Opinion
Guest Essay
A
Progressive Future Depends on National Identity
June 19,
2025
By Claire
Ainsley
Ms. Ainsley,
an adviser to Keir Starmer before he became prime minister of Britain, is the
director of the Project on Center-Left Renewal at the Progressive Policy
Institute.
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/06/19/opinion/border-policy-immigration-labour-party.html
When Prime
Minister Keir Starmer of Britain stepped before a lectern at 10 Downing Street
last month, he made clear how misguided he thought the country’s immigration
policies had been. He described its recent approach as a “one-nation experiment
in open borders” that Britons never voted for. In its place, he announced a
slew of measures to toughen border controls, raise skill requirements for
immigrants and effectively end mass migration.
All this is
coming from Britain’s center-left Labour Party, which long favored openness
toward migrants. That reflected Labour’s modern base of urban progressive
voters. Higher immigration was economically advantageous for them, in
particular by holding down prices, and it was consistent with their
humanitarian worldview.
The trouble
is, these views tend to be at odds with the views of many working-class voters.
Those less affluent voters have questioned the impact of mass migration for
years, worried about its impact on housing, public services, wages and
communities. The response of urban progressives in Britain, as in other parts
of Europe and the United States, has often been to denounce working-class
voters as narrow-minded or racist. It should hardly be surprising that voters
responded by switching their political allegiances. Immigration, more than any
other issue, symbolizes the wedge between center-left parties and their
traditional class base.
For the sake
of the progressive left and all it stands for, Mr. Starmer’s announcement
represents a crucial acknowledgment that both the policy and the political
direction must change.
Political
analysts and rivals interpreted his announcement as a defensive maneuver to
lessen the threat of Reform U.K., a right-wing, anti-immigration party. There
is an element of truth in this. Labour managed to win back working-class
support in the election last year partly based on early moves toward a tighter
border policy, although that support is at risk now that the party is trying to
govern. Labour politicians are reasonably worried that Britain will follow the
path of Germany, Italy and the Netherlands, all countries where the right wing
overtook the center left in the last election.
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But it is a
mistake to see Labour’s new policy as mere tactics. Getting serious about
immigration can be part of a coherent progressive vision, not just a bargain
with working-class voters to stave off the right. Progress toward a more equal
and fair society depends on stability and community.
Importantly,
Mr. Starmer has also fought the excesses of the nativist right. When
anti-immigration riots spread across the U.K. last summer, he was quick to
clamp down. He helped restore order and calmed fears, rather than escalating
the tensions. This approach was a far cry from the ugly tactics that the Trump
administration has used against protests this month in Los Angeles.
Still, the
political right has often aligned with public opinion on immigration because
parts of the left have ignored a basic truth: The ability to control borders,
to decide who does and does not come into a country, is central to a democracy.
Without that ability, the citizens of a nation lose control over it. Without
strong borders, the post-World War II welfare state — which exists because
voters decided to tax themselves to help their fellow citizens — will break
down. If people believe that national governments are a waste of time, we are
not headed for the socialist utopia that some open-borders advocates imagine.
In the absence of order, survival prevails.
Disordered
borders create psychological instability. I recall a member of my own family
describing how boats would wash up on the stony shores of the beach we played
on as children on the South Coast of England, mostly full of men, who would
quietly disembark on the pebbles and walk off into the country. The
destabilizing impact of loose borders has an outsize political impact.
Mass
migration has had a tangible impact too, felt more acutely by working-class
communities. Every year now, Britain adds on average as many residents as live
in Sheffield, our sixth-largest city. This scale of immigration almost always
frays social cohesion. In Britain, high immigration has already affected the
availability of subsidized housing, as well as held down wages and challenged
community integration. If Britain repeats the recent pace of immigration over
the next decade, it will risk losing popular support for the public resources
needed to maintain a socially cohesive society. The overall numbers matter.
The root of
the modern progressive dilemma is identity. The left has de-emphasized class in
favor of other characteristics and alienated many working-class voters. As the
liberal order comes under threat from authoritarians on the right and on the
left, a new progressive politics needs to emerge, anchoring people in
identities that make them feel safer and more in solidarity with one another.
Renewing the concept of the modern nation can help achieve that goal. The
starting point for a new progressive future can be the idea of a community that
provides security and opportunity, and to which we owe as much as we expect
from it.
The
political right is wrong when it defines a nation based on ethnicity or
excludes all immigrants. But the left is wrong when it adopts an
ultra-globalism that erodes national identities and undermines the sense of
belonging that a national community can bring. A modern national identity,
based on collective responsibilities, earned citizenship and shared risk and
reward, can start to bring our societies back together.
More
progressives are beginning to recognize this reality. In Denmark, Prime
Minister Mette Frederiksen has transformed her center-left party’s approach to
immigration since 2019, based on the idea that restrictive immigration is
progressive because it helps preserve the Danish social model that citizens
hold dear. Ms. Frederiksen has won that debate and weakened the Danish far
right. Mr. Starmer is essentially trying to follow her path. In the United
States, some congressional Democrats have started shifting in that direction.
Immigration
needs to move from an issue that progressives avoid to one that they seek to
own. If handled well, it can be a catalyst for putting national community and
citizenship at the center of a new progressive politics. There is an even
bigger prize to win than beating back the populist right. It is the chance to
emerge from the failures of modern globalism and forge strong, self-confident
and socially cohesive nations.


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