of public protection and public confidence.

    In sum, our reforms will ensure that those offenders who present the highest risk to public safety are reviewed more rigorously, with additional ministerial oversight. Protecting the public is the Government’s top priority. The proposals in this review will reinforce public safety. I commend this statement to the House.

  • Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on Withdrawing UK Judges from Hong Kong Court of Appeal

    Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on Withdrawing UK Judges from Hong Kong Court of Appeal

    The comments made by Dominic Raab, the Justice Secretary, on 30 March 2022.

    Since 2020 and the introduction of the national security law, our assessment of the situation in Hong Kong is that it has shifted too far from the freedoms that we hold dear – making free expression and honest critique of the state a criminal offence.

    This flies in the face of the handover agreement we have had with China since 1997 and, having discussed at length with Foreign Secretary and the President of the Supreme Court, we regretfully agree that it is no longer appropriate for serving UK judges to continue sitting in Hong Kong courts.

    I thank our judges for being a bastion of international rule of law in Hong Kong over the past 25 years.

  • Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on Victim Support

    Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on Victim Support

    The comments made by Dominic Raab, the Deputy Prime Minister, in the House of Commons on 25 March 2022.

    We want more victims to have the confidence to come forward, so that more criminals can be prosecuted and victims can get the justice they deserve.

    We’re increasing transparency through local scorecards, rolling out pre-recorded cross-examination for rape victims to more Crown Courts, and boosting funding for vital support services to £440 million over the next three years so that victims get the support they need.

  • Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on HMP Five Wells

    Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on HMP Five Wells

    The comments made by Dominic Raab, the Deputy Prime Minister, on 4 March 2022.

    HMP Five Wells is a flagship example of this Government’s plan to create secure and modern prisons that cut crime and protect the public.

    From drug-recovery centres that employ abstinence-based treatment to world-class prisoner training courses, this smart prison is designed to tackle the key obstacles to cutting reoffending and making our streets safer.

  • Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on Family Mediation

    Dominic Raab – 2022 Comments on Family Mediation

    The comments made by Dominic Raab, the Deputy Prime Minister, on 17 January 2022.

    I want to see children and their parents spared the stress and conflict of the courtroom as much as possible, and I’m delighted that thousands more will now have the opportunity to resolve their disputes in less combative way.

    At the same time, it will free up vital capacity in the family courts to ensure the system can recover quickly from the pandemic.

  • Dominic Raab – 2016 Speech on Controlled Immigration

    Dominic Raab – 2016 Speech on Controlled Immigration

    The speech made by Dominic Raab, the then Secretary of State for Justice, on 8 June 2016.

    There is no European country more global in outlook than Britain.

    We trade more beyond this continent than any EU country except Malta.

    Britain is a hub for many of the world’s commercial networks.

    The one truly global language is English,

    And millions of our citizens have family ties beyond Europe, whether with the Indian subcontinent, Australia, New Zealand or Africa.

    I’m only here today because Britain welcomed my father as a refugee from Czechoslovakia in 1938.

    So, I appreciate the advantages of immigration.

    I feel the emotional tug of Europe.

    And I understand the lessons of history.

    But you can feel European and want to leave the anti-competitive and undemocratic EU club.

    It’s not about being a Little Englander.

    I started my career as an international business lawyer, and I later worked at the Foreign Office.

    I spent 3 years posted to The Hague, representing the UK at global institutions like the International Criminal Court and working closely with EU bodies like Eurojust.

    I lost count of how many times Australian, Japanese, Brazilian diplomats bitterly lamented the inward, navel-gazing, focus of EU discussions … at the expense of what was going on in the rest of the world.

    I also have a wife from Brazil, and two young sons.

    My 3 year old already speaks better Portuguese than me.

    I want them to have a perspective of the world beyond our shores, and beyond Europe.

    And I want Britain to leave the EU so we can be more, not less, of a global nation.

    That’s why I am so disappointed with the EU’s lousy record on negotiating free trade deals, from Asia to Latin America.

    And, yes, if we want to be a truly global player,

    With world-beating economic competitiveness, and broad horizons, immigration will be vital both to a thriving economy and a tolerant, outward-looking, society.

    Controlling Immigration

    But, common sense says it has to be properly controlled.

    So, people come in at a rate that can be absorbed by local communities.

    Last year, over a million arrived in Europe from the Middle East, north Africa and beyond.

    They swept across the continent.

    In the UK, net migration was 333,000 last year.

    The government’s pledge is to reduce it to the tens of thousands.

    Yet, net migration from the EU was 184,000 alone.

    Those numbers are likely to rise as economic migrants flee the mass unemployment the single currency has inflicted on southern Europe.

    And they will increase further with Turkey and four low-income Balkan states being lined up for EU membership.

    We could just take the view that mass migration is an irresistible force.

    That national borders are outdated.

    If those campaigning for Britain to stay in the EU embrace that view, they need to be honest with the public about it, including the impact it will have.

    It’s no good dismissing concerns based on people’s real life experiences,

    Of finding their local schools full,

    Of struggling to get a GP appointment, or a home they can afford.

    Of having their wages undercut.

    And those campaigning to stay in the EU need to be up front about who bears the burden.

    Because it is often those on the lowest incomes who feel these pressures the most.

    The Bank of England has calculated that, for this group, every 10% increase in migration leads to a 2% fall in wages.

    Ultimately, if we don’t take back control, I fear Britain’s traditional openness may be tested as never before.

    When I lived in Holland, I saw first-hand the emergence of a nasty strain of anti-immigration politics in the aftermath of the murder of the politician Pym Fortuyn.

    People felt mainstream parties ignored their concerns about immigration.

    It became an issue of mistrust in the political class, not just immigration policy.

    We are seeing it spread across Europe.

    I don’t want it here.

    So, David Cameron was absolutely right to test the dogmatic consensus in Brussels in favour of the rigid rules on free movement.

    They should have listened to him.

    But, we got short shrift, no change to allow us to control the volume of immigration.

    The dogmatic defenders of the EU’s free movement rules are like the most stubborn opponents of gun control in the United States.

    They believe that because something was written into a constitutional document long ago.

    It must be sacrosanct,

    It can’t be challenged,

    Even when it is causing such tensions,

    Even when it puts our safety at risk.

    Security and Border Checks

    Let me turn to security.

    Of all the security issues debated in this referendum, there is one absolutely clear-cut dividend from leaving the EU.

    That is our ability to regain control of our borders.

    Including far stronger powers over who we can deport.

    And proper preventative checks at the border.

    At the moment, we can’t bar anyone in possession of an EU passport or identity card unless they represent a “genuine, present and sufficiently serious threat” to our security.

    There’s two points here.

    First we are forced to rely on other EU government’s putting in place proper controls.

    And yet we already have a very serious problem with other EU states undermining proper border controls and effective passport checks.

    We have to admit EU citizens with residence cards, even though Frontex, the EU’s own external border agency, says these documents are forged on a systematic basis.

    The European Court has prevented us requiring persons from the EU to have documents issued by our Government to come to the UK.
    EU law even forbids us from automatically refusing entry to people without any travel documents at all.

    But this is only the start of the problem.

    On your chair is a photocopy of a Cyprus estate agent journal, advertised particularly to Russians as the Russian text shows.

    This shows open, flagrant selling of EU passports.

    Once people buy these EU passports and with it citizenship of an EU member state, they have the automatic right to come to the UK because of ‘free movement’.

    Given this is already happening at scale, imagine how much worse this problem will be after the next wave of EU accessions.

    The second point concerns the substantive EU test for denial of entry and deportation.

    Even if that high threshold – a genuine, serious, present threat to our security – is met, we have to disclose the reasons to the individual barred, even if that itself could endanger national security.

    We can’t just deny entry to someone, because they made an unexplained trip to Syria, or because sketchy intelligence suggests a link to terrorist activity.

    We can’t even bar people from coming in, solely because they have a criminal record, even for murder.

    Yes, in the past ten years since the Free Movement Directive entered into force, we have refused entry to around 11,000 people coming from the EU.

    But that compares with more than 200,000 barred from outside Europe, who can be excluded simply because their presence is deemed not conducive to the public good.

    That’s the massive difference in the operational bite of our border powers, as a result of EU law.

    Ronald Noble, the former head of Interpol, called the EU open borders policy a “real and present danger” that “abets terrorists”, as shown by the ease with which the Paris and Brussels terrorists moved to and fro across Europe.

    We know Mohammed Abrini, accused of involvement in both the Paris and Brussels bombings, visited the UK three times in 2015, despite a criminal record for robbery and other violent offences.

    We have a terrorism trial going on at the Old Bailey right now,

    Which will shed further light on the links between plotters based in Birmingham and Brussels.

    But it’s clear that the EU’s fetters on our power to deny entry and deport are crucial security issues.

    Both sides in this referendum recognise this.

    That is why the Prime Minister made it a key point in our renegotiation, in his letter to Donald Tusk last November.

    But, the EU point blank refused to change the Free Movement Directive, let alone the EU treaties.

    In fact, the Council Conclusions re-asserted the current rules.

    The best the Commission could offer was to ‘examine the thresholds’ on deportation and denial of entry.

    If the Free Movement Directive is revised at some indeterminate, unspecified, point in the future.

    That means: no change.

    Not even a promise of future change.

    We can’t responsibly bet this country’s security on that.

    It is now the EU and the Luxembourg Court that present the clear and present danger to our security.

    They put their ivory tower dogma of EU free movement ahead of the safety of our citizens.

    Sir Richard Dearlove, the former head of MI6, says leaving the EU would bring important security gains.

    Peter Higgins, former head of immigration at UK ports, describes the passport checks we have in place because we are outside Schengen as ‘pretty minimal’.

    And evidence from the EU’s own institutions, Frontex and Europol, shows the rising security risk we face, if we stay in the EU.

    Conclusion

    When the British people vote to leave the EU and take back control on June 23rd, we will be able to restore control over our immigration policy and our borders.

    An Australian-style, points-based regime so we can choose who comes to this country, based on the skills we need, not the passport of the applicant.

    That’s better for Britain, and it will remove the arbitrary discrimination against non-Europeans.

    Operational law enforcement cooperation with our European partners will continue, because it is in everyone’s interests, and the EU already engages in important operational cooperation, from data-sharing to police cooperation, with non-EU countries, from the US to Australia.

    But, critically, we can put in place the proper border controls required to keep Britain safe.

    I want make sure immigration is managed in the best interests of our economy and our security.

    That’s why I will be voting to leave the EU, to take back control of our borders on 23 June.