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Sunak’s small boats policy doesn’t look like an election winner – politicalbetting.com

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  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,938

    My suggestion.

    (a) Decide what fraction F of GDP you wish to spend on assisting migrants/refugees/asylum seekers. This gives a budget £Y

    (b) Estimate how much it costs to provide emotional support, language assistance, housing, education etc for a refugee/migrant. Let us say on average it is £X . Compute Y/X to give a number . That is the number of refugees/migrants the Government can reasonably support each year. That is all the Government should admit (so withdraw from international conventions).

    (c) Any other migrant who wishes to settle needs to find a supporter who is willing to put up £X. So, the supporter could be an individual, a community group, a church, whatever. In this way, individuals or groups of individuals can also take personal responsibility, if they feel so inclined.

    (d) People who arrive on boats have to wait until either the Government supports them (via b) or an individual supports them (via c).

    (e) The fraction F is open to debate at election time and parties can put forward their manifestos on how large or small F should be.
    The terms were: humane, lawful, electorally possible. This of course fails under current law. And would fail electorally with regard to Ukraine!

  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    .

    Not necessarily. Some of the people arriving by boat would opt for a safer legal route if it were available. An asylum system that actually worked would be a deterrent for some with a dodgy claim. But if it means slightly higher numbers but a much bigger share of valid claims then I'd be okay with that. We've got labour shortage and refugees are often highly motivated and able people. A lot of people have views similar to mine, put probably not many are potential Tory voters.
    The share of claims that are valid, we have been told, is already exceptionally high. Therefore "deal with asylum claims quickly and remove people whose claims are not valid" is pretty similar to "accept asylum claims more quickly".

    I have some sympathy for the labour shortage point - I don't think the electorate as a whole does, though.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    edited March 2023
    Pulpstar said:

    'merry your MP' ?!?
    Strange out correct - find your MP...

    EDIT: One told me it was racist policy. Because it would prevent undocumented people getting jobs.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560

    The problem is easier to fix for Labour who have a coalition of voters who mostly want humane and lawful. It is very hard for the Tories given where their voters are on this issue.
    Sure, Labour have an easy get-out: just open the borders.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172

    (c) already exists, it's called community sponsorship. I am a member of a group sponsoring a family who arrived this month.
    I wasn't aware of that in the UK, but I do know it exists in Canada.

    And I do know that in Canada individuals sponsor people they have never met and have no connection with.

    I think it is a worthwhile thing.
  • FoxyFoxy Posts: 51,113

    Nah. Put them in prison hulks.

    On the Clyde.

    They'll soon be asking for free passage home.
    Strange that you mention that:

    https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/families-refugees-could-moved-aboard-28925235
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    On guns, it is interesting to note how many of the deaths are suicides. In 2020, suicides accounted for 54% of the 45,222 gun deaths.
    Yes, the suicide rate is much higher as well, and as you say a gun is often the method used. I guess more likely to succeed than overdosing or hanging.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,852
    ..

    Mr. Pioneers, what's the Labour proposal?

    Process asylum claims, deport those that fail and maybe do something about the black economy.

    It's a 50% solution at best, but still better than the Conservatives 0% solution. Which only makes sense if the Conservatives know they are going to lose the next election and are happy to dump the accumulating problem on the next Labour government.
  • YBarddCwscYBarddCwsc Posts: 7,172
    algarkirk said:

    The terms were: humane, lawful, electorally possible. This of course fails under current law. And would fail electorally with regard to Ukraine!

    It fails under current law, I agree. The current laws are unworkable.

    I am not sure I understand the reference to fails "electorally with regard to Ukraine! " Please provide evidence.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082

    (c) already exists, it's called community sponsorship. I am a member of a group sponsoring a family who arrived this month.
    It would be interesting to see kind of resource allocation carried through into all the requirements for modern society.

    If the population increases by 100K, we need (roughly) 100K bedrooms. We need schools, hospitals etc.

    I am in favour of mass immigration and mass infrastructure. It is institutional racism not to provide the infrastructure to go with the population increase.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    FF43 said:

    ..

    Process asylum claims, deport those that fail and maybe do something about the black economy.

    It's a 50% solution at best, but still better than the Conservatives 0% solution. Which only makes sense if the Conservatives know they are going to lose the next election and are happy to dump the accumulating problem on the next Labour government.
    The issue appears to be that it’s increasingly difficult to actually deport anyone, about six people per day on average.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/feb/24/deportations-from-uk-at-record-low-as-asylum-applications-soar
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    There was a discussion on this yesterday;

    'As a gay teacher, I tried to help LGBT students feel included - only for them to turn on me when I failed to endorse their gender ideology': Educator's warning from a rural comprehensive where 'kids seem to shop for sexualities and change pronouns weekly'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11908547/I-tried-help-students-turn-failed-endorse-ideology.html
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,477

    On guns, it is interesting to note how many of the deaths are suicides. In 2020, suicides accounted for 54% of the 45,222 gun deaths.
    That was a point made to me by an American friend also. Interestingly a very liberal individual who however is really into his hunting and fishing and a gun advocate so it isn't all one sided.

    We tend to avoid the discussion, but one wonders whether the suicide rate would be lower if guns weren't present. I know there are plenty of other ways to top yourself, but most take a little more planning. I don't have any figures so it may just be stories but I believe farmers and shotguns are not a good mix.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    Sandpit said:

    We ran the numbers on this a few weeks ago. BBC pays £70.5m per year to the Premier League, so MOTD is by far the most expensive programme they produce even before Lineker’s salary.

    For comparison, their highest rated show Eastenders costs around £20m per year, and is on three times a week every week.
    The interesting thing is that Premier League highlights on free to air television are not on the crown jewels list, so it's not simply a case of being the highest free to air bidder. Quite why they aren't on the list, I don't know.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    Sandpit said:

    The issue appears to be that it’s increasingly difficult to actually deport anyone, about six people per day on average.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/feb/24/deportations-from-uk-at-record-low-as-asylum-applications-soar
    Part of the Rwanda concept is, IIRC, that when faced with Rwanda, a number of those who have "lost" their documents will find them again.

