H
politics
H
HOYONEWS
HomeBusinessTechnologySportPolitics
Others
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Society
Contact
Home
Business
Technology
Sport
Politics

Food

Culture

Society

Contact
Facebook page
H
HOYONEWS

Company

business
technology
sport
politics
food
culture
society

CONTACT

EMAILmukum.sherma@gmail.com
© 2025 Hoyonews™. All Rights Reserved.
Facebook page

Tories will not deport legally settled people, Badenoch clarifies

about 13 hours ago
A picture


The Conservative MP Katie Lam spoke “imprecisely” in stating the party would deport large numbers of legally settled families from the UK, Kemi Badenoch said, adding she had no plans to make tougher immigration rules retrospective.Badenoch’s comments to reporters after a speech in London end days of confusion over Tory migration policy, particularly over whether many thousands of people who have made lives in the UK could lose their status of indefinite leave to remain (ILR) under a future Conservative government.In an interview earlier this month, Lam, a shadow Home Office minister, said that the party’s policy was to revoke ILR, and people would “go home” in order to ensure the UK was mostly “culturally coherent”.Her comments prompted some Conservative MPs to complain to party whips, and renewed focus on a Conservative draft bill tabled in May, under which people would lose ILR if they or a dependant claimed any benefit or if their income was less than £38,700.While Badenoch’s spokesperson initially said Lam was “broadly in line” with party policy, the Tories then said its policy on ILR had changed, while refusing to say if changes to rules would be made retrospective.

But speaking on Thursday, Badenoch clarified this was not the plan.“No, we’re not.We’re not being retrospective,” the Conservative leader said.The only element that could result in someone losing their ILR could be if they committed a crime, which was already the case, she said, adding: “But we have a principle.We don’t believe in making things retrospective.

”Now that the Conservatives had committed to leaving the European convention on human rights (ECHR) it was possible to deny benefits to non-EU overseas nationals, she said, allowing a policy change, adding: “What we are trying to do is make sure that all our policies are coherent and work with changes and adaptations like leaving the ECHR.”In explaining the migration policy, Badenoch said that Lam “just stated it imprecisely”.Max Wilkinson, the Liberal Democrats’ home affairs spokesperson, said: “Katie Lam’s divisive comments will have caused angst for families worried about being broken apart.Kemi Badenoch should sack her from the Conservative front bench to send a clear signal that this was not her party’s policy and restore order to her ranks.”Amid the confusion, Labour wrote to Badenoch asking how the rules on losing ILR if claiming a benefit would work, for example whether this would apply to maternity pay.

Badenoch said this was not the case: “Maternity leave is not a benefit.It’s an entitlement.It’s pay.What we have said is that people who come to our country should be contributors.They shouldn’t need to go on benefits.

”Lam’s statement that ILR would be removed from large numbers of people had prompted a backlash, with Keir Starmer saying it showed “how far the Conservative party has sunk”, and a number of Conservative MPs privately criticising Lam’s remarks.
societySee all
A picture

Almost all children in 73 areas of England live in low-income households

Almost 100% of children in 73 neighbourhoods in England are living in income-deprived families, according to new measures that factor in the impact of soaring rents.Changes to official measures reveal the neighbourhoods where in effect all children live in low-income households. Of these, 31 are in inner London boroughs with high housing costs such as Tower Hamlets, Hackney, Haringey and Westminster.The new indices of multiple deprivation confirm that attempts at levelling up have failed to shift stubbornly high levels of deprivation in so-called left-behind towns and cities in the Midlands and north of England.Blackpool, Middlesbrough, Burnley, Manchester and Birmingham are the top five most deprived local authority areas

about 8 hours ago
A picture

UK woman who booked Oslo flight but did not fly loses child benefit ‘because she emigrated’

A woman who booked a flight from London to Oslo but never checked in or travelled has had her child benefit stopped by the UK government. Tax authorities told her their records showed she had emigrated.Lisa Morris-Almond is one of thousands of people who have had their child benefit frozen as part of a botched crackdown on benefit fraud.She was due to travel to Norway in April 2024 for a wedding but her friend called it off just days before and Morris-Almond did not check in for her British Airways flight.But three weeks ago she noticed her child benefit had not arrived as usual and rang the child benefit helpline where she was told to check with her bank, a routine request

about 18 hours ago
A picture

Only full abolition of two-child benefit cap will substantially cut poverty, thinktank says

