Home Office
The Home Office is a ministerial department of Her Majesty's Government of the United Kingdom, responsible for immigration, security and law and order. As such it is responsible for policing in England and Wales, fire and rescue services in England, visas and immigration and the Security Service. It is also in charge of government policy on security-related issues such as drugs, counter-terrorism and ID cards. It was formerly responsible for Her Majesty's Prison Service and the National Probation Service, but these have been transferred to the Ministry of Justice. The Cabinet minister responsible for the department is the Home Secretary, currently Priti Patel.
The Home Office, which is considered to be one of the Great Offices of State, continues to be known, especially in official papers and when referred to in Parliament, as the Home Department.
Organisation
The Home Office is headed by the Home Secretary, a Cabinet minister supported by the department's senior civil servant, the permanent secretary.As of October 2014, the Home Office comprises the following organisations:
Non-ministerial government departments
- National Crime Agency
- Security Service
Inspectorates/accountability
- HM Inspectorate of Constabulary
- Independent Chief Inspector of Borders and Immigration
- Independent Office for Police Conduct and other oversight bodies
- Home Affairs Select Committee
- HM Chief Inspector of Fire Services
Divisions
- Border Force
- HM Passport Office
- Immigration Enforcement
- Corporate Services
- UK Visas and Immigration
- Police Services
- Fire and Rescue Services
- Office for Security and Counter-Terrorism
Non-departmental public bodies
- Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs
- Animals in Science Committee
- Disclosure and Barring Service
- Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority
- Independent Police Complaints Commission
- Investigatory Powers Tribunal
- Migration Advisory Committee
- National DNA Database Ethics Group
- Office of Surveillance Commissioners
- Office of the Immigration Services Commissioner
- Police Advisory Board for England and Wales
- Police Discipline Appeals Tribunal
- Police Remuneration Review Body
- Security Industry Authority
- Surveillance Camera Commissioner
- Technical Advisory Board
Operations
These included:
- Use of the Airwave communications system by police forces
- The Police National Database
- The National DNA Database
- Legislative powers regarding police employment
- Forensics policy
- The National Procurement Hub for information technology
Home Office ministers
Minister | Title | Portfolio |
The Rt Hon. Priti Patel MP | Secretary of State | Overall responsibility for the work of the department; overarching responsibility for the departmental portfolio and oversight of the ministerial team; cabinet; National Security Council ; public appointments; MI5 oversight. |
The Rt Hon. James Brokenshire MP | Minister of State for Security | Counter terrorism – prepare, prevent, pursue, protect; serious and organised crime; cybercrime; economic crime; hostile state activity; extradition; royal and VIP protection; online harms; Common Travel Area; aviation and maritime security; Commons lead on transition period ; fire; Grenfell; flooding/hurricane/natural; disaster relief. |
Kit Malthouse MP | Minister of State for Crime & Policing | Policing; crime; county lines; criminal justice system; acquisitive crime; public protection and protests; undercover policing; Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services ; police technology; police powers; facial recognition; major events; football policing; reoffending; unauthorised encampments; firearms; serious violence; drugs and alcohol. |
The Rt Hon. The Baroness Williams of Trafford | Minister of State for Countering Extremism | All Home Office business in the House of Lords; overall corporate lead including Spending Review and Budget; data and identity; enablers; digital and technology including the emergency services network; public appointments; sponsorship unit; countering extremism; hate crime; forensic science and DNA. |
Lord Greenhalgh | Minister of State | TBC |
Victoria Atkins MP | Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Safeguarding | Modern slavery and the national referral mechanism; domestic abuse; violence against women and girls including female genital mutilation and forced marriage; early youth intervention on serious violence; Disclosure and Barring Service ; victims; child sexual abuse and exploitation; Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse; Gangmasters and Labour Abuse Authority; sexual violence including the rape review; anti-social behaviour; prostitution; stalking; online internet safety/WeProtect; victims of terrorism; Security Industry Authority. |
Kevin Foster MP | Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Immigration and Future Borders | Design and implementation of the UK’s points-based system; Design and implementation of digital and secure borders including Electronic Travel Authorities; counting in and counting out; current and future visa system including fees; global visa operations; net migration; immigration rules; immigration system simplification; exit checks; Immigration Bill; EU; Settlement Scheme; casework; sponsorship of UK Visas and Immigration, Her Majesty's Passport Office and Borders, Immigration and Citizenship System policy directorates. |
Chris Philp MP | Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Immigration Compliance | Compliance environment; detention; returns; foreign; national offenders; illegal immigration strategy; overseas development aid; Immigration Enforcement; asylum; resettlement; casework; nationality; animals ; sponsorship of Border Force and Immigration Enforcement directorates. |
Priorities
The Department outlined its aims for this Parliament in its Business Plan, which was published in May 2011 and superseded its Structural Reform Plan. The plan said the department will:The Home Office publishes progress against the plan on the 10 Downing Street website.
