Theresa May has rejected a points-based system for controlling EU
migration, one of the key promises of Leave campaigners during the referendum.
A
points-based model would not let the government control arrivals, she said.
Mrs May is
attending the G20 summit of world leaders in Hangzhou , her first international summit as
prime minister.
Although
Mrs May supported remaining in the EU, she has said that the Brexit vote must
be respected and suggested that curbs on the current free movement of EU
citizens into the UK would be a red line in future negotiations with the EU.
But
speaking to journalists in China
she dismissed Vote Leave's proposal of an Australian-style points system for
deciding the number of skilled and unskilled workers who could come into the UK every year
from the EU and beyond - with numbers to be determined by MPs.
Rather than
giving the government control, such a system would allow anybody into the UK if they met
the criteria, she said, adding that curbs on student visas had been a more
effective measure to reduce immigration.
"I
want a system where the government is able to decide who comes into the country
- I think that's what the British people want. A points-based system means that
people come in automatically if they just meet the criteria," she added.
Ex-UKIP
leader Nigel Farage said many people had voted Leave for the policy, backed by
Boris Johnson among others.
Mr Farage
said he was "worried" by Mrs May's comments.
"The
people were clear in wanting a points-based immigration system which is why so
many went out and voted to leave the European Union," he said.
"Any
watering down from that will lead to real anger."
Labour MP
Chuka Umunna, who chairs Vote Leave Watch, which was set up by Remain
campaigners after the referendum, said that, proportionally, immigration was
higher in Australia ,
where a points-based system was in use.
He told BBC
Radio 4's Today programme the prime minister could "square the circle"
of getting the UK continued access of the single market but also ending
"free movement as we know it", for example by only allowing
immigration within the EU in respect of people who have a job offer.
Mrs May has
faced pressure to sketch out a vision of what Brexit will mean for the UK's
relations with key partners and major inward investors, such as the US and
Japan.
Having held
talks with US President Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin on Sunday,
she is meeting Chinese president Xi Jinping on Monday among other engagements
before heading home.
In a
briefing released to journalists on Sunday, the Japanese government expressed
concern about the impact of the UK
leaving the EU on its firms' tariff-free access to the single market and their
ability to recruit highly-skilled workers for its UK plants.
The
country's ambassador to the UK ,
Koji Tsuruoka, told Today it was hard to imagine Japanese companies pulling out
entirely from the UK ,
but said "all options" would be open to businesses if export
conditions worsened as a result of Brexit.
In his
first Commons statement in his new job, Brexit Secretary David Davis told MPs
the government wanted to "build a national consensus" for its EU
negotiations.
The process
would be an "exciting and considerable challenge", he said, adding
that the government would "take the time to get it right".
"Naturally,
people want to know what Brexit will mean," he said.
"Simply,
it means leaving the European Union."
Source: BBC
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