Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    This iOS 26 Feature Lets You Stop iPhone Spam Calls In a Few Easy Steps

    How Premier League clubs’ big plans caused a chain transfer reaction and sparked huge business across Europe

    Locarno Open Doors: ‘Kachifo,’ ‘Black Snake,’ ‘Diary of a Goat Woman’ Win Big at Africa-Focused Forum

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube LinkedIn
    Naija Global News |
    Tuesday, August 12
    • Business
    • Health
    • Politics
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Education
    • Social Issues
    • Technology
    • More
      • Crime & Justice
      • Environment
      • Entertainment
    Naija Global News |
    You are at:Home»Politics»Here’s the truth about Britain’s immigration hysteria: Starmer and co have whipped it up to get cheap votes | Nesrine Malik
    Politics

    Here’s the truth about Britain’s immigration hysteria: Starmer and co have whipped it up to get cheap votes | Nesrine Malik

    onlyplanz_80y6mtBy onlyplanz_80y6mtAugust 11, 2025006 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Here’s the truth about Britain’s immigration hysteria: Starmer and co have whipped it up to get cheap votes | Nesrine Malik
    Migrants who had been intercepted crossing the Channel, Dover, 6 August 2025. Photograph: Dan Kitwood/Getty Images
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Immigration has been a fixture of Britain’s political discourse for so long, it now feels, like Voltaire’s god, that if the issue did not exist, we would have to invent it. What would our politics look like, what would the broad majority of Britain’s media do with themselves, without immigration? It has become such a feature of the country’s political culture, it amounts to a sort of historical exhibit: “rivers of blood”, the “hostile environment”, “go home” vans, “controls on immigration” crockery, the Brexit “breaking point” poster, the Windrush scandal, “stop the boats”, “island of strangers”. And now, summer riots.

    What conjoins all of these is one thing: misinformation. I have banged on for years in this column about the disconnect between immigration discourse and the reality of how hard and expensive it is to enter the UK and stay there. A poll from last week demonstrates that gulf with striking simplicity. The conclusion to be drawn from the survey is that support for hardline immigration policies is linked to ignorance about migration figures. Half of all respondents thought that there were more migrants living in the UK illegally than legally. According to YouGov, these perceptions are “wide of the mark”, with those in the country legally vastly outnumbering those who are not, even at the most generous estimates of irregular migration.

    But there is a new development related to that ignorance. Over the past 20 years or so, immigration demands have shifted from variations of “controlling our borders” and reducing numbers of new migrants, to demanding that zero migrants be allowed to enter, and “requiring large numbers of migrants who came to the UK in recent years to leave”. This is an “extraordinary” development, according to YouGov. Indeed, the last time a member of a political party even hinted at any sort of deportation policy was in the late 00s, when British National party leader Nick Griffin (another installation in the immigration exhibit) stated that he would “encourage” voluntary repatriation of legal migrants and “those of foreign descent to return to their lands of ethnic origin”. On Saturday, far-right protesters clashed with police while holding signs saying “Remigration NOW”.

    This latest mutation of migration discourse to include mass deportation is down to, as ever, media and politics. Rightwing media not only constantly cover immigration negatively, but go through different seasons of doing so, depending on the political climate. The 2010s was about Muslims, the run-up to Brexit about certain east European nationalities and how their presence had a deleterious effect on British society, and the latest phase is about “numbers”. Specifically, numbers of irregular arrivals. The small boats fixation here is central, as they evoke a sense of losing control of the borders, sadly no longer as easy to pull off after Brexit.

    That fixation has been mirrored in political discourse. The last government’s contribution to this was the Rwanda scheme and Rishi Sunak’s “stop the boats” campaign – one of his five promises, which was given equal weight to such macro challenges as bringing down inflation and cutting NHS waiting lists. And this government has continued in the same vein.

    Far-right and anti-asylum protesters gather in Nuneaton – video

    Keir Starmer’s “island of strangers” speech, which referred to an era of rising migration as a “squalid chapter” in the country’s history, was the rhetorical opening salvo in an anti-immigration campaign that in its tone and relentlessness reinforces the issue as a crisis. Starmer’s X account constantly posts highlights of crackdowns against those who try “to cheat the system” and even Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)-like videos of deportations. In the past week alone, Starmer has posted 14 times on X; 10 of those posts were about immigration, particularly irregular arrivals and those arriving on small boats. This is a wildly disproportionate emphasis, considering this cohort makes up a minuscule percentage of overall immigration to the UK.

