Britain’s leftist government is scrapping plans to prioritize British citizens over migrants for public housing as violent protests and counter-protests over mass migration rock the country. Angela Rayner, Deputy Prime Minister and Housing Secretary under Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, is removing the “UK connection test” for taxpayer-subsidized housing, referred to as social housing in the United Kingdom.
The previous Conservative Party government introduced the “UK connection test” for social housing after 14 years of failing to follow through on its promises to curb immigration. Labour, which ousted the Conservatives in a July 4 snap election, has scrapped it before it could be implemented.
The move provides further evidence that Prime Minister Starmer has no intention of addressing public concerns over immigration and integration failures, dismissing protests prompted by the mass stabbing of young girls by a migration-background teenager in Southport, England, as nothing but “far-right thuggery.”
“If you were born in this country, worked hard, paid your taxes, and obeyed our laws, then [Labour will] put your family at the bottom of the housing list in favor of people who have just arrived in our country,” commented Lee Anderson, a Member of Parliament (MP) for Nigel Farage‘s Reform Party.
In many British cities, a grossly disproportionate share of households headed by foreigners are in taxpayer-subsidized housing. In the capital of London, 74 percent of all Somali households, roughly half of Jamaican and Ghanaian households, 44 percent of Bangladeshi households, 41 percent of Nigerian households, 37 percent of Turkish households, and 35 percent of Afghan households are in social housing.
This compares to 23.5 percent of households headed by people born in Britain—including people from a relatively recent migration background, with parents or grandparents born overseas.