
UK to Open New Refugee Sponsorship Routes as Part of Asylum Overhaul
Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood unveils Canada-style community sponsorship scheme while tightening deportation rules, amid political transition and opposition criticism.
The British government will introduce new legal pathways for refugees later this year, allowing universities, community groups and employers to sponsor individuals for resettlement, the Home Office announced. The scheme, modelled on Canada’s private sponsorship programme, will operate alongside legislation to be debated in the House of Commons this week that tightens asylum rules, including measures to accelerate the deportation of failed applicants and restrict family reunion rights. Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood stated the dual approach would “support genuine refugees” while “closing loopholes that have been too often abused.” The first sponsored arrivals are expected in autumn 2027, with an employer route opening next year; the programme will be capped and begin with small numbers, though no specific quota has been set.
Viewed from London, the initiative represents an attempt by the governing Labour Party to balance humanitarian commitments with domestic pressure over irregular migration. The Home Office said it would work with the UN refugee agency to determine eligibility and conduct pre-entry screening. Sponsoring organisations will assume responsibility for housing and employment support. In Canada, the model has resettled approximately 400,000 people since 1979, with the Home Office noting that 70 per cent of privately sponsored refugees find work within a year—a rate 30 percentage points higher than those assisted through government schemes. The UK currently resettles a relatively small number of refugees under its existing programme, with around 800 arrivals in the year to September 2025, the vast majority supported by local councils.
The opposition Conservative Party argues that no new humanitarian admissions should be permitted until illegal immigration is halted. Shadow home secretary Chris Philp accused Labour of backing “open borders” and said the plan would not deter small-boat crossings in the Channel. The hard-right Reform UK party, through its home affairs spokesperson Zia Yusuf, described the proposals as lacking an electoral mandate and pledged to reverse them if it gained power. Within Labour, some members have previously criticised Mahmood’s earlier tightening measures—including making refugee status temporary and doubling the waiting period for permanent residence—as overly restrictive.
The policy launch unfolds against a backdrop of political transition. Prime Minister Keir Starmer announced his resignation this week, with former Manchester mayor Andy Burnham widely expected to succeed him as early as July. It remains unclear whether Mahmood will retain her post under a new premier, and Burnham’s own immigration stance has yet to be detailed beyond acknowledging public concern. The Home Office bill is scheduled for its first reading in the Commons this week, where some Labour backbenchers are expected to oppose certain provisions. The sponsorship routes will open for applications later this year, with university-sponsored arrivals projected for 2027.
How the same story is told elsewhere.
2 editorial groups · 5 languages
The UK government is introducing new legal pathways for refugees, inspired by Canada's community sponsorship model, while simultaneously closing loopholes to curb illegal immigration. The Home Secretary argues this will ensure protection for those genuinely in need, though the proposals may face parliamentary debate.
The outgoing Starmer government wants to tighten asylum rules while expanding refugee sponsorship, with universities able to sponsor from 2027. This dual approach raises questions about the balance between restriction and humanitarian commitment.
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