Reform Asylum Treaties
Conservative · what the evidence says
An independent, source-checked look at Conservative’s policy “Reform Asylum Treaties” — what it would actually do across the things that affect your life. Every claim below quotes the source behind it. How this works.
Crime, justice & national security — Genuinely contested
n/a · low confidence
This policy aims to reform asylum treaties and restrict visas from uncooperative countries, but its effect on national security and justice is genuinely unclear — the core commitment is aspirational, and evidence on whether such measures reduce illegal migration or improve the justice system is mixed.
The evidence
- The policy commits to working with other countries to reform international asylum laws and restricting visa access from non-cooperating countries. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “work with other countries to reform international asylum laws to make them fit for an age of mass migration, restricting visa access from countries that do not cooperate on national priorities like illegal migration”
- The backlog of unresolved asylum claims stood at 224,700 cases as of March 2026, representing a significant justice system burden. — courthousenews.com (media) — “The backlog of unresolved asylum claims stood at 224,700 cases in March 2026”
- A record 105,000 people applied for asylum in the UK in 2024. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “A record 105,000 people applied for asylum in 2024”
- Analysts question whether restrictions such as those proposed will significantly reduce asylum applications or small boat crossings. — migrationobservatory.ox.ac.uk (academic) — “They question whether recent restrictions will significantly reduce asylum applications or small boat crossings”
- Push factors like conflict and persecution and pull factors like social networks are considered more potent drivers of migration than deterrents, meaning deterrent-focused policies have historically yielded mixed results. — ukandeu.ac.uk (academic) — “historically, such measures have yielded mixed results, with "push" factors (like conflict and persecution) and "pull" factors (like social networks and historical ties) being more potent drivers of migration than deterr…”
- An implemented visa brake on certain nationalities was estimated to prevent only approximately 1,400 asylum claims over 18 months. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “The government estimated that this "visa brake" could prevent approximately 1,400 asylum claims if maintained for 18 months”
- Feasibility of international reform is uncertain; discussions are underway for a political declaration to facilitate deportations but no agreed reform has been secured. — globallawexperts.com (media) — “discussions are underway for a "political declaration" to facilitate deportations among Convention states”
Biggest unknown: Whether international treaty reform can be achieved and would materially reduce unscreened illegal entry or asylum backlogs, rather than merely shifting migration patterns.
Our reading: O5 is concerned with safety, order, the justice system, and national security. This policy has two operative elements: aspirational treaty reform ('work with other countries') and the concrete lever of restricting visas from uncooperative states. On national security and illegal migration: the soft-verb framing ('work with') carries no committed instrument, budget, or statutory duty, so the treaty reform element earns only candidacy, not a direction. The visa-brake analogy — the closest real-world precedent in the evidence — was projected to prevent around 1,400 asylum claims over 18 months, a modest number against a backlog of 224,700 cases and 105,000 annual claims. Analysts at the Migration Observatory question whether restrictions significantly reduce asylum applications or small boat crossings, and the broader literature cited notes that push/pull factors outweigh deterrents historically. On the justice system: the asylum backlog is large and growing, but this policy does not contain a direct mechanism to speed processing, fund courts, or increase enforcement capacity. The indirect route — fewer arrivals leading to a smaller caseload — depends on the effectiveness of deterrence, which the evidence rates as uncertain. Feasibility is a further crux: international treaty reform requires agreement from sovereign partners, and only preliminary discussions for a 'political declaration' are evidenced; no reform has been secured. Taken together, there is genuine, non-resolvable uncertainty: the mechanism is plausible but the evidence does not support projecting either a meaningful improvement or a worsening of O5 indicators at population scale. This is a legitimate too-uncertain verdict, not a hedge — credible institutional analysis consistently flags that deterrent-focused border measures have limited impact on the drivers of illegal migration that most directly bear on security screening.
Equal treatment & democratic rights — Hurts
minor · low confidence
This policy aims to restrict asylum protections and use visa access as leverage over other countries, which legal experts say risks breaching international human rights obligations that protect asylum seekers' due process rights. However, the core treaty-reform element is purely aspirational with no committed mechanism, so real-world effect is highly uncertain.
