‘No Cap, No Control’ — Think Tank Calls for Hard Limit on Immigration to Prevent Britain Becoming a ‘Fractured Society’
To prevent Britain from devolving into a “fractured society”, Migration Watch UK has called for a hard cap on anual immigration.
To prevent Britain from devolving into a “fractured society”, Migration Watch UK has called for a hard cap on anual immigration.
Nearly two-thirds of British voters, including a plurality of supporters of the top left-wing parties, favour cutting immigration.
UK Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has sworn that he “wants” to reduce the record number of legal migrants coming to Britain.
Contrary to long-standing promises from Britain’s governing Conservative Party, net migration is expected to remain in the hundreds of thousands for the foreseeable future, the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) predicted this week.
Over half of Brexit voters would back an alternative party to the Tories that made cutting migration a top priority, a poll has found.
The foreign-born population of Britain has grown by an estimated 370,000 since the Census was conducted last year, the ONS revealed.
Net migration rose to its highest level in Britain to over half a million despite Conservative pledges to cut immigration following Brexit.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak is reportedly preparing to introduce a “growth visa” to bring in more workers to Britain.
Home Secretary Suella Braverman said she that she wants to reduce net migration to the UK down to the tens of thousands to fulfill Brexit.
Boris Johnson’s government failed to reduce migration after leaving the EU, with a record 1.1 million visas granted to foreigners last year.
In a bid to solve delays in the country’s airports, Germany is to do what it does best: bring in more migrants, mostly from Turkey.
The population of England and Wales hit a new all-time high according to last year’s census, with the majority of growth due to immigration.
The British government has undercounted the number of European Union migrants living in the country by over two million.
Many establishment Republicans are trying to beat populist GOP rivals by mimicking President Donald Trump’s pro-American immigration arguments, says a top editor at the Atlantic magazine.