    In many cases this won't work, since they have been destroyed.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,852
    Sandpit said:

    The issue appears to be that it’s increasingly difficult to actually deport anyone, about six people per day on average.

    https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2022/feb/24/deportations-from-uk-at-record-low-as-asylum-applications-soar
    That's partly because they are not processing the claims, which is effectively Conservative Party policy. You can't deport people unless you have established their claim of being in danger is false.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668
    edited March 2023

    There was a discussion on this yesterday;

    'As a gay teacher, I tried to help LGBT students feel included - only for them to turn on me when I failed to endorse their gender ideology': Educator's warning from a rural comprehensive where 'kids seem to shop for sexualities and change pronouns weekly'

    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-11908547/I-tried-help-students-turn-failed-endorse-ideology.html

    Teacher: OK students just wanted you to know that I support you whatever decisions you make about your gender.
    Student: Thanks - I want to be identified as non-binary
    Teacher: Well I'm not endorsing that
    Student (and sane, non-Daily Mail readers): WTF?!
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,650
    FF43 said:

    As this policy is massively supported by Leavers and massively opposed by Remainers it's likely to be as successful as Brexit.

    So it'll win the general election for the Cons then? Oh please god no.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    tlg86 said:

    The interesting thing is that Premier League highlights on free to air television are not on the crown jewels list, so it's not simply a case of being the highest free to air bidder. Quite why they aren't on the list, I don't know.
    I suspect it's because the PL tenders FTA highlights without government pressure - they know they need them. I also suspect that the MOTD brand is so strong that the PL might not necessarily go with an ITV or C4 bid even if it were slightly higher. Especially after the debacle of Andy Townsend's Tactics Truck.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,442
    edited March 2023

    Not necessarily. Some of the people arriving by boat would opt for a safer legal route if it were available. An asylum system that actually worked would be a deterrent for some with a dodgy claim. But if it means slightly higher numbers but a much bigger share of valid claims then I'd be okay with that. We've got labour shortage and refugees are often highly motivated and able people. A lot of people have views similar to mine, put probably not many are potential Tory voters.
    The individual costs for those coming in via a safe route, and those currently detained might be massively different, too.

    Refugees allowed to settle and work might be net contributors to the economy overall.
    Detaining those who aren't is extremely expensive.

    That alone isn't an argument for any given policy, but it ought to be included in their assessment.
  • TazTaz Posts: 17,428
    Driver said:

    Sure, Labour have an easy get-out: just open the borders.
    Pretty much what many in Labour think and want anyway.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,852
    edited March 2023

    The government policy isn't cheap either. We live in a dangerous and complicated world, dealing with that isn't cheap.
    Costs Australian government $AUS 4 million per detainee per year in Nauru. In the UK's case the detainee will have processing and rendering costs before the detention costs in Rwanda.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    tlg86 said:

    The interesting thing is that Premier League highlights on free to air television are not on the crown jewels list, so it's not simply a case of being the highest free to air bidder. Quite why they aren't on the list, I don't know.
    That’s a good spot, I hadn’t realised either. The only domestic football on either list is the FA Cup Final (and the Scottish Cup Final in Scotland).
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ofcom_Code_on_Sports_and_Other_Listed_and_Designated_Events
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427
    kjh said:

    That was a point made to me by an American friend also. Interestingly a very liberal individual who however is really into his hunting and fishing and a gun advocate so it isn't all one sided.

    We tend to avoid the discussion, but one wonders whether the suicide rate would be lower if guns weren't present. I know there are plenty of other ways to top yourself, but most take a little more planning. I don't have any figures so it may just be stories but I believe farmers and shotguns are not a good mix.
    There must doubtless be people who in a moment of emotional crisis, reach for their gun; who in the absence of such an immediate way out might have got beyond the moment, reconsidered and lived through it.

    But then, they have trains to throw themselves under and more higher buildings to throw themselves off, so the means are there. Maybe guns just mean they don't have to inconvenience so many people.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    Driver said:

    I suspect it's because the PL tenders FTA highlights without government pressure - they know they need them. I also suspect that the MOTD brand is so strong that the PL might not necessarily go with an ITV or C4 bid even if it were slightly higher. Especially after the debacle of Andy Townsend's Tactics Truck.
    I have fond memories of The Premiership on ITV. Admittedly, that might have something to do with Arsenal winning the league two times out of three (and it really ought to have been three out of three).
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Nah. Put them in prison hulks.

    On the Clyde.

    They'll soon be asking for free passage home.
    Tory MPs? Not like you.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427
    Taz said:

    Pretty much what many in Labour think and want anyway.
    Well, until they have to face the voters.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    TOPPING said:

    Teacher: OK students just wanted you to know that I support you whatever decisions you make about your gender.
    Student: Thanks - I want to be identified as non-binary
    Teacher: Well I'm not endorsing that
    Student (and sane, non-Daily Mail readers): WTF?!
    If you read the article, it bears out some thing that teachers have told me - that some teenagers have created a weird interpretation of trans that changes every 4 minutes.

    A good friend had something like this with his daughter. She was going through a very rough patch at the start of being a teenager. One day she declared she was trans. He took the approach of finding the best trick cyclist he could - an expert in the area - who works with her to try and sort out various issues that he (the specialist) could see she had - body acceptance, social etc. The specialist was pro-trans, incidentally and had referred patients to Tavistock etc.

    My friend took the approach of saying she could dress how she liked (as long as vaguely you-won't-get-arrested) and you can use any pronouns you like. He also had long chats on the basis of "just tell me - anything".

    After about a year, the weekly oscillations subsided. She announced she wasn't trans, after all.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    There must doubtless be people who in a moment of emotional crisis, reach for their gun; who in the absence of such an immediate way out might have got beyond the moment, reconsidered and lived through it.

