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UK refugee resettlement scheme
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UK refugee resettlement scheme

Home Office voluntary programme placing vulnerable refugees with local councils; first revoked by a Reform-controlled council on 9 May 2026.

Last refreshed: 9 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic

Key Question

If Reform councils exit the refugee scheme en masse, does the Home Office have any power to stop them?

Timeline for UK refugee resettlement scheme

#911 May

Received first English council withdrawal announcement from Lancashire

UK Local Elections 2026: Lancashire is first to quit UKRS
#79 May
View full timeline →
Common Questions
What is the UK refugee resettlement scheme and how does it work?
It is a voluntary Home Office programme where local councils host vulnerable refugees with central government funding. Councils opt in; the Home Office coordinates placement and pays a per-head grant.Source: Home Office
Why did Lancashire withdraw from the refugee resettlement scheme?
Lancashire County Council withdrew on 9 May 2026, two days after Reform UK took control of the council in the 7 May elections, making it the first Reform council to act on immigration policy.Source: Lowdown / UK Elections 2026
Can other Reform councils also leave the refugee scheme?
Yes. The scheme is voluntary; councils can withdraw via a cabinet decision without any new legislation. Lancashire's withdrawal on 9 May 2026 is a template other Reform councils may follow.Source: Lowdown / UK Elections 2026

Background

Lancashire County Council withdrew from the UK refugee resettlement scheme on 9 May 2026 — two days after switching to Reform UK control in the 7 May elections — becoming the first council to revoke its participation after the election results. The withdrawal was the first concrete policy decision from any of the newly Reform-controlled councils and set the immediate terms of the debate over what Reform-controlled local government would actually do with its new power.

The scheme is a Home Office voluntary programme under which local authorities opt in to host vulnerable refugees — including those fleeing conflict and persecution — with central government funding provided per person resettled. Councils take on housing, support, and integration responsibilities; the Home Office coordinates placement and funds a per-head grant. Participation is voluntary: local authorities can join and leave without primary legislation, meaning Reform councils can revoke participation through a cabinet decision rather than parliamentary action.

The Lancashire withdrawal tests a central question of post-election Reform governance: how FAR can council-level decisions diverge from national refugee obligations without triggering a central government response? The Home Office retains overall responsibility for asylum and refugee policy; participation in the resettlement scheme is discretionary for councils but the underlying legal framework remains a UK Government programme. How many of Reform's other newly-won councils follow Lancashire's lead will determine whether this is a symbolic gesture or the beginning of a systematic withdrawal of council cooperation with national refugee placement.

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