    The result is a framing of all of immigration through the lens of irregular arrivals, and therefore cultivating a sense of crisis and overwhelm. A study by the University of Birmingham that surveyed thousands of media texts and political documents earlier this year found that that disproportionate focus on small boats shapes public attitudes towards migration, fuelling “a sense of crisis and emergency”.

    There’s something compulsive about all of this, almost addictive. Posturing on immigration is a cheap hit, a low-cost (to politicians – the cost is very high for migrants) way to gesture at some sort of executive action, for a government otherwise in the mire. The irony is that this fixation produces ignorance about all immigration, which means there is less and less the government can do to address the very myths it has seeded. If you create the impression that small boats, “illegality” and cheating are the defining feature of the UK’s immigration, then how can you expect the public to make distinctions that their very government does not?

    And so in a grim spiral, Labour continues to fuel the sense of crisis, then chase it, never catching up, and always setting the stage for those further right to make ever bigger promises of crackdown and deranged claims about housing and crime. The galling idiocy of it all is that posting hectically about immigration and rolling out hardline measures is self-defeating. It doesn’t even work to instil confidence in Labour as the only credible party on immigration. The more Labour presses the issue, the more it reinforces the validity of anti-immigration rhetoric, empowering Reform as the specialised vehicle of crackdown. To voters mobilised by this, Labour can never be better than the real thing.

    And so it can only be a spiral. In order to keep immigration as that easily activated issue central to a political system that has few answers to any of the structural problems that are most salient to people’s everyday lives, from the cost of living to lack of housing, we must always be at some sort of breaking point. That toxic energy has to go somewhere. It’s not the sort of thing that can be just a casual part of discourse and stay in a holding pattern. The stakes are constantly higher, more frightening, more defining of why things are bad. And on and down it goes.

    We must wean the UK off its “immigration dependency”, Starmer said in 2022. But the problem is his – and the entire political establishment’s – dependency on immigration as an issue to be exploited, rather than to be handled with honesty, duty of care to immigrants who are now terrorised in the streets, and to the whole country’s social cohesion.

    Britains cheap Heres hysteria Immigration Malik Nesrine Starmer Truth votes whipped
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleNigerian profitable food delivery Chowdeck lands $9M from Novastar, Y Combinator
    Next Article U2 Release Statement Voicing Support for Gaza
    onlyplanz_80y6mt
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Palestine Action co-founder accuses ministers of making defamatory claims | Protest

    August 12, 2025

    UN chief condemns assassination of Al Jazeera journalists | Media

    August 11, 2025

    The Perseid Meteor Shower Is Peaking. Here’s How to Watch

    August 11, 2025
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Advertisers flock to Fox seeking an ‘audience of one’ — Donald Trump

    July 13, 20251 Views

    A Setback for Maine’s Free Community College Program

    June 19, 20251 Views

    Russia, Indonesia deepen ties as Putin and Prabowo meet in St Petersburg | International Trade News

    June 19, 20251 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram
    Latest Reviews

    At Chile’s Vera Rubin Observatory, Earth’s Largest Camera Surveys the Sky

    By onlyplanz_80y6mtJune 19, 2025

    SpaceX Starship Explodes Before Test Fire

    By onlyplanz_80y6mtJune 19, 2025

    How the L.A. Port got hit by Trump’s Tariffs

    By onlyplanz_80y6mtJune 19, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest tech news from FooBar about tech, design and biz.

    Most Popular

    Advertisers flock to Fox seeking an ‘audience of one’ — Donald Trump

    July 13, 20251 Views

    A Setback for Maine’s Free Community College Program

    June 19, 20251 Views

    Russia, Indonesia deepen ties as Putin and Prabowo meet in St Petersburg | International Trade News

    June 19, 20251 Views
    Our Picks

    This iOS 26 Feature Lets You Stop iPhone Spam Calls In a Few Easy Steps

    How Premier League clubs’ big plans caused a chain transfer reaction and sparked huge business across Europe

    Locarno Open Doors: ‘Kachifo,’ ‘Black Snake,’ ‘Diary of a Goat Woman’ Win Big at Africa-Focused Forum

    Recent Posts
    • This iOS 26 Feature Lets You Stop iPhone Spam Calls In a Few Easy Steps
    • How Premier League clubs’ big plans caused a chain transfer reaction and sparked huge business across Europe
    • Locarno Open Doors: ‘Kachifo,’ ‘Black Snake,’ ‘Diary of a Goat Woman’ Win Big at Africa-Focused Forum
    • How Democrats Lost Working-Class Voters
    • Being Chair at a Time of Existential Challenge (opinion)
    © 2025 naijaglobalnews. Designed by Pro.
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.