    But then, they have trains to throw themselves under and more higher buildings to throw themselves off, so the means are there. Maybe guns just mean they don't have to inconvenience so many people.
    Isn’t it farmers and doctors that stand out in the suicide statistics? Both stressful jobs, but crucially jobs with easy access to a reliable method.

    Suicide by train, more common in Europe than the US, is utterly horrific for the poor train driver. Many of them are off work for months, and some never go back to driving trains afterwards.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513

    There must doubtless be people who in a moment of emotional crisis, reach for their gun; who in the absence of such an immediate way out might have got beyond the moment, reconsidered and lived through it.

    But then, they have trains to throw themselves under and more higher buildings to throw themselves off, so the means are there. Maybe guns just mean they don't have to inconvenience so many people.
    Railways are an interesting one. The rate varies through the year with more people doing it in the Spring and Summer when there's more daylight.

    I think opportunity is a big part of it, so I can imagine access to guns does make a difference. That said, I'd be interested to see the figures for other countries with high levels of gun ownership, that don't seem to have nearly as many mass shootings.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022

    Part of the Rwanda concept is, IIRC, that when faced with Rwanda, a number of those who have "lost" their documents will find them again.

    In many cases this won't work, since they have been destroyed.
    Presumably someone from, say, Albania, who ends up in Rwanda, might find that the Albanian embassy can get him a new passport to let him go back to that country?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    tlg86 said:

    Railways are an interesting one. The rate varies through the year with more people doing it in the Spring and Summer when there's more daylight.

    I think opportunity is a big part of it, so I can imagine access to guns does make a difference. That said, I'd be interested to see the figures for other countries with high levels of gun ownership, that don't seem to have nearly as many mass shootings.
    It's definitely cultural - think Switzerland and Israel. In both, you have military, full automatic weapons everywhere.

    But there isn't the same gun worship culture.

    In Isreal, you can be on the bus with some teenagers doing military service, complete with their rifles. Yet there is nothing like the atmosphere of the US with people openly carrying a pistol in public. No feeling of menace.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    Sandpit said:

    Presumably someone from, say, Albania, who ends up in Rwanda, might find that the Albanian embassy can get him a new passport to let him go back to that country?
    Given it is Albanian, I would expect that

    1) The passport guy at the Albanian embassy in Rwanda will shortly be wearing a watch like the guys at border control in Saudi. Worth more than a car.
    2) A lot of people will be getting Albanian passports who don't deserve one
    3) A number of Albanians will be stuck in Rwanda for the crime of not having enough money to pay the guy off to get a passport.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427
    Carnyx said:

    Tory MPs? Not like you.
    It's easy to be rather glib. But if those coming over in boats weren't facing Rwanda, but instead were facing "hulks" (moored up tired old cruise ships/ferries) - no freedom of movement within the UK, no opportunity to make money to remit home, no contact with family, in single-sex restricted accomodation - how many would still think it worth the risk? They would have housing, health and food needs met. But not much else.
  • Andy_JS said:

    "Why are Americans dying so young?
    US life expectancy is falling well behind Europe"

    https://unherd.com/thepost/why-are-americans-dying-so-young/

    Drugs, guns and over-eating.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427

    Drugs, guns and over-eating.
    There was something mentioned on here the other day - not so much over-eating, as their bodies reacting to WHAT they are eating.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Sandpit said:

    Isn’t it farmers and doctors that stand out in the suicide statistics? Both stressful jobs, but crucially jobs with easy access to a reliable method.

    Suicide by train, more common in Europe than the US, is utterly horrific for the poor train driver. Many of them are off work for months, and some never go back to driving trains afterwards.
    This happened to a very close friend's dad (I also know the dad very well, have done since I was in primary school, always in and out of each other's houses). He was as driver for over thiry years. He was off four a couple of months after the suicide, returned for four days and then quit for good. It simply made it impossible for him to continue. He worked, until retirement, as a school-run minibus driver.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    If you read the article, it bears out some thing that teachers have told me - that some teenagers have created a weird interpretation of trans that changes every 4 minutes.

    A good friend had something like this with his daughter. She was going through a very rough patch at the start of being a teenager. One day she declared she was trans. He took the approach of finding the best trick cyclist he could - an expert in the area - who works with her to try and sort out various issues that he (the specialist) could see she had - body acceptance, social etc. The specialist was pro-trans, incidentally and had referred patients to Tavistock etc.

    My friend took the approach of saying she could dress how she liked (as long as vaguely you-won't-get-arrested) and you can use any pronouns you like. He also had long chats on the basis of "just tell me - anything".

    After about a year, the weekly oscillations subsided. She announced she wasn't trans, after all.
    Absolutely sounds very sensible. And I'm sure not at all untypical.

    It was the headline that I thought amusing: teacher who says I welcome LGBT students then fails to endorse (presumably) LGBT students.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390
    Taz said:

    Pretty much what many in Labour think and want anyway.
    A few activists maybe. It's not a view I hear expressed in my Labour supporting London metropolitan elite bubble.
  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,007
    kjh said:

    Yep if he had said it on BBC or ITV I would have been happy with it. I have no interest in censorship.

    It was the link you posted not what KM said. It is all in the context. Not least it was a link to something promoting financial scams.
    The link was to the story. I had no idea there was any link to a scam. If the mods don't like it they can remove it.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    So, catching up...

    I lost a little on the SNP leadership in the end. Took the view that Yousaf was too short and Forbes too long and - given the result - I think that was probably* right, so a value loser. Looks like I would have had a chance to trade out profitably, which I probably would have done if I hadn't been too busy yesterday. Unusually for me, I had intended to see this through, after some earlier trades, so hadn't left an out bet open.

