IMAGENS DE OVOODOCORVO
They got Brexit done. So why are UK Tories still
angry about immigration?
Rising immigration feeds into a sense of ‘betrayal’
among Brexiteer voters.
BY ESTHER
WEBBER
MAY 25,
2023 4:02 AM CET
https://www.politico.eu/article/tories-brexit-done-uk-conservatives-on-immigration-rishi-sunak/
LONDON —
There’s a terrible habit the U.K. Conservatives can’t kick. It keeps coming
back to bite them — and this week Prime Minister Rishi Sunak might become the
latest victim.
David
Cameron began the trend with his fateful vow at the 2010 election to cut net
migration to below 100,000 people a year. Every subsequent Conservative prime
minister has made their own version of his failed pledge. None has come close
to achieving what they promised.
Brexit was
meant to resolve the issue, ending the free movement of people from Europe and
handing back control of U.K. borders to the government. Yet more than three
years after Britain left the EU, the numbers are only going higher.
New figures
published Thursday show migration added 606,000 people to the U.K.’s population
in 2022 — the highest number on record.
While some
Tory voices suggest it’s time to move on from the fixation on absolute numbers,
others in Sunak’s party fear another big headline rise will further alienate
the very pro-Brexit voters they are trying to hug close ahead of next year’s
election.
“It’s
completely insane,” backbench MP Adam Holloway told the right-wing TV station
GB News this week. “Who would think that a Conservative government was
presiding over effectively uncontrolled immigration?”
Numbers game
Some
experts argue that post-Brexit, the whole subject of immigration is of
diminishing importance in British politics.
Rob Ford,
professor of political science at Manchester University, cites data suggesting
that “across a very wide range of measures, people are more positive about the
economic and social impacts of immigration now than they were in the years
running up to the EU referendum.” He says last year was the first time polling
found a majority of people thought levels of immigration should stay where they
are now or increase further.
There are
also several caveats to the latest migration stats that in theory ought to
soften their impact with the general public.
The new
total will include 174,200 Ukrainian refugees and 160,700 Hongkongers fleeing
repression in China — groups entering the country via special visa schemes that
command considerable public support.
It will
also include large numbers of foreign students — they totaled 485,758 last year
— a group some prominent Conservatives suggest should not be counted in
migration stats at all since, in the words of ex-minister Kit Malthouse, they
“pay us megabucks” and “largely support themselves.”
Broader
demographic shifts are also starting to change the immigration conversation.
The types of voters who tend to view immigration more positively — university
graduates and those from migrant backgrounds — are increasing as a share of the
population. Younger generations now reaching voting age are also generally less
concerned.
PM Rishi
Sunak speaks during a press conference following the launch of new legislation
on migrant channel crossings | Leon Neal/Getty Images
And Brexit
itself, plus the subsequent introduction of a points-based immigration system,
may have helped to drive down public concern further, by giving a vague
impression the issue had been “dealt with.”
But that in
turn means any leap in headline numbers — coupled with the immense strain being
felt by key services including housing and the National Health Service — has
the potential to send immigration rocketing back up the political agenda,
spelling serious trouble for Sunak.
Brexit ‘betrayal’
Rising
immigration feeds into a sense of “betrayal” among Brexiteer voters, explains
Rachel Wolf, a co-author of the 2019 Conservative manifesto and founder of
polling consultancy Public First.
“We pretend
that ‘take back control’ is something completely abstract,” she says of the
famous 2016 Vote Leave slogan, “but a huge part of it was about taking back
control of immigration. That’s what a lot of people voted for.”
One of the
problems inherent in the Brexit campaign was that its proponents at the elite
level actually “wanted a kind of high-immigration, low-regulation, free-market
state,” she notes. “But that’s not what the voters wanted.”
Boris
Johnson was one of those leading Brexiteers supremely unbothered by higher
immigration, as indicated by his decision to opt for a more liberal approach
than that envisaged by his predecessor, Theresa May, in the form of the
Australian-style points system.
Nick
Timothy, May’s former chief of staff, claimed in a column this week that
Johnson never believed in his own election promise to bring overall numbers
down. He points out that every Tory government since 2010 has won power making
promises on net migration and then delivering the exact opposite.
Craig
Oliver, David Cameron’s communications chief, is from a different Conservative
tradition to Timothy, but agrees the party has made a rod for its own back with
constant pledges on immigration numbers.
“It’s what
happens when you have people who are solely interested in campaigning,” he
says, “and not so much in having a sensible discussion about how to govern.”
This is a
concern for Conservative MPs across the political spectrum. While Sunak’s
supporters urge a sense of perspective, they don’t deny it creates a
credibility gap when the party says one thing and does another.
One
minister, requesting anonymity to speak candidly, cited the large numbers of
current migrants linked to Ukraine and Hong Kong, but admitted he was still not
looking forward to discussing the issue with constituents. “It’s not great,” he
sighed.
Where next?
While Sunak
this week made some attempt at action, via a clampdown on the dependents of
international students, he is well aware that cutting numbers significantly
would require a more radical shift in the U.K. economy.
“Moving
from a world in which we are quite dependent on immigration to one which we’re
not would probably be quite a painful process, in which we would have certain
industries and retail outlets suddenly not able to succeed,” says Paul Johnson,
director of the Institute for Fiscal Studies think tank.
Along with
truck drivers, fruit pickers and hospitality workers, a large chunk of the
migrant visas issued by Britain last year were for much-needed health and
social care workers. It’s far from clear what alternative the government might
be able to devise.
Yet just
like his predecessors, Sunak has now made himself a hostage to fortune, telling
journalists last week he wants immigration to return to pre-pandemic levels —
and so placing his faith in overall numbers falling sharply next year.
His MPs are
watching closely and will ratchet up the pressure if the pledge looks set to be
broken. Home Secretary Suella Braverman — already trying to position herself as
the next Tory leader — has made her personal feelings clear, establishing
herself as a hero to backbench MPs who want to see numbers come down.
One former
Cabinet minister confirmed a schism was emerging, saying: “I side firmly with
Suella on this.”
For now,
switching out of their forever campaign mode on immigration seems to be beyond
the Conservatives’ reach.



Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário