Supply chain crisis: Tories poised to U-turn on
foreign worker visas
Boris Johnson believed to have overruled ministers
unwilling to compromise on post-Brexit immigration as forecourt queues mount
Rowena
Mason and Rob Davies
Fri 24 Sep
2021 17.53 BST
Ministers
are poised to agree an extraordinary post-Brexit U-turn that would allow
foreign lorry drivers back into the UK to stave off shortages threatening fuel
and food supplies.
Boris
Johnson ordered a rapid fix on Friday to prevent the crisis escalating.
Ministers met in an attempt to agree a short-term visa scheme permitting
potentially thousands more lorry drivers from abroad to come to the UK.
The prime
minister is understood to have weighed in to demand a compromise from his
warring cabinet, which was split over the issue, after scenes of chaotic queues
at some petrol stations and warnings from suppliers that the shortage of fuel
on forecourts could worsen. On Friday night, forecourt operator EG Group said
it would introduce a limit of £30 worth of fuel per customer.
The
shortage of up 100,000 heavy goods vehicle (HGV) drivers – exacerbated by the
pandemic and Brexit – has also impacted the food sector and other industries.
The British Retail Consortium warned on Friday that significant disruption to
Christmas was “inevitable” unless the problem was contained in the next 10
days.
The prime
minister and his cabinet have publicly played down the extent of the problem. A
senior government source said some ministers appeared keen to avoid the
perception that Brexit was to blame, and were therefore reluctant to relax
immigration rules.
However,
the Office for National Statistics revealed that millions of people were
already facing empty supermarket shelves, with one in six struggling to find
essential items.
Amid
growing alarm within government about the threat to supermarket and fuel
supplies, ministers are poised to allow lorry drivers to come to the UK on
short-term visas, probably for a number of months.
A Downing
Street spokesperson said the government was looking at “temporary measures to
avoid any immediate problems, but any measures we introduce will be very
strictly time-limited”.
She
stressed that the UK has “ample fuel stocks in this country and the public
should be reassured there are no shortages”.
While many
have blamed Brexit for the shortage of drivers, Downing Street claimed it was a
“temporary Covid-related shortage” also suffered by other countries around the
world.
On Friday
night, cabinet sources said discussions were ongoing but the plan was expected
to be signed off over the weekend.
The move
will be seen as a remarkable climbdown, as Johnson’s Brexit campaign was
founded on giving the UK more control over immigration and ending free
movement. It is likely that other sectors suffering from labour shortages –
such as hospitality – will now put pressure on ministers to grant them
exemptions as well.
Under the
current system, lorry drivers do not meet the threshold for skills that would
qualify them to come to the UK. But the proposed scheme could permit temporary
visas, similar to the seasonal workers scheme under which people can apply to
come to the UK for six months to do agricultural work if they have a sponsor
and money to support themselves.
Empty shelves
Supermarket
shelves in a Sainsbury’s superstore in London Colney, Hertfordshire, on Friday.
The ONS has reported that one in six people have already reported difficulty
finding essential items. Photograph: Rex/Shutterstock
Anne
McLaughlin, the SNP’s immigration spokesperson, said: “The prime minister and
senior Tory ministers were repeatedly warned about the damaging consequences of
their extreme Brexit plans, including over the threat of staff shortages.
Despite those warnings, the Tories recklessly ploughed ahead. The pandemic has
undoubtedly led to challenges.
“However,
scrapping freedom of movement and cutting immigration in pursuit of an
ideological Brexit has piled on the hardship and been a major factor in the
issues we are facing today: empty supermarket shelves, staff shortages, and a
lack of drivers leading to petrol station closures.”
The Home
Office had been opposed to adding HGV drivers to the formal occupation shortage
list but is thought to have been convinced to back a more short-term visa
scheme.
Grant
Shapps, the transport secretary, was also initially sceptical but on Friday he
pledged to “move heaven and earth” to solve the problem, and said all options
were on the table.
Kwasi
Kwarteng, the business secretary, is understood to believe the problem should
be solved by the haulage and fuel companies offering higher wages and better
working conditions instead of allowing entry to workers who may accept lower
pay.
However,
the visa scheme was pushed by George Eustice, the environment secretary.
Stephen Barclay, the Cabinet Office minister, was also in favour and among the
ministers who were meeting on Friday to finalise the solution.
The Home
Office will ultimately have to sign off the decision on whether to relax
immigration restrictions for drivers, with the government recognising that
something has to be done.
A Whitehall
source said cabinet ministers opposed to the shortage-occupation-list solution
would prefer a plan to tempt back to the sector some of the 600,000 people with
heavy goods licences not currently employed as drivers.



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