    *can never be sure, of course - it might be that the result was at the far extremes of likelihood with low Yousaf and high Forbes, in which case there was no value.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    Selebian said:

    This happened to a very close friend's dad (I also know the dad very well, have done since I was in primary school, always in and out of each other's houses). He was as driver for over thiry years. He was off four a couple of months after the suicide, returned for four days and then quit for good. It simply made it impossible for him to continue. He worked, until retirement, as a school-run minibus driver.
    A very sad story, and one of around 250 such stories every year in the UK. That’s one railway suicide every working day.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited March 2023

    The link was to the story. I had no idea there was any link to a scam. If the mods don't like it they can remove it.
    There might have been Youtube ads played around the video, but the link was just to the story on GB News, on the station’s own channel.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited March 2023

    It's easy to be rather glib. But if those coming over in boats weren't facing Rwanda, but instead were facing "hulks" (moored up tired old cruise ships/ferries) - no freedom of movement within the UK, no opportunity to make money to remit home, no contact with family, in single-sex restricted accomodation - how many would still think it worth the risk? They would have housing, health and food needs met. But not much else.
    Your sneer about the Clyde doesn't suggest you are being serious. They need to be in the Thames where most of the immigration is heading, and where historically most of the hulks were for the same basic purpose.

    But in seriousness: there are major issues with using such old ships, not least sanitation. Dicscharging raw sewage will get you nowhere with planning authorities and environmental laws. Also, such ships are not designed for surveillance and security. And they are very poor value for money in terms of prisoner per pound. Better to have a properly designed and run internment camp on land. With all the nasty things you go on about. [Edit: but that seems to be beyond the skills of HMG (London) these days. Perhaps through deliberate intent? They can't be that incompetent.)

    It's revealing that no government has ever adopted the prison ship solution for long, other than the special case of the C18-C19 where the prisoners naturally turned up at naval bases or were needed to work on things like piers and docks. Maidstone in NI was an emergency, soon replaced by land camps.

    "no contact with family" - try getting that past any sane court.
  • SelebianSelebian Posts: 9,243
    Sandpit said:

    A very sad story, and one of around 250 such stories every year in the UK. That’s one railway suicide every working day.
    Yep. He's a very eloquent guy* and was very open about what happened and how it made him feel. Interestingly he didn't attach any blame to the person who jumped out in front of him. He managed to get in touch with the family which helped him a bit (and, perhaps, also them). He'd say he's over it, I think, but part of that process meant he could never drive a train again.

    *also one of my favouriter pro-Brexit voters - much like Richard Tyndall on sovereignty grounds and had some interesting discussions about that. Absolutely non-racist, I've heard him call out people complaining about immigration and immigrants multiple times.
  • It's definitely cultural - think Switzerland and Israel. In both, you have military, full automatic weapons everywhere.

    But there isn't the same gun worship culture.

    In Isreal, you can be on the bus with some teenagers doing military service, complete with their rifles. Yet there is nothing like the atmosphere of the US with people openly carrying a pistol in public. No feeling of menace.
    In Switzerland and Israel people are carrying rifles for the defence of the state. In America they are carrying rifles to defend themselves *against* the state...
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    Carnyx said:

    Your sneer about the Clyde doesn't suggest you are being serious. They need to be in the Thames where most of the immigration is heading, and where historically most of the hulks were for the same basic purpose.

    But in seriousness: there are major issues with using such old ships, not least sanitation. Dicscharging raw sewage will get you nowhere with planning authorities and environmental laws. Also, such ships are not designed for surveillance and security. And they are very poor value for money in terms of prisoner per pound. Better to have a properly designed and run internment camp on land. With all the nasty things you go on about.

    It's revealing that no government has ever adopted the prison ship solution for long, other than the special case of the C18-C19 where the prisoners naturally turned up at naval bases or were needed to work on things like piers and docks. Maidstone in NI was an emergency, soon replaced by land camps.

    "no contact with family" - try getting that past any sane court.
    It would probably be cheaper to put them on cruise ships... and give them non stop round the world cruises.

    Complete with the eat-much-as-you-like buffet.
  • It's easy to be rather glib. But if those coming over in boats weren't facing Rwanda, but instead were facing "hulks" (moored up tired old cruise ships/ferries) - no freedom of movement within the UK, no opportunity to make money to remit home, no contact with family, in single-sex restricted accomodation - how many would still think it worth the risk? They would have housing, health and food needs met. But not much else.
    Do you understand asylum at all? When people apply for asylum they get deposited in houses that nobody wants to live in. Given subsistence-level non-cash vouchers they can exchange for food and clothes. Not allowed to work. No money to travel. They literally exist, in a lengthy limbo whilst awaiting a decision. With at best hostility and at worst attacks from the locals.

    There is a perception that asylum seekers live large on our dollah. In the real world it simply isn't true.
  • FeersumEnjineeyaFeersumEnjineeya Posts: 4,748
    edited March 2023

    Drugs, guns and over-eating.
    Infant mortality is notably higher in the US than it is in Western European countries. I don't know if that would have a significant effect on life expectancy though.

    Limited access to medical care for poorer Americans is surely a factor.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    It would probably be cheaper to put them on cruise ships... and give them non stop round the world cruises.

    Complete with the eat-much-as-you-like buffet.
    Not for the time equivalent: and actually running an efficient processing and legal system would resolve that issue, even if it is true.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Cannot underestimate the significance of three Asian-origin political figures as PM of the UK, Mayor of London, and FM of Scotland.

    Risen up within three separate political parties.

    This can only happen in a tolerant, pro-equality, anti-discrimination democracy like ours…..

    Compared to the state of affairs in other Western European countries, it is a luxury - as a non-white, non-Christian academic & writer - to even be in the position to criticise a Hindu PM of Indian origin and the Mayor of London & FM of Scotland (both of Pakistani heritage).


    https://twitter.com/rakibehsan/status/1640630105612382208?s=20
  • We are desperately short of workers in certain sectors and certain areas. We could route people fleeing asylum to these areas and given them a very limited visa - you can live and work in the UK if you live here. If you move elsewhere your visa is rescinded and we can deport you.

    I know that the angry don't want any foreigners coming here taking our jobs and our benefits, but they don't want to take the jobs we can't fill either. So...
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617
    edited March 2023
    Selebian said:

    So, catching up...

