Reform UK
plan to target EU nationals based in Britain ‘absolutely outrageous’
Exclusive:
Rights group says Nigel Farage’s party is reneging on promises made during the
Brexit referendum campaign
UK politics live – latest updates
Peter
Walker Senior political correspondent
Thu 25
Jun 2026 13.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2026/jun/25/reform-uk-plan-target-eu-nationals-britain-brexit
EU
nationals based permanently in the UK have expressed alarm over a Reform UK
plan to target their rights to accommodation and employment, saying the policy
is a betrayal of promises made in the Brexit referendum 10 years ago.
Under
updated migration policies, Nigel Farage’s party would evict all overseas
nationals from social housing and make it notably more expensive for companies
to employ them, with both policies also affecting EU nationals who have settled
status.
Under the
UK’s Brexit deal with the EU, people with such status have the permanent right
to live and work in the UK, as well as to receive social security and pensions,
as do family members.
Both the
new policies would require a renegotiation of the Brexit deal, with the
possibility that the EU would penalise UK nationals living in the bloc as a
reciprocal policy, or impose trade barriers.
Announcing
what he called the “migrants labour levy”, Robert Jenrick, Reform’s Treasury
spokesperson, said employers would have to pay higher national insurance for
non-UK nationals, as well as an annual fee that would be more for lower
earners, citing the possibility of £3,750 for someone on the “national living
wage”, a surcharge of about 15%.
There
would be no additional consideration given for EU nationals, even if they had
been in the UK for decades, or had a UK national partner and children, Jenrick
said, and his message for such people was that if they lost their job because
of the levy they should leave.
“If you
are in this country and you are not a British citizen, and you are somebody who
will not be able to stay in the UK under a Reform government, then you should
think of leaving the country.”
The
campaign group the3million, which speaks up for the rights of EU nationals in
the UK, has pointed out that the policies go against promises made by the leave
campaign in the referendum that people’s rights would be protected, with Farage
saying it would be “quite unreasonable” to push people out.
Daniel
Sohege from the group, said: “For the last decade, EU citizens have faced
uncertainty and fear about our future in the UK. We were told before the Brexit
referendum that our rights would be respected. We were told when the withdrawal
agreement was signed that our rights would be protected.
“Successive
governments have failed to keep those promises. Now we are being told that in a
couple of years time a potential Reform government could rip up our rights
entirely. The UK is our home, but there is still a lot of concern, anger and
worry about what the future will hold for us.”
One EU
national, Nicole – who asked that her full name was not used – said she was
worried about losing her long-term job with a business centre group and being
forced to leave the UK after 37 years.
“I‘m not
allowed to have dual citizenship because the Dutch are very difficult about
it,” she said. “This is my home. I moved here when I was 18, so I’ve lived here
twice as long as I ever lived in the Netherlands.
“I’ve
been with my company a long time, so I would hope that they would support me,
but I think it’s absolutely outrageous. It’s just pulling the rug from under
people that have been here for so long, who have done everything right.”
Al
Pinkerton, the Liberal Democrats Europe spokesperson, said: “Threatening
hundreds of thousands of people who have made their lives here would only throw
our economy into chaos, while failing to restore order and fairness to our
immigration system.
“Resorting
to these cruel, Trump-style politics will only isolate the UK further and
invite damaging retaliation from our closest trading partners at a time when we
need to work together to boost the economy, strengthen our defences and go for
growth.”

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