Mucca Mad Boys
Well-Known Member
When Blair became PM, net migration was around 50k so it’s a lot easier to argue the virtues of immigration when numbers are low. Against a backdrop of NHS waiting lists, overcrowded schools, overcrowded roads and a generation of people struggling with exploding rents and mortgages… those arguments are less potent.That's what surprises me, that nobody is actually brave / confident enough to do that. Blair seemed to harness the benefits of immigration - cool Britannia managed to make multiculturalism a positive after all.
I mean we're prepared to state things in black and white elsewhere, so why on earth doesn't somebody do the reverse in this case?
tbf though (as we see on this thread!) you can put the numbers and the whys down as much as you like, and some people will still mutter about 'losing a British culture' or something similar...
Overall, I’m a proponent of immigration and see the benefits of it. We do need to ‘clamp down’ on low-income migration to avoid exploitative employers relying on ‘cheap’ labour rather than investing in equipment and automation. Likewise, there needs to be a tightening on granting visas for dependents for students and workers. Then, we need to be policing the compliance of said visas. For example, if people are here on health and social visas, it’s only right they’re remaining in the country on the condition they’re working in that field.