    I lost a little on the SNP leadership in the end. Took the view that Yousaf was too short and Forbes too long and - given the result - I think that was probably* right, so a value loser. Looks like I would have had a chance to trade out profitably, which I probably would have done if I hadn't been too busy yesterday. Unusually for me, I had intended to see this through, after some earlier trades, so hadn't left an out bet open.

    *can never be sure, of course - it might be that the result was at the far extremes of likelihood with low Yousaf and high Forbes, in which case there was no value.

    If it is any consolation you were as correct as anyone could be, and very much of my view, and some other PBScots. And much more correct than those on PB who insisted that Mr Yousaf would be a walk-in. We didn't know the age/length of membership distribution of the electorate, and that was a big issue. And that poll of members which HYUFD touted - it could not possibly be an accurate sample withouth a major GDPR breach.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082

    In Switzerland and Israel people are carrying rifles for the defence of the state. In America they are carrying rifles to defend themselves *against* the state...
    No really.

    In Israel, it's more "I have to carry this power tool for this job I have to do. Annoying isn't it?"

    In Switzerland, where open carry is less common - "I am taking my army rifle to the range to convert ammunition into noise and chat with some friends. Because it's a thing I do from time to time."

    In America - "I am carrying my customised Sig Blah Blah on my hip. Because any second now, I will need to defend myself against Professor Snape and a multicultural group of international terrorists. Or more likely, shoot someone by accident in a road rage incident."
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082

    We are desperately short of workers in certain sectors and certain areas. We could route people fleeing asylum to these areas and given them a very limited visa - you can live and work in the UK if you live here. If you move elsewhere your visa is rescinded and we can deport you.

    I know that the angry don't want any foreigners coming here taking our jobs and our benefits, but they don't want to take the jobs we can't fill either. So...

    I don't think your idea would do much other than give immigration lawyers a new arena to fight in.

    I would think that tying a visa to a location within the UK would be problematic - how do you define the location and their adherence to it?
  • kjhkjh Posts: 12,477
    We are friends with 3 people who work for Border Force at Heathrow (husband and wife and friend who are all retired Sargent with the Met). They tell us the number of people claiming asylum at Heathrow is huge. I assume because it is unseen it never gets mentioned. I am assuming their stories are accurate, but I also assume they are rather jaded by their experiences.

    They are coming in on false passports, or arrangements to study that turn out to be false (apparently obviously so). As soon as they are rumbled they claim asylum.

    I assume the difference between these people and the boat people is the ability or having enough funds to pay for false documents and a flight (although by the sounds of it boat people are paying a fortune for the trip over the channel as well).
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    Carnyx said:

    Not for the time equivalent: and actually running an efficient processing and legal system would resolve that issue, even if it is true.
    Detention of any kind is very, very expensive.

    Hence the old crack about Eton being cheaper than Borstal.
  • kinabalukinabalu Posts: 44,650
    Taz said:

    Pretty much what many in Labour think and want anyway.
    Open borders now - as opposed to a dreamy 'one day' aspiration - is a niche position even in Labour. 'That v Rwanda' is a false binary created as a debating strategy by proponents of hard-ball anti-refugee policies.
  • MarqueeMarkMarqueeMark Posts: 54,427

    Do you understand asylum at all? When people apply for asylum they get deposited in houses that nobody wants to live in. Given subsistence-level non-cash vouchers they can exchange for food and clothes. Not allowed to work. No money to travel. They literally exist, in a lengthy limbo whilst awaiting a decision. With at best hostility and at worst attacks from the locals.

    There is a perception that asylum seekers live large on our dollah. In the real world it simply isn't true.
    I have huge sympathy for geniuine asylum seekers. I have an equal measure of contempt for those economic migrant chancer queue-bargers who have broken the system. If we were dealing purely with asylum seekers, there'd be a whole lot more money per individual to assist them with.

    Those chancers who have broken the system, who get here and then go into a black economy, "shielded" by those in their community - who often exploit them in the process.

    The number of what one might term "true asylum seekers" are probably relatively static. Labour with a more "streamlined" way into the UK will see the number of applicants soar. They have form on this. Ask them about the few thousand who were going to come over from Eastern Europe - the few thousand that turned into millions.

    So, either Labour is quickly going to realise it has to be as "brutally 1930s" as the Tories. Or they will get turfed out of power at the first opportunity.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Just signed my formal letter of resignation and departed Bute House for the final time.
    Next stop @ScotParl to vote proudly for @HumzaYousaf as Scotland’s 6th First Minister.
    From me - for now - thank you Scotland, for the privilege 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿


    https://twitter.com/NicolaSturgeon/status/1640648358351056896?s=20
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    Detention of any kind is very, very expensive.

    Hence the old crack about Eton being cheaper than Borstal.
    Quite, so why be so slow about processing?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    Carnyx said:

    Quite, so why be so slow about processing?
    The slow processing means spending less money day to day by the departments employing the assessors, lawyers etc , and is seen as a disincentive.
  • tlg86tlg86 Posts: 26,513
    kjh said:

    We are friends with 3 people who work for Border Force at Heathrow (husband and wife and friend who are all retired Sargent with the Met). They tell us the number of people claiming asylum at Heathrow is huge. I assume because it is unseen it never gets mentioned. I am assuming their stories are accurate, but I also assume they are rather jaded by their experiences.

    They are coming in on false passports, or arrangements to study that turn out to be false (apparently obviously so). As soon as they are rumbled they claim asylum.

    I assume the difference between these people and the boat people is the ability or having enough funds to pay for false documents and a flight (although by the sounds of it boat people are paying a fortune for the trip over the channel as well).

    Isn't the difference that the airline is obliged to return them?
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    I have huge sympathy for geniuine asylum seekers. I have an equal measure of contempt for those economic migrant chancer queue-bargers who have broken the system. If we were dealing purely with asylum seekers, there'd be a whole lot more money per individual to assist them with.

    Those chancers who have broken the system, who get here and then go into a black economy, "shielded" by those in their community - who often exploit them in the process.

