The debate around an expected influx of Romanians and Bulgarians has been intensifying in Britain as people fear the pressure on public services caused by poor immigrants coming in search of jobs.
While speaking in a parliamentary debate on immigration, Vaz said he and Conservative MP Mark Reckless will be at Luton Airport in the north of London in time for the 7.40 am flight from Bucharest on January 1.
"Why is it that we still don't have estimates of how many people are going to come here next year," asked Vaz, who chairs the Commons Home Affairs Committee.
Immigration minister Mark Harper said advice given to the government was that it was not "sensible or helpful" to produce precise numerical estimates.
"If the only way to do it is to do it with our own eyes... then I am afraid we are going to have to do this," Vaz responded.
The debate was prompted by a group of backbench Conservative MPs who want the restrictions to be extended.
It came after Downing Street outlined tighter rules on claiming benefits from January 1, 2014.
Conservative John Baron argued that in fact higher pay rather than benefits was attracting migrants to the UK.
The debate around the impact of rising immigration took place as official figures revealed almost nine in 10 babies born in parts of Britain have at least one foreign-born parent.
Last week it had revealed how the number of foreign-born people in England and Wales has quadrupled in 60 years, with immigration accounting for almost half the growth in the population.
The biggest migrant group is now those born in India, which accounts for 694,000 people in England and Wales. It is followed by Poland in second place with 579,000 migrants, Pakistan with 482,000, and then Ireland with 407,000, the ONS said.
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