- Mon May 12, 2025 3:42 pm
#89147
Public services being put under pressure is a recurrent “argument” put forward against immigration, as we saw repeatedly during the shameful campaign for the 2016 referendum.
But it deliberately conflates what are two separate issues. Farage’s UKIP used it as their key campaigning lie, as did Johnson . As I argued at the time, people exercising treaty rights on free movement of labour to work and live in any EU member state were arguably not actually “immigrants” in the conventionally understood sense at all. Most of them would stay in the UK working for limited periods of time before returning home, and of course, the treaty rights were mutual, and being exercised and enjoyed by many UK citizens living and working in other EU member states.
If there were pressures on local public services such as schools, GPs, and hospitals, etc, then that was a failing by the UK government that should have been, as an EU member state, making adequate provision for those areas affected by particularly intense levels of EU citizens living and working there. Instead of that, “immigrants” or EU citizens exercising treaty rights, got the blame, and the Tories were only too happy to go along with that lie.
Now that we no longer have EU citizens here on free movement, “thanks” to Brexit, we still have, unsurprisingly, the same problem, except the people that Farage rails against now genuinely are “immigrants”. And the failing is again the same - namely that of government to ensure that the provision of public services is adequate, particularly in areas of the country affected by (perhaps) larger concentrations of immigrants.
In short, if governments were doing their core job properly, immigration at any level would not be the “problem” it is perceived to be, and certainly not the poisonous source of grievance exploited by Farage, Badenoch, and now seemingly (though I hope not) by Keir Starmer.
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.