September 28, 2006
White Immigration Can Be A Problem Too: Britain’s
Polish Predicament
By David Orland
[Previously by David Orland:
‘We Should Have Had A Final Go On Immigration’—UK
Tories]
"If we
are not careful, we will be transformed into a global
traffic station and that is not what most people mean by
being part of a country. "
British
Labour Party MP Frank Field.
When
Poland and seven other former
Soviet bloc countries joined the European Union in
2004, Tony Blair’s government assured the
British public that the country would not be flooded
by job-seeking migrants from the East. At most,
ministers asserted—at most—Britain could expect
around 15,000 additional immigrants per year.
Not for the
first time, a government’s math has proven wildly,
grotesquely wrong. According to a new
Home Office study of worker registration numbers,
fully 447,000 people have migrated to Britain from
the new EU member states since visa requirements
were lifted two years ago.
Since those counted do not include
self-employed people such as
contractors and and plumbers, the actual number is
likely much higher.
Open borders
enthusiasts have been quick to point out the story’s
bright side. The vast majority of the new arrivals are
young, few bring children or elderly relatives with
them, and a remarkable 97 percent are employed
full-time. The Slavic invasion of Britain,
they conclude, has been a smashing success.
And yet the latest numbers couldn’t
come at a worse time for Tony Blair. Over the past year,
Blair’s government has been wracked by an
ever-deepening series of
immigration-related
scandals. At the same time, the ongoing threat of
homegrown Islamic extremism has led a number of
public
figures to
question the value of diversity and multiculturalism
in ways that would have been unthinkable just five years
ago.
In Britain, at least, the tide
seems to have turned. According to
a poll conducted for the Sunday Times a week
before the most recent Home Office report:
"Just 14% of people strongly agree
that immigration is ‘generally good’ for Britain—with
double that number taking the opposite view. A total of
63% say immigration laws should be "much tougher"—up
from 58% 18 months ago—while a further 11% say there
should be no more immigration." [
Public
wants much harsher immigration policy, says poll,
August 20, 2006]
The latest Home Office numbers, in
this respect, are sure to fuel public concern about the
pace and scale of Britain’s transformation—as indeed
they should.
Immigration to Britain has never
been higher. Since Labour came to power in 1997,
over a million non-EU immigrants have been granted the
right to live in the country. A further 4 to 9 hundred
thousand
illegal aliens—for obvious reasons, no one is sure
of the actual number—are believed to be in the country.
And despite government promises to
the contrary, the pace of immigration shows no signs of
slowing. In 2005 alone, a record 178,120 non-EU
immigrants (70 percent of them from
Africa) were granted settlement rights.
Britain’s Polish predicament gives
the lie to the frequent assertion of immigration
enthusiasts that
no-one would worry if immigrants were white.
Polish immigrants are no doubt a better fit for
Britain than
African—or, soon,
Turkish—ones. But in today’s political climate, that
is no longer
the question.
As Times columnist Camilla
Cavendish recently wrote in response to the government’s
call for a "mature
discussion" of immigration:
"Our leaders have been conducting a
massive and undemocratic experiment on Britain’s
population, the results of which we will not be able to
judge fully for many years. It is quite wrong that a
small elite has been dictating the country’s future
behind closed doors. Free debate is a good start.
Getting a grip would be even better." [
Yes,
you're right Mr Reid, but how are you going to keep the
illegals out? Camilla Cavendish, August 10, 2006]
In democratic society, indefinite
mass immigration is not viable policy. Tragically, the
British political Establishment has only
just begun to come around to this point of view.
David Orland [email
him], proprietor of the
faute de pire blog, lives
in
Paris.