    The number of what one might term "true asylum seekers" are probably relatively static. Labour with a more "streamlined" way into the UK will see the number of applicants soar. They have form on this. Ask them about the few thousand who were going to come over from Eastern Europe - the few thousand that turned into millions.

    So, either Labour is quickly going to realise it has to be as "brutally 1930s" as the Tories. Or they will get turfed out of power at the first opportunity.
    So an aspirational Tory who presumably champions the "get on your bike" approach to life dislikes intensely those (from other countries) who aspire to a better life in this country.

    Gotit.
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    The slow processing means spending less money day to day by the departments employing the assessors, lawyers etc , and is seen as a disincentive.
    Point taken. But all Home Office surely?
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 13,938

    A few activists maybe. It's not a view I hear expressed in my Labour supporting London metropolitan elite bubble.
    To win an election SKS needs the core 'Labour till I die' vote + several million people who generally vote Tory.

    These are not uniform. The One nation Clarkeist Tories who have gone are very different from the WWC vote. SKS is doing a decent job of keeping both groups on board (I think); but the more he says anything or has actual policies the harder it will get.

    Sunak has a difficult job in trying to both run a country and get both groups back.

    We also have a country where people are bored with politicians and politics but there are no interesting leaders with attention getting qualities.

    Just suppose the next election was Badenoch v D Miliband or Streeting v Forbes. But borefest it will be.
  • TOPPING said:

    So an aspirational Tory who presumably champions the "get on your bike" approach to life dislikes intensely those (from other countries) who aspire to a better life in this country.

    Gotit.
    They want to come here and work. We need people to come here and work. But as we dislike these foreign types we want to slam the door shut so that we can decline faster.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    They want to come here and work. We need people to come here and work. But as we dislike these foreign types we want to slam the door shut so that we can decline faster.
    He finds people who want to come here for a better life "contemptible".

    I suppose it really is very pleasant in Devon/Cornwall who on earth would want that charming vista obscured by cyclists on their way to work.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    edited March 2023
    Carnyx said:

    Point taken. But all Home Office surely?
    That assumes the helicopter view of the Home Office. That it is run to maximise efficiency overall. It isn't.

    If you increase budget for assessors, lawyers etc, you will increase, massively, in the short term, immigration.

    If you decrease budget for assessors, lawyers etc, you will decrease legal immigration. Kinda.

    The dentation facilities come out of a different budget.

    This kind of disfunction is common in large organisations.
  • CarlottaVanceCarlottaVance Posts: 60,281
    Not to spoil it or anything, but if you want to skip the speeches then Humza Yousaf will get 71 votes, Douglas Ross will get 31, Anas Sarwar will get 22 and Alex Cole-Hamilton will get four. If everyone turns up and presses the right buttons that is, which isn’t always a given…

    https://twitter.com/BBCPhilipSim/status/1640649142962737154?s=20
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,200
    TOPPING said:

    He finds people who want to come here for a better life "contemptible".

    I suppose it really is very pleasant in Devon/Cornwall who on earth would want that charming vista obscured by cyclists on their way to work.
    Suddenly many of the governments policies are perhaps beginning to finally make sense. Are they intent on making the UK a worse place to live to put off the economic migrants from coming here?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,442
    TOPPING said:

    Absolutely sounds very sensible. And I'm sure not at all untypical.

    It was the headline that I thought amusing: teacher who says I welcome LGBT students then fails to endorse (presumably) LGBT students.
    They got one thing right: "I was completely out of my depth. "
  • TOPPING said:

    He finds people who want to come here for a better life "contemptible".

    I suppose it really is very pleasant in Devon/Cornwall who on earth would want that charming vista obscured by cyclists on their way to work.
    Thanks to Simon Cowell we now have a generation who don't want to work jobs that involve graft - they want fame / fortune on a plate. So its proving very difficult to encourage young and single (mobile) people to move to places where we have labour shortages in hospitality, in agriculture, in manufacturing.

    People simply don't want to uproot themselves to do these jobs. So we need to bring people in who do, or see a contraction in hospitality and agriculture and manufacturing. People may not want Cornwall to be sullied by the other, but they will also be upset if there are fewer restaurants, cafes, hotels for them to enjoy.
  • DriverDriver Posts: 5,560
    Carnyx said:

    Quite, so why be so slow about processing?
    Rationing by queuing, like the NHS.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390

    Thanks to Simon Cowell we now have a generation who don't want to work jobs that involve graft - they want fame / fortune on a plate. So its proving very difficult to encourage young and single (mobile) people to move to places where we have labour shortages in hospitality, in agriculture, in manufacturing.

    People simply don't want to uproot themselves to do these jobs. So we need to bring people in who do, or see a contraction in hospitality and agriculture and manufacturing. People may not want Cornwall to be sullied by the other, but they will also be upset if there are fewer restaurants, cafes, hotels for them to enjoy.
    Where would they live if they moved to Cornwall?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082

    Thanks to Simon Cowell we now have a generation who don't want to work jobs that involve graft - they want fame / fortune on a plate. So its proving very difficult to encourage young and single (mobile) people to move to places where we have labour shortages in hospitality, in agriculture, in manufacturing.

    People simply don't want to uproot themselves to do these jobs. So we need to bring people in who do, or see a contraction in hospitality and agriculture and manufacturing. People may not want Cornwall to be sullied by the other, but they will also be upset if there are fewer restaurants, cafes, hotels for them to enjoy.
    The majority of those jobs are actually being done by locals, as they always have.

    The mythology that all the menial jobs are done by foreigners is nearly never true.
  • Not to spoil it or anything, but if you want to skip the speeches then Humza Yousaf will get 71 votes, Douglas Ross will get 31, Anas Sarwar will get 22 and Alex Cole-Hamilton will get four. If everyone turns up and presses the right buttons that is, which isn’t always a given…

    https://twitter.com/BBCPhilipSim/status/1640649142962737154?s=20

    The sad thing for Yousless is that today is the best day in his job as First Minister. It will only slide downhill from here, and he will snarl and hiss at all the people he will be attacking for being responsible for the slide.

