The fact I participate on this forum should suggest to you that my views do not fall into the "nice and tidy" little box that you may think.tobiashomer wrote:JAJ, by saying that Labour "irresponsibly increased the intake" I am afraid you make it all too clear which side of this (and perhaps other) issues you stand on. What a nice tidy country this would be without all those foreigners!
The following graph pretty much tells its own story.
http://www.statistics.gov.uk/cci/nugget.asp?id=260
And it didn't happen by accident either. It was government policy at the time (Blunkett says "no limit"): http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/3265219.stm
(of course people did vote for that government)
A society that is not open to diversity and foreign influence will be much the poorer for it, and it is true that migrants by definition are (usually) harder working, more enterprising and better educated than the average in their former countries. That much is clear.
But the irresponsibility of the Labour government was the way it ignored the impact of a 1-2 million increase in the population per decade, particularly on the employment prospects and wage levels of the least-skilled British citizens.
It seems that more recently the Labour party have taken fright and are trying to reduce immigration back to lower levels, but characteristically are not making a very good job of it. Hence, back to ham-fisted efforts like the across-the-board 4 years to 5 change in rules.
At least this makes the context of the rule change easier to see.