Failure to abolish the two-child benefit limit would wreck the government’s child poverty ambitions and risk creating levels of hardship not seen under a Labour government for more than half a century, an analysis warns.The Resolution Foundation said political courage was required for ministers to show they are serious about reversing trends that, if not addressed, would push the rate of child poverty to a historic high by the end of the decade.It advised the government against introducing half-measures that would dampen the impact of the two-child limit – such as lifting the limit for families in work – saying this would have little or no meaningful effect on overall child poverty rates.The thinktank’s analysis concludes: “In one fell swoop, the government could reduce the number of children growing up in poverty by 330,000 today and save a further 150,000 children from that fate by 2029-30 if it were bold enough to scrap the two-child limit in full.”Aside from the economic and moral case, the Resolution Foundation suggests failing to emulate some of its Labour predecessors by reducing child poverty will tarnish the government’s social justice legacy

1 day ago
A picture

Patients go to court to stop embryos being destroyed after admin error

A group of at least 15 fertility patients are taking legal action to prevent their frozen embryos being destroyed as a result of administrative errors that could deny them a chance to have children.The group, which includes people with cancer and fertility problems, froze gametes or embryos to improve their chances of conceiving later on, but were informed by their clinics that owing to administrative errors they had not renewed their consent in time and would not be able to access their embryos or extend their storage without a court order.In some cases, people only learned of the errors when they approached the clinic about their plans to have a child and for some it is their only hope of conceiving naturally. In other cases, clinics approached couples after internal audit processes and apologised for their errors but notified them that they could only extend storage through a court order.The errors relate to two changes in law

1 day ago
A picture

Robert Wilkinson obituary

My father, Robert Wilkinson, who has died aged 73, was employed for more than 30 years in local government, mostly as a community worker for the London borough of Waltham Forest, but also managing lottery funding bids in nearby Camden.Outside his career, Robert’s main passion was oral history, which he believed was a way of giving voice to ordinary people who would otherwise have left behind just birth and death certificates.In 1983 he co-founded the Waltham Forest Oral History workshop, whose members interviewed hundreds of local people; it also published books and pamphlets on subjects such as school strikes, childhood health and local pubs. He later became a long-serving committee member and treasurer of the national Oral History Society.Later in life he worked as a freelance, including as the oral historian in residence for two years at Kettle’s Yard in Cambridge and for the British Library

1 day ago
A picture

Councils in England face clampdown on four-day working weeks

The local government secretary, Steve Reed, is seeking to clamp down on councils introducing four-day working weeks after writing to South Cambridgeshire warning that the policy had damaged performance.Reed told the council, which is the only local authority to formally trial a four-day week for staff, that they risked worsening public services and value for money.His letter, first seen by the Telegraph, marks the first intervention by the Labour government on shortened working weeks in local government in England.Reed wrote to Bridget Smith, the council’s Liberal Democrat leader, noting there had been a deterioration in rent collection and repairs by the council.“The independent report shows that performance declined in key housing-related services including rent collection, reletting times and tenant satisfaction with repairs, especially where vulnerable residents may be affected,” he wrote

1 day ago
cultureSee all
A picture

Man who won damages over Richard III film calls for more regulation of fact-based drama

2 days ago
A picture

Jon Stewart on Trump’s taunts of an illegal third term: ‘We know he’s thought about it’

2 days ago
A picture

Steve Coogan says Richard III film was ‘story I wanted to tell’ as he agrees to libel settlement

3 days ago
A picture

‘We were fitted with remote control penises’: Harry Enfield and Kathy Burke on Kevin and Perry Go Large

3 days ago
A picture

From White Teeth to Swing Time: Zadie Smith’s best books - ranked!

4 days ago
A picture

Ardal O’Hanlon: ‘I fell asleep on stage once – I could hear someone doing my material, got annoyed and woke up’

5 days ago