A group of backbench Conservative MPs is putting pressure on Rishi Sunak to further reduce immigration tied to the UKโs higher education sector.
The โNew Conservativesโ, a group of โRed Wallโ parliamentarians, published a report on 3 July which calls on the prime minister to take action to drastically reduce immigration, arguing that this is key to fulfilling the promises made in the partyโs 2019 manifesto.
The report, by Ipswich MP Tom Hunt, says that international students should be barred from attending the โpoorest performing universitiesโ, that post-study work visas should be scrapped, and that new restrictions on the students who can bring dependants with them to the UK should be extended.
โOur immigration policy should not be used to prop up the finances of underperforming universities. As the home secretary has previously observed, allowing international students to bring in โfamily members who can piggyback on to their student visaโ aids โpropping up, frankly, substandard courses in inadequate institutionsโ,โ the report says.
โMore needs to be done to ensure universities are fit for purpose and that international students receive an education that warrants the high prices they are charged.โ
The governmentโs most recent step in this area was the May announcement that international students will be barred from bringing family members to the UK from January 2024, unless they are on postgraduate research courses.
The New Conservatives report says that the ban should be extended to cover one-year research masterโs courses.
In making the May announcement, home secretary Suella Braverman stopped short of restricting post-study work visas, an area where some ministers were reportedly keen on action.
The New Conservatives report says that this โgraduate routeโ, which allows students to stay in the UK to look for work for two years after finishing their degrees, should be closed altogether, noting that high-performing students should not need to spend several years looking for a job.
The report also notes an increase in the number of international students attending non-Russell Group universities in recent years, so that they now make up 62 per cent of all study visas.
โA study visa that is blind to the rigour of university courses is also blind to the earning potential, or even employability, of graduates who can then go on to apply for graduate work visas,โ warns the report, which recommends that visas should be reserved โfor the brightest international students by excluding the poorest performing universities from eligibility criteriaโ.
The report suggests this could be achieved by barring the โpoorest performing quartileโ of universities outside the Russell Group from being able to sponsor visas.
The report suggests that, collectively, its reforms to student visas could cut net migration by about 172,000 each year. In 2022 long-term international migration stood at 606,000.
โThe British public voted for a strong approach to migration. They did not vote for mass migration and the social and economic harms it brings,โ the report says.
Penistone and Stocksbridge MP Miriam Cates and Devizes MP Danny Kruger are reported to be the principal organisers of the New Conservatives initiative.