History
On 27 March 1782, the Home Office was formed by renaming the existing Southern Department, with all existing staff transferring. On the same day, the Northern Department was renamed the Foreign Office.To match the new names, there was a transferring of responsibilities between the two Departments of State. All domestic responsibilities were moved to the Home Office, and all foreign matters became the concern of the Foreign Office.
Most subsequently created domestic departments have been formed by splitting responsibilities away from the Home Office.
The initial responsibilities were:
- Answering petitions and addresses sent to the King
- Advising the King on
- *Royal grants
- *Warrants and commissions
- *The exercise of Royal Prerogative
- Issuing instructions on behalf of the King to officers of the Crown, lords-lieutenant and magistrates, mainly concerning law and order
- Operation of the secret service within the UK
- Protecting the public
- Safeguarding the rights and liberties of individuals
- Colonial matters
- 1793 added: regulation of aliens
- 1794 removed: control of military forces
- 1801 removed: colonial business
- 1804 removed: Barbary State consuls
- 1823 added: prisons
- 1829 added: police services
- 1836 added: registration of births, deaths and marriages in England and Wales
- 1844 added: naturalisation
- 1845 added: registration of Friendly Societies
- 1855 removed: yeomanries and militias
- 1858 added: local boards of health
- 1871 removed: local boards of health
- 1871 removed: registration of births, deaths and marriages
- 1872 removed: highways and turnpikes
- 1875 added: control of explosives
- 1875 removed: registration of Friendly Societies
- 1885 removed: Scotland
- 1886 removed: fishing
- 1889 removed: Land Commissioners
- 1900 removed: matters relating to burial grounds
- 1905 removed: public housing
- 1914 added: dangerous drugs
- 1919 removed: aircraft and air traffic
- 1919 removed: use of human bodies in medical training
- 1919 removed: infant and child care
- 1919 removed: lunacy and mental health
- 1919 removed: health and safety
- 1920 added: firearms
- 1920 removed: Representation of Britain abroad in labour matters
- 1920 removed: mining
- 1921 added: elections
- 1922 removed: relations with Irish Free State
- 1923 removed: Order of the British Empire
- 1925 removed: registration of trade unions
- 1931 removed: county councils
- 1933 added: poisons
- 1934 removed: metropolitan boroughs
- 1935 added: Civil Defence Service
- 1937 removed: road accident returns
- 1938 added: fire services
- 1938 removed: Imperial Service Order and medal
- 1940 removed: factory inspections
- 1945 removed: workmen's compensation scheme
- 1947 added: infant and child care
- 1947 removed: regulation of advertisements
- 1947 removed: burial fees
- 1947 removed: registration of building societies
- 1948 removed: Broadmoor hospital
- 1949 added: Civil Defence Corps
- 1950 removed: structural precautions for civil defence
- 1950 removed: minor judicial appointments
- 1953 removed: slaughterhouses
- 1954 removed: markets
- 1956 removed: railway accidents
- 1969 removed: reservoirs
- 1971 removed: child care in England
- 1971 removed: child care in Wales
- 1972 removed: Northern Ireland
- 1973 removed: adoption
- 1992 removed: broadcasting and sport
- 2001 removed: Crown Dependencies
- 2007 removed: criminal justice, prisons & probation and legal affairs
- 2007 added: counter-terrorism strategy
- 2016 added: fire and rescue services in England
Recent Incidents
Union action
On 18 July 2012, the Public and Commercial Services Union announced that thousands of Home Office employees would go on strike over jobs, pay and other issues. However, the PCSU called off the strike before it was planned it claimed the department had, subsequent to the threat of actions, announced 1,100 new border jobs.Windrush scandal
The first allegations about the unfair targeting of pre 1973 Caribbean migrants started in 2013, in 2018 the allegations were put to the Home Secretary in the house of Commons and resulted in the resignation of the Home Secretary. The Windrush scandal resulted in British Citizens being wrongly deported and being refused life critical medical treatment along with a further compensation scheme for those affected and a wider debate on the Home Office hostile environment policy., London
in Croydon, which holds the headquarters of UK Visas and Immigration
Location
Until 1978, the Home Office had its offices in what is now the Foreign and Commonwealth Office Main Building on King Charles Street, off Whitehall. From 1978 to 2004, the Home Office was located at 50 Queen Anne's Gate, a Brutalist office block in Westminster designed by Sir Basil Spence, close to St. James's Park tube station. Many functions, however, were devolved to offices in other parts of London and the country, notably the headquarters of the Immigration and Nationality Directorate in Croydon.In 2005, the Home Office moved to a new main office designed by Sir Terry Farrell at 2 Marsham Street, Westminster, on the site of the demolished Marsham Towers building of the Department of the Environment.
