Minister rejects Rayner’s claim Home Office plan to make migrants wait longer for settled status is ‘un-British’ – UK politics live


Minister rejects Rayner’s claim Home Office plan to make migrants wait longer for settled status ‘un-British’

Nick Thomas-Symonds, the Cabinet Office minister, argued in interviews this morning that people in government agreed with Angela Rayner about wanting to deliver change quickly. (See 8.52am.)

But he would not accept her criticisms of Shabana Mahmood’s plan to make most immigrants wait much longer until they can apply for indefinite leave to remain. Rayner said this was “un-British”, because the new rules will apply to people already in the UK, which she argued did not amount to fair play. Thomas-Symonds said he disagreed.

He told Times Radio:

double quotation markNo I don’t think that the changes Shabana Mahmood has announced are un-British.

I think what they are doing is trying to strike fairness and a balance between, in the first instance, control of our borders, and also people who are here still having the opportunity then to gain a settled status, but also being fair to everybody.

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Tories defend shadow minister Nick Timothy after he claimed mass prayer by Muslims in London ‘act of domination’

A member of the shadow cabinet has defended Nick Timothy, the shadow justice secretary, after he was criticised for saying he objected to Muslims taking part in a mass prayer event in Trafalgar Square.

In a post on social media yesterday, Timothy complained about Muslims engaging in mass prayer at an event in Trafalgar Square. “Mass ritual prayer in public places is an act of domination,” he claimed.

Too many are too polite to say this.

But mass ritual prayer in public places is an act of domination.

The adhan – which declares there is no god but allah and Muhammad is his messenger – is, when called in a public place, a declaration of domination.

Perform these rituals in… pic.twitter.com/PIfJAgb7Zk

— Nick Timothy MP (@NJ_Timothy) March 17, 2026

In response, the Labour MP Sarah Owen posted this on Bluesky.

double quotation markWait until he sees Trafalgar Square during Christmas, Hanukkah, Holi, Lunar New Year, PRIDE, Vaisakhi and the passion of Jesus.

Trafalgar Square really is for everyone.

Nick Timothy either knows that and is deliberately stirring up hatred or he isn’t that bright.

Either way, he should do better.

Dominic Grieve, the former Tory attorney general (who subsequently quit the party over Brexit, posted this.

double quotation markThis is a very odd post from a Conservative who says he believes in freedom of expression under law and is a principal spokesman of the Free Speech Union.

I appreciate that he does not like Islam and there is no reason why he should. As a Christian it is not my faith.

But the use of Trafalgar Square ( with permission) for religious events Christian and other goes back a long way. There have been prayers and hymns, chants and religious events performed there in the past. If such an event ‘shouldn’t happen again’ it raises the question of whether this is to apply to all religious events or just to Muslim ones. If to all, then we are moving like France to imposing secularism as a norm and it is contrary to our national tradition and does not seem to have helped develop social cohesion there.If just to Muslims then it is an act of discrimination against them without any lawful basis. To achieve it you would have to enact discriminatory legislation targeted at Muslims. Is this what Nick Timothy is advocating ?

And on Bluesky Sunder Katwala, director of British Future, a thinktank focusing on race and cohesion, has posted examples of various other faith events taking place in Trafalgar Square which don’t seem to have upset Timothy (they did not involved Muslims). Katwala says:

double quotation markIf the Shadow Lord Chancellor says “it should not happen again”, is it now Conservative policy to ban an Iftar in a public square in London, or elsewhere?

– What current/new law?

– Or to make it an offence to pray in public? or to limit the number doing so, for a specific faith, or several/all]?

On Sky News this morning, Richard Holden, the shadow transport secretary, said he agreed that Trafalgar Square belonged to everyone. But if they were being used by religous groups “to try and dominate”, that was wrong, he said.

He said there was a place for religion in the public sphere. “But when it is used as a weapon to oppress people, I think that’s wrong,” he said.

Asked if he thought mass ritual prayer was always an “act of domination”, Holden replied: “It can be, in certain circumstances … for all sorts of different groups.”

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