    Lets assume that Ms Forbes isn't given a job she will accept (or at all) and leads the awkward squad inside the party. OK so most MSPs back Yousless. But she has a significant minority of members behind her, which could make things interesting.

    The current iteration of the SNP as being Right-On is only a recent creation. It is a centre party bringing people together from across the political spectrum to fight for independence. If Yousless is going to keep trying to marginalise all the people who aren't right-on, we could see it drift apart.
  • OnlyLivingBoyOnlyLivingBoy Posts: 16,390

    Cannot underestimate the significance of three Asian-origin political figures as PM of the UK, Mayor of London, and FM of Scotland.

    Risen up within three separate political parties.

    This can only happen in a tolerant, pro-equality, anti-discrimination democracy like ours…..

    Compared to the state of affairs in other Western European countries, it is a luxury - as a non-white, non-Christian academic & writer - to even be in the position to criticise a Hindu PM of Indian origin and the Mayor of London & FM of Scotland (both of Pakistani heritage).


    https://twitter.com/rakibehsan/status/1640630105612382208?s=20

    This is true, it is quite remarkable and reflects well on us as a country and more specifically on our political parties. Only Khan has won a popular election though.
  • The majority of those jobs are actually being done by locals, as they always have.

    The mythology that all the menial jobs are done by foreigners is nearly never true.
    Who said all? Basic question - are there enough locals to fill all the roles? We both know that the answer to that question is no. So people need to migrate in whether internally within the CTA or externally. Or simply cut provision of these things to the level that locals can provide.

    Part of the problem faced by nice areas like Cornwall is the influx of the rich tourist. They buy up houses they don't live in, shoving up prices and reducing availability. Which makes it increasingly difficult for said locals to live there, especially doing lower paid jobs.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082

    Where would they live if they moved to Cornwall?
    According to people I spoke to in Cornwall, the problem is that you can't afford to have a low end job in Cornwall - the cost of housing is too high.

    There are 20,000 holiday home and second home in the entire of Cornwall. Out of 240K homes in Cornwall as a whole. But building 20K more properties is apparently impossible,

    With an increasing population and a demand that there is no development in Cornwall, the obvious solution is forced emigration.
  • SandpitSandpit Posts: 56,022
    edited March 2023

    Who said all? Basic question - are there enough locals to fill all the roles? We both know that the answer to that question is no. So people need to migrate in whether internally within the CTA or externally. Or simply cut provision of these things to the level that locals can provide.

    Part of the problem faced by nice areas like Cornwall is the influx of the rich tourist. They buy up houses they don't live in, shoving up prices and reducing availability. Which makes it increasingly difficult for said locals to live there, especially doing lower paid jobs.
    An increase in immigration needs to be accompanied by an increase in housebuilding, which has failed to keep up with population changes for a couple of decades.
  • OllyTOllyT Posts: 5,033
    Sandpit said:

    Isn’t it farmers and doctors that stand out in the suicide statistics? Both stressful jobs, but crucially jobs with easy access to a reliable method.

    Suicide by train, more common in Europe than the US, is utterly horrific for the poor train driver. Many of them are off work for months, and some never go back to driving trains afterwards.
    I agree. Suicide is legal in the UK but the Government makes it nigh but impossible to access the drugs to do it painlessly and with dignity. I doubt anyone would choose to throw themselves under a train if other methods were readily available.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,200
    Sandpit said:

    An increase in immigration needs to be accompanied by an increase in housebuilding, which has failed to keep up with population changes for a couple of decades.
    And we need immigrants to help build the houses too.....
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,861
    edited March 2023

    This is true, it is quite remarkable and reflects well on us as a country and more specifically on our political parties. Only Khan has won a popular election though.
    Indeed an achievement but only Khan has won an election amongst the voters he governs ie Londoners. Sunak has yet to win a UK general election and Yousaf has yet to win a Scottish election
  • Sandpit said:

    An increase in immigration needs to be accompanied by an increase in housebuilding, which has failed to keep up with population changes for a couple of decades.
    Sure! The problem of course is where do you build the houses? So many of these twee villages would no longer be twee if they slapped a Barrett estate on the edge of it. So you solve the housing issue but damage the thing which pulls people in.

    Or - radical idea - restrict who can own property there. Slap a CPO on any property which isn't occupied on a permanent basis. Use it or lose it. That way you don't need to destroy these places through over-development, you just remove the rich parasites which have made housing unaffordable and impossible for locals.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,388

    They want to come here and work. We need people to come here and work. But as we dislike these foreign types we want to slam the door shut so that we can decline faster.
    It is particularly disheartening that the two flag wavers for this policy are respectively the son and daughter of economic migrants. That they should arrive here and then pull up the drawbridge on others following them is quite disgusting. Particularly when Sunak made so much of the advantages he and his family gained and by implication how much this country gained by having them.

    My family came from Riga in the late nineteenth century so that is several generations further on but I would still feel a hypocrite supporting a party that wanted to introduce this
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    edited March 2023

    Sure! The problem of course is where do you build the houses? So many of these twee villages would no longer be twee if they slapped a Barrett estate on the edge of it. So you solve the housing issue but damage the thing which pulls people in.

    Or - radical idea - restrict who can own property there. Slap a CPO on any property which isn't occupied on a permanent basis. Use it or lose it. That way you don't need to destroy these places through over-development, you just remove the rich parasites which have made housing unaffordable and impossible for locals.
    There aren't enough houses for the people living in Cornwall.

    image

    If you advocate an increasing population (which you do), you need somewhere for people to live.
  • HYUFDHYUFD Posts: 126,861

    There aren't enough houses for the people living in Cornwall.

    image

    If you advocate an increasing population (which you do), you need somewhere for people to live.
    Excluding those with second homes who live in London and the Home counties most of the year it might have enough
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,220

    I don't eat ketchup because it's fucking disgusting but I know my kids would go ballistic if we bought anything other than Heinz. We had a mini rebellion on our hands just substituting the low sugar and salt version. I'm mostly an own brand kind of guy but there are certain things (weetabix, ketchup and mayonnaise, marmite, nutella) where only the branded version will do.
    I have a pal whose lad goes similarly ballistic when she buys supermarket brands, he calls them ‘council sauce’, ‘council ginger’ etc. She performed an experiment where she replaced the contents of an opened tube of Pringles with I think Asda’s own version, and nary a peep was heard.

