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Labour embarrassment as asylum backlog predicted to take 44,000 years to clear
The backlog calculation excludes a further 87,000 appeals lodged by April to overturn failed claims – a 70 % rise on the previous year.

A group of migrants tries to cross the English Channel in a flimsy dinghy (Image: Getty)
It will take 44,000 years to clear the asylum court backlog built up since Labour took power, shocking figures reveal. A new analysis shows that processing all 38,866 asylum cases lodged since the government entered office would equate to 44,000 years if handled one after another. The extraordinary total highlights the scale of delays plaguing the system.
Official data indicates that lawyers and migrants are launching repeated appeals, with the average wait for a judgment stretching to 14 months over the past two years. The backlog calculation excludes a further 87,000 appeals lodged by April to overturn failed claims — a 70 % rise on the previous year. Operating the immigration and asylum appeals service already costs taxpayers £80 million annually.
London’s Taylor House court is facing a 10,888-year backlog, while Manchester Piccadilly stands at 7,412 years, marking them among the least efficient venues in the country.
The revelations come as Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood announced plans to replace asylum judges with an independent appeals body in a bid to overhaul the system. However, critics say mounting delays continue to tie up courts and drain public resources.
Tory MP Sir Alec Shelbrooke told The Sun: “This is a totally inefficient system. Until we get out of the European Convention on Human Rights we won’t be able to change it. It’s bad enough Labour’s taking us back to the 70s — but the ice age is another level.
“It’s a bad use of taxpayers’ cash. The reason we’ve so many activist lawyers is they know backlogs give years of work.”