The evidence
- The policy commits only to 'working with' other countries to reform asylum laws and restricting visas from non-cooperating countries — no committed instrument or statutory duty. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “will work with other countries to reform international asylum laws to make them fit for an age of mass migration, restricting visa access from countries that do not cooperate”
- Legal experts warn that UK asylum restriction plans risk violating the Refugee Convention and the Human Rights Act. — leftfootforward.org (media) — “Legal experts, including the Immigration Law Practitioners' Association (ILPA), warn that recent UK asylum plans risk violating the UK's human rights obligations, including the Refugee Convention and the Human Rights Act…”
- Legal experts and human rights organisations argue that restrictive asylum policies risk breaching international and domestic human rights obligations. — leftfootforward.org (media) — “Legal experts and human rights organisations contend that policies like temporary refugee status and extended settlement pathways risk breaching international and domestic human rights obligations.”
- A comparable visa-restriction instrument ('visa brake') has already been implemented by the UK government, restricting visas for nationals of specific countries. — commonslibrary.parliament.uk (government) — “In March 2026, the government implemented a "visa brake," a temporary ban on certain visa applications (primarily study visas and some work visas for Afghans) from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Myanmar, and Sudan.”
Biggest unknown: Whether any actual international treaty reform is achievable, and how far visa-restriction measures would be applied in practice — both determine whether O9 effects materialise at all.
Our reading: O9 covers due process, minority protections, and equal treatment under law. This policy points in a direction that would tighten asylum protections and introduce differential treatment of nationals by country (via visa leverage). Both elements have O9 relevance: reforming asylum law to make it more restrictive could erode due process for a vulnerable minority (asylum seekers), and restricting visa access by nationality creates unequal treatment based on country of origin. Legal experts (E1, E35) flag genuine human rights and rule-of-law concerns — these are not fringe views. However, the threshold discipline rule is important here: the treaty-reform core is entirely aspirational ('will work with'), with no committed instrument, budget, or statutory duty. Under the soft-verb rule, that element defaults to negligible in isolation. The visa-restriction element is more concrete — a real-world analogue already exists (E9) — and does impose differential treatment by nationality. On balance, the policy direction trends toward worsening O9 (reduced asylum protections, differential nationality-based visa access), but because the main mechanism is aspirational and the scale of any treaty reform is wholly uncertain, both magnitude and confidence are low. The verdict is 'worsens/minor' rather than 'too-uncertain' because the evidence on direction is consistent across legal commentators (E1, E35) and the visa-brake analogue (E9) shows concrete differential treatment is already operational, making the directional signal credible even if scale is uncertain.
Immigration & border control — Moves toward more control
We don’t call this better or worse — that’s your call; we only show which way the policy moves it.
moderate · low confidence
This policy aims to tighten asylum rules by reforming international treaties and using visa restrictions to pressure uncooperative countries, moving things toward more control over asylum-related migration. How much it would actually reduce numbers depends heavily on whether other countries agree to changes — which is far from certain.
The evidence
- The policy proposes reforming international asylum laws and restricting visa access from countries that do not cooperate on illegal migration. — conservatives.com (manifesto) — “restricting visa access from countries that do not cooperate on national priorities like illegal migration”
- Feasibility of international reform is uncertain; the UK has expressed desire for a leading role in reforming relevant conventions but outcomes are unclear. — youtube.com (media) — “the UK Home Secretary has expressed a desire for Britain to play a "leading role" in reforming the ECHR at the European level”
- Legal experts warn that changes to asylum laws risk violating UK human rights obligations including the Refugee Convention. — leftfootforward.org (media) — “Legal experts, including the Immigration Law Practitioners' Association (ILPA), warn that recent UK asylum plans risk violating the UK's human rights obligations, including the Refugee Convention and the Human Rights Act”
- Researchers argue that deterrent measures have historically had mixed results, with push and pull factors being more potent drivers of migration than deterrents. — ukandeu.ac.uk (academic) — “historically, such measures have yielded mixed results, with "push" factors (like conflict and persecution) and "pull" factors (like social networks and historical ties) being more potent drivers of migration than deterr…”
Biggest unknown: Whether other countries would agree to reform international asylum laws, and whether visa leverage would be sufficient to change their behaviour, is deeply uncertain and determines whether this policy has any real effect.
Our reading: The policy explicitly targets asylum routes by seeking to reform international law and apply visa pressure on non-cooperating states — both moves designed to reduce asylum-based migration inflows, placing it firmly toward more controlled. However, the magnitude is rated moderate rather than major because international treaty reform requires multilateral agreement that is not guaranteed, and researchers note deterrents have historically had limited effect on asylum flows driven by conflict and persecution. Confidence is low because the policy is aspirational and depends almost entirely on external actors agreeing to change.