The British government is preparing a major reset of its asylum system, unveiling sweeping reforms aimed at curbing unauthorized migration and reducing the number of dangerous small-boat crossings across the English Channel.
According to The Associated Press, Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood will introduce the proposals on Monday in the House of Commons, marking the Labour government’s latest effort to make the U.K. less appealing to migrants who do not qualify for asylum while speeding up the removal of those found ineligible.
The plan draws heavily from Denmark’s strict model, which has sharply reduced asylum applications in recent years.
Mahmood framed the overhaul as both a practical and moral imperative.
“People can see huge pressure in their communities and they can also see a system that is broken, and where people are able to flout the rules, abuse the system and get away with it,” she told the BBC.
She rejected accusations that Labour was embracing far-right rhetoric, noting her own background as the daughter of migrants. Mahmood argued the reforms are meant to restore confidence in a system that has failed under multiple governments.
Successive administrations have struggled to deter arrivals, including the previous Conservative government’s widely debated plan to send asylum seekers to Rwanda. That policy collapsed before implementation and was scrapped after Prime Minister Keir Starmer took office last year, promising instead to target smuggling networks fueling the crossings.
Small-boat arrivals have surged again this year. More than 39,000 migrants have reached British shores, surpassing last year’s total of nearly 37,000. While still below the record pace of 2022, the persistent influx has placed pressure on the government to act.
Despite the public focus on boats, unauthorized crossings remain a small fraction of overall immigration. Net migration stood at 431,000 in the year ending June 2025, down sharply from 860,000 the previous year. The earlier spike was driven largely by people fleeing Ukraine and Hong Kong.
Tensions rose this summer when protests—at times turning violent—erupted outside hotels housing asylum seekers. The demonstrations followed the arrest and later conviction of a migrant for sexually assaulting a 14-year-old girl.
Under the new reforms, the U.K. would revoke its longstanding legal duty to provide guaranteed support for asylum seekers. The government would be able to withdraw housing and weekly allowances and deny benefits to those who refuse available work, work illegally, or break the law.
Refugee status would face routine review to determine whether individuals can be safely returned home. The government also plans to establish designated safe pathways for asylum claims, eliminating the need for migrants to risk the Channel crossing.
The proposals drew swift criticism from some Conservatives. MP Chris Philp dismissed the reforms as insufficient.
“I don’t object to it in principle, but it’s not going to work,” Philp told the BBC. “It’s gimmicks. It’s rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. It’s not going to stop people getting on boats.”
The Home Office defended the approach, pointing to Denmark’s success in cutting asylum applications to their lowest level in four decades and repatriating 95% of applicants.
Denmark, once known for its openness to refugees, has become one of Europe’s strictest on migration.














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