The Chancellor said extra cash will allow the Home Office to “cut the asylum backlog, hear more appeal cases and return people who have no right to be here”.
More than 15,000 migrants have crossed the Channel this year (Image: Getty)
Every migrant hotel will be closed by July 2029, Rachel Reeves has vowed.
During today’s Spending Review, the Chancellor said extra cash will allow the Home Office to “cut the asylum backlog, hear more appeal cases and return people who have no right to be here”.
This could save taxpayers £1bn a year, Ms Reeves has claimed.
The Chancellor admitted it could take ministers another four years to close every asylum hotel, despite fears over spiralling costs.
Yvette Cooper is under pressure to end the Channel migrant crisis (Image: Getty)
Some 32,345 migrants are currently living in taxpayer-funded hotels, costing an estimated £54,000 a year each.
It comes as more Channel migrants arrived in Dover this morning, taking the total past 15,000. The Chancellor told MPs: “I can confirm today that led by the work of the Home Secretary we will be ending the costly use of hotels to house asylum seekers, in this Parliament.
“Funding that I have provided today including from the Transformation Fund will cut the asylum backlog; hear more appeal cases; and return people who have no right to be here, saving the taxpayer £1bn per year. That is my choice, Mr Speaker. That is Labour’s choice. And that is the choice of the British people.”
Ms Reeves has announced funding of “up to £280 million more per year” by the end of the spending review for the Border Security Command to “support the integrity of our borders”. Hundreds of migrants are feared to have been intercepted in the English Channel this morning.
Windy conditions have hampered crossings so far in June. But people smugglers took advantage of calm conditions – despite the low visibility – with at least one inflatable picked up mid-Channel early this morning.
Migrants in orange life jackets were seen coming ashore at immigration processing centre at the Port of Dover’s Western Docks in Kent this morning.
They were brought into the harbour on the Border Force catamaran Volunteer. A second Border Force vessel – Typhoon – came into the port soon after while another catamaran Ranger could be seen in mid Channel according to ship tracking site Marine Traffic.
French rescue vessels can also be seen positioned off the French coast. Today’s crossings are the first since May 31 when a record 1,195 people in 19 boats were intercepted. The total to cross so far in 2025 stands at 14,811 in 263 boats.
Shadow Home Secretary Chris Philp said: “15,000 illegal Channel crossings and its only June – 2025 is the worst year ever for small boat crossings so far. While traffickers and criminal gangs rake in millions, Labour Ministers stand in Westminster rehearsing soundbites. This is a total collapse of border control.