For external shots of its fictional Home Office, the TV series Spooks uses an aerial shot of the Government Offices Great George Street instead, serving as stand-in to match the distinctly less modern appearance of the fictitious accommodation interiors the series uses.
Research
To meet the UK's 5-year science and technology strategy, the Home Office sponsors research in police sciences, including:- Biometrics – including face and voice recognition
- Cell type analysis – to determine the origin of cells
- Chemistry – new techniques to recover latent fingerprints
- DNA – identifying offender characteristics from DNA
- Improved profiling – of illicit drugs to help identify their source
- Raman Spectroscopy – to provide more sensitive drugs and explosives detectors
- Terahertz imaging methods and technologies – e.g. image analysis and new cameras, to detect crime, enhance images and support anti-terrorism
Devolution
Scotland
Reserved matters:- The Misuse of Drugs Act 1971
- Extradition legislation, but the Scottish Ministers have executive responsibility for all aspects of mutual legal assistance
- Most aspects of firearms legislation, but Scottish Ministers have some executive responsibilities for the licensing of firearms. Further powers are transferred under the Scotland Act 2012
- Immigration and nationality
- Scientific procedures on live animals
Northern Ireland
Excepted matters:- Extradition
- Immigration and nationality
- Drug classification
- Parades
- Security of explosives
- National Crime Agency
The Department of Justice is accountable to the Northern Ireland Executive whereas the Northern Ireland Office is a UK Government department.
Wales
Under the Welsh devolution settlement, specific policy areas are transferred to the National Assembly for Wales rather than reserved to Westminster.Criticism
In March 2019, it was reported that in two unrelated cases the Home Office denied asylum to converted Christians by misrepresenting certain Bible quotes. In one case it quoted selected excerpts from the Bible to imply that Christianity is not more peaceful than Islam, the religion the asylum-seeker converted from. In another incident, an Iranian Christian application for asylum was rejected because her faith was judged as "half-hearted", for she did not believe that Jesus could protect her from the Iranian regime. As outrage grew on social media, the Home Office distanced itself from the decision, though it confirmed the letter was authentic. The Home Secretary admitted that it was "totally unacceptable" for his department to quote the Bible to question an Iranian Christian convert's asylum application, and ordered an urgent investigation into what had happened.The treatment of Christian asylum seekers chimes with other incidents in the past, like the refusal to grant visas to the Archbishop of Mosul to attend the consecration of the UK's first Syriac Orthodox Cathedral. In a 2017 study, the Christian Barnabas Fund found that only 0.2% of all Syrian refugees accepted by the UK were Christians, although Christians accounted for approximately 10% of Syria's prewar population.
In 2019, the Home Office admitted to multiple breaches of data protection regulations in the handling of its Windrush compensation scheme. The department sent emails to Windrush migrants which revealed the email address of other Windrush migrants to whom the email was sent. The data breach concerned five different emails, each of which was sent to 100 recipients. In April 2019, the Home Office admitted to revealing 240 personal email addresses of EU citizens applying for settled status in the UK. The email addresses of applicants were incorrectly sent to other applicants to the scheme. In response to these incidents, the Home Office pledged to launch an independent review of its data protection compliance.
In 2019, the Court of Appeal issued a judgement which criticized the Home Office's handling of immigration cases. The judges stated that the "general approach in all earnings discrepancy cases legally flawed". The judgement relates to the Home Office's interpretation of Section 322 of the Immigration Rules.