Labour has begun planning for taxpayer-funded asylum contracts that extend to 2039.
The potential decade-long contracts, reported to be worth £10billion, would come despite the Government promising to end the use of migrant hotels.
The Home Office has told GB News that it plans to “improve the management of contracts”, attributing the high costs of asylum contracts to the previous Conservative Government.
They have invited potential suppliers to discuss terms for housing migrants from 2029 to 2036, with a possible extension to 2039, according to reports.
The initial seven-year period would see taxpayers chipping in with an average of £1.4billion per year, according to the Times.
The use of hotels to house asylum seekers has been heavily criticised across Britain, with protests and marches taking place up and down the country.
Residents who live near the facilities have voiced concerns over public safety, with several high-profile murders and sex attacks on women.
A Sudanese asylum seeker named Deng Chol Majek murdered a hotel worker, Rhiannon Whyte.

He stabbed her 23 times with a screwdriver after she finished her shift at the Park Inn Hotel in Walsall, which was housing asylum seekers.
Hadush Kebatu, an Ethiopian migrant, was deported after launching a sex attack on a 14-year-old schoolgirl, where he touched and tried to kiss the child.
The attack sparked protests outside the Epping hotel which spread to several major towns and cities in the UK.
Nearly 37,000 small boat migrants have crossed the English Channel so far this year, already surpassing the total for 2024.
LATEST DEVELOPMENTS
- ‘Sexual predator’ small boat migrant admits raping ‘intoxicated’ woman in alleyway
- Asylum seeker strangled and sexually assaulted woman in ‘petrifying’ attack – ‘I have nightmares’
- ‘Hokey Cokey’ migrant still in UK two weeks after arriving back across the Channel

The Government has pledged to end the use of hotels to house asylum seekers by 2029, when the current contracts end.
It is believed future plans include using private housing and large sites, such as disused military bases.
A Home Office spokesperson said: “We inherited disastrous asylum contracts that were not properly scrutinised. We are improving the management of these contracts to guarantee value for taxpayers’ money.
“Engagement notices are not contracts or formal procurement activity, the contents of which change over time. Claims of the final value of the contract is speculation.”

More To Follow…
Our Standards:
The GB News Editorial Charter



Follow