    Not really an option with ketchup I accept.
  • TOPPINGTOPPING Posts: 43,668

    This is true, it is quite remarkable and reflects well on us as a country and more specifically on our political parties. Only Khan has won a popular election though.
    For me the real joy is with the footie. On the pitch at least there is complete and utter colour-blindness. Now of course it would be difficult to show otherwise, and who knows what might go on in some of their minds but when a goal is scored the colour-blind unbridled joy amongst the players is indeed joyous.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082
    HYUFD said:

    Excluding those with second homes who live in London and the Home counties most of the year it might have enough
    There are 20K second homes and holiday lets in Cornwall, out of a housing stock of 240K

    That's 8.3% - if you close down the entire tourist industry completely.

    According to the graph, the population of Cornwall is expanding by 4K or so, people . Each year.
  • There aren't enough houses for the people living in Cornwall.

    image

    If you advocate an increasing population (which you do), you need somewhere for people to live.
    So I come back to the basic question - where do you build these houses? Because when you ask, people say no. If you impose, you change the nature of the place. Some villages can't have new houses built because the geography doesn't allow it. So it has to be in others, and that of course is where the objections come in.

    The other factor is what kind of homes are being built? Some flats could be built which are sympathetic to the surrounding and give younger singles somewhere to live. But very little chance of getting local crusties who run councils and have more votes to agree to that.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,388
    edited March 2023
    Here's a beautiful cinema commercial from the last time the refugees were being pilloried. It was shot by an English director but it was run throughout Europe.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5n0DLYbYqc
  • CarnyxCarnyx Posts: 44,617

    I have a pal whose lad goes similarly ballistic when she buys supermarket brands, he calls them ‘council sauce’, ‘council ginger’ etc. She performed an experiment where she replaced the contents of an opened tube of Pringles with I think Asda’s own version, and nary a peep was heard.

    Not really an option with ketchup I accept.
    cooncil juice would be rather obvious ...
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,200

    Who said all? Basic question - are there enough locals to fill all the roles? We both know that the answer to that question is no. So people need to migrate in whether internally within the CTA or externally. Or simply cut provision of these things to the level that locals can provide.

    Part of the problem faced by nice areas like Cornwall is the influx of the rich tourist. They buy up houses they don't live in, shoving up prices and reducing availability. Which makes it increasingly difficult for said locals to live there, especially doing lower paid jobs.
    One of the many ironies of Brexit is that we are still going to recruit immigrants for those roles but it is the businesses that can cope best with additional red tape that are benefitting.

    The Australian style points system is all bluster - if you are in a shortage occupation that is low paid you can get a visa on £10.10 per hour.

    https://www.gov.uk/skilled-worker-visa/when-you-can-be-paid-less

    National minimum wage is £9.50 and going up to £10.42.....

    And before someone says it is only for skilled workers in shortage occupations, its a massive list that includes most jobs. Need 4 immigrants to work as staff in your pub - make one the bar manager, another a catering manager, one a floor manager and the last the kitchen manager and its all fine.

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/skilled-worker-visa-eligible-occupations/skilled-worker-visa-eligible-occupations-and-codes

  • squareroot2squareroot2 Posts: 7,007
    edited March 2023
    HYUFD said:

    Indeed an achievement but only Khan has won an election amongst the voters he governs ie Londoners. Sunak has yet to win a UK general election and Yousaf has yet to win a Scottish election
    And there must be a serious doubt that Yousaf will win..The days of the One Party State in Scotland are over.
  • TheuniondivvieTheuniondivvie Posts: 43,220
    edited March 2023
    Carnyx said:

    Your sneer about the Clyde doesn't suggest you are being serious. They need to be in the Thames where most of the immigration is heading, and where historically most of the hulks were for the same basic purpose.

    But in seriousness: there are major issues with using such old ships, not least sanitation. Dicscharging raw sewage will get you nowhere with planning authorities and environmental laws. Also, such ships are not designed for surveillance and security. And they are very poor value for money in terms of prisoner per pound. Better to have a properly designed and run internment camp on land. With all the nasty things you go on about. [Edit: but that seems to be beyond the skills of HMG (London) these days. Perhaps through deliberate intent? They can't be that incompetent.)

    It's revealing that no government has ever adopted the prison ship solution for long, other than the special case of the C18-C19 where the prisoners naturally turned up at naval bases or were needed to work on things like piers and docks. Maidstone in NI was an emergency, soon replaced by land camps.

    "no contact with family" - try getting that past any sane court.
    If HMG farmed out the running of the hulks to English water companies, discharging raw sewage problem instantly solved and another income stream to discharge into the directors’ bonus funds. Trebles all round!
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,082

    So I come back to the basic question - where do you build these houses? Because when you ask, people say no. If you impose, you change the nature of the place. Some villages can't have new houses built because the geography doesn't allow it. So it has to be in others, and that of course is where the objections come in.

    The other factor is what kind of homes are being built? Some flats could be built which are sympathetic to the surrounding and give younger singles somewhere to live. But very little chance of getting local crusties who run councils and have more votes to agree to that.
    The locals want more houses to be built. It's generally the incomers who are blocking them.

    The geography argument is largely nonsense - there are very few villages that don't have room to expand by 1% a year. This is what used to happen, back when planning was just a dream.

    Pretty simple to demand that properties be built in the local vernacular - local planning can do that.

    The population is expanding at 1% per year. 1% of the housing stock is 2,400 homes. Double that to deal with the back log. 5,000 a year.
This discussion has been closed.