I have no interest whatsoever in the MAGA movement, though it may have some features which align with the discontent fuelling support for Reform (which again - I do not support).
What I am interested in is that UK government policy actively engages with the problems of the people around me. People of what was once called, the working class' have seen decades long loss of living standards, and decent working conditions. The costs of their housing has more than doubled in real terms in the time since I bought my first home. Their wages have been suppressed by mass migration of lower skilled people from afar. The numbers of migrants have been huge and of a never before seen scale.
People used to say, 'Ah, but we always had migrants'. Yes - but they were in numbers and in proportion to the population that was absolutely tiny by comparison to what we see now and for the last thirty some years.
One set of my own great grandparents on one side of my family, came from Italy. I still bear their surname. They arrived legally in 1895, penniless, uneducated and young. They were about 18. Only one of their descendants as far as I know (there are many of them, since they had about 8 children, and their grandchildren also had large families) has ever been in trouble with the law and that was a comparatively minor offence.
My migrant Italian great grandparents in middle life.
On the other side of my family there were migrant Irish people - they were great great grandparents who probably arrived about 1875 - 1880.
At the time of these migrations when of some of my ancestors arrived, the population of the UK was about 42 million. It is now very much larger - probably at least 70 million, and the numbers arriving each year are massive - worst of all under the last government.
The 1891 census recorded about 350,000 foreign-born people in England and Wales, rising to 475,000 in 1901. At the present time, the 2021 census shows that 10.7 million of the population was foreign born. The difference should be pretty obvious to any but the terminally dim.
In 1891, 1 person in 120 of the UK population was foreign born.
In 1901, 1 person in 87 of the UK population was foreign born.
in 2021, 1 person in 6.3 was foreign born.
Since 2021 we saw the greatest ever numbers. The proportion will now be even more skewed.
Those supporting continued large scale migration always emphasise the benefits gained by the UK population from the work of highly trained, and well educated foreign doctors, engineers and scientists.
I don't argue against that.
What I do argue against is the massive proportion of low skilled migrants we have taken. Migration Watch say that 60% of the recent migrant population are employed in low skilled / unskilled work. This particularly affects the life chances of the uk population who would have been employed in such activities.
When my ancestor migrants came here - they were unskilled. The Italian fellow - Salvatore, set himself up in Fulham as an ice cream seller, making ice cream in his backyard. In winter he pushed a barrow with hot chestnuts. He supported himself and his large family and never had a penny of assistance until he was over 65.
The Irish side Michael Sweeney worked in construction as an unskilled labourer. I doubt he got any input from the state. There was no such thing in the 1870s.
People in the UK population who are unskilled or semi-skilled have been drastically affected by unskilled migration. The numbers are large and the mindset is to accept any work, under any conditions at any price. Those who would have had to compete for such work, are either poorer because of this, or they are unemployed - sometimes because they prefer to collect benefit rather than to work under such a regime as is available. Unskilled farm work, warehousing, meat processing, goods distribution, hospitality, and other such businesses have a high proportion of foreign born workers and it is indisputable among honest interlocutors that their presence in the labour market has lowered wages and conditions.
The other serious impact of mass migration of course, and a constant theme with me is that the numbers of new citizens and irregular migrants who are not citizens has vastly increased the cost of housing for all of us who do not already own our homes outright.
The first term of my schoolboy economics course back in 1968 taught me about the effect of supply and demand on price. I won't labour the point, because it is obvious that concerning any necessary commodity, increased demand and limited supply cause very large increases in price. This is true for rented or owner occupied property.
The real terms cost increase since I bought my first home is well over 100%. We also see such an insufficiency of housing that homelessness is increasing, much of it disguised. Flecc has pointed out in the past the large hidden component of housing shortage, outside the official figures in which every scrap of space is occupied by dwellings often converted from garages, gardens and sheds. He spoke of this in relation to London. We have an increase in more typical, but also disguised homelessness such as 'sofa surfing' and conversion to HMO property of ordinary dwellings by extension and internal reorganisation into tiny bedrooms. The conditions people live in and our environment generally are diminished. How coudl it be otherwise?
For these reasons I utterly oppose namby pamby dogooderism of the sort that YOU evince at every post on the subject. People coming from safe countries such as France (which has a quarter of the population density of England and is a free, modern and civilised country) HAVE NO RIGHT AT ALL, TO TURN UP ON A BEACH HERE AND DEMAND ASYLUM.
I and probably about 70% of the population firmly hold this opinion, and because of the idiocy of the main 'respectable' parties, we will see more and more movement towards the alternative on offer - that is true whether we like it or not, and whether they will be competent to govern or not.
Just wait and see... Unless there is a total turn around on this and the impediments in certain sections of the 1998 Human Rights Act which prevent deportation and ensnare government in endless legal appeals, you WILL SEE far more right wing parties in government here.
My family some of them migrants have from teh start integrated fully and have fought for this country. This was true of the first generation of British born sons who fought in WW1 and were wounded and it is true of the last generation of suitable age - my nephew who performed his duties as an infantry captain for three tours in Afghanistan. This can not be said for many of the newer migrants we have accepted. Many of whom are far from integrated, far from self supporting and far from loyal to any acceptable concept of Britishness.