Starmer seems to be copying the Tory mistake of doing Farage’s work and making it a high priority, increasing Farage’s profile and credibility.
But immigration - and especially illegal or irregular immigration along with the asylum seeker issue - is a high priority. Regardless of how important it is directly, this is a very visible issue.
There’s a brand new service station and Starbucks near me in Crick. The Ibis Hotel there is now an asylum hotel. The people there seem to be exclusively young men with nothing to do, who live in a chained off budget hotel, who can be seen walking main roads miles into town, who congregate in groups.
In Weedon, the Tesco frequently has asylum seekers hanging around it. Just blokes with nothing to do, no proper handle on how we exist here, a recipe for trouble. (The Holiday Inn in Flore is now an asylum hotel too)
This is a very visible problem and one which many people will find demoralising. The state is not dealing with it properly.
Many asylum seekers should not be here; they’re economic migrants and little more. Many don’t bring families.
The state needs to do two things:
- Sort the mess out. Discourage asylum claims from chancers. Make the problem less visible; like anything else obviously dysfunctional it’s a symptom of state rot and very very bad for the legitimacy of the state.
- process all claims outstanding in line with the rule of law. Speedily, fairly, and with concern and compassion. Many asylum seekers, even if not legitimate, are vulnerable and complex people. The state should have concern for all vulnerable people because it’s a barometer for how they treat other minority groups. The Reform aesthetic of dealing with it cannot fly here.
Farage is making a lot of capital from this issue because it is visible, important, and damaging. Of course it’s got worse since Brexit, and half of the issue is really his fault, but still. It’s got to be sorted.
Standards of living are declining; Britain is in severe trouble. I’d prefer a different solution than Reform offer and would vote to keep them out, but I don’t think we should pretend everything is fine and can be sorted by our NPC prime minister, a vacuous solicitor without the political acumen to hold the office in any era other than these straitened times.