UK to
announce plans to emulate stringent Danish immigration system
Shabana
Mahmood’s proposals draw scorn from some Labour MPs, while others want
government to go further
Sammy
Gecsoyler
Sat 8 Nov
2025 13.55 GMT
Shabana
Mahmood is to announce changes to the UK’s immigration rules modelled on the
Danish system, largely seen as among the most stringent in Europe, the Guardian
understands.
Last
month, the home secretary dispatched officials to Denmark to study its border
control and asylum policies. Denmark’s tighter rules on family reunions and
restricting some refugees to a temporary stay are among the policies being
looked at.
Mahmood
will announce the changes later this month, according to the BBC, which first
reported the plans.
The
proposals have drawn scorn from some Labour MPs, particularly from those on the
left of the party, who said it was a “dangerous path” to take, although others
want the government to go further.
In
Denmark, refugees who have been personally targeted by a foreign regime are
more likely to be given protection, while those fleeing conflicts are usually
only allowed to remain in the country on a temporary basis. Denmark itself
decides what is a safe country.
In 2022,
the Danish government notified about 1,200 refugees from Damascus in Syria that
their residency permits would not be renewed because, breaking with the UN and
EU, it judged the region to be safe for refugees to return.
UK Home
Office officials have also been drawn to Denmark’s tighter rules for family
reunions. When a refugee granted residency rights wants their partner to join
them, there are numerous thresholds that must be met. Both people must be age
24 and above, the partner in Denmark must not have claimed benefits for three
years and also has to put up a financial guarantee. Both partners must also
pass a Danish language test.
Denmark
has also barred those who live in housing estates designated as “parallel
societies” by the government – where more than 50% of residents are from what
it considers to be “non-western” backgrounds – from being granted family
reunion.
In 2021,
Denmark passed a law enabling it to process asylum seekers outside Europe,
which drew anger from human rights advocates, the UN and the European
Commission.
The
Labour MP Clive Lewis was deeply critical of the British government’s plans to
adopt the Danish system in an effort to outflank Reform UK.
“Denmark’s
Social Democrats have gone down what I would call a hardcore approach to
immigration,” he said. “They’ve adopted many of the talking points of what we
would call the far right.
“Labour
does need to win back some Reform-leaning voters but you can’t do that at the
cost of losing progressive votes.”
Nadia
Whittome, the Labour MP for Nottingham East and a member of Labour’s Socialist
Campaign Group, said it would be a “dangerous path” to take and that some of
the Danish policies, especially those around “parallel societies”, are
“undeniably racist”.
“I think
this is a dead end – morally, politically and electorally,” she told BBC Radio
4’s Today programme.
Some
Labour MPs from the centre of the party told the BBC off the record that they
would oppose the implementation of Danish immigration policies in the UK.
However,
Jo White, who leads a group of Labour MPs in “red wall” seats in the Midlands
and the north of England, said she would like to see the government go further
in the Danish direction.
“The
consequences are that we go into a general election where Reform will be the
biggest challenger in most Labour seats … and we will be annihilated,” she
said.
Mahmood,
who was appointed as home secretary in September, told the Labour conference
that “contribution to this country is a condition”, while announcing a number
of requirements that must be met by people seeking asylum, including plans to
increase the period from when indefinite leave to remain is usually granted,
from five years to 10 years.
She has
come under fire from charities who accused her of “scapegoating” migrants.
After her conference speech, more than 100 charities including Refugee Action,
Save the Children and Oxfam called on Mahmood to find solutions to problems
with housing, the climate crisis and the NHS, and to end the use of
“performative policies” that cause harm.

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