A system, first designed and implemented in Australia, specifically to increase immigration. Johnson – who loved the policy and campaigned for the Tory leadership on it – was warned it would mushroom numbers (in this story for example, plus others) (2/3)https://t.co/g4l0lamsM1
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Must be one of the most instantly successful political word-coinages of recent years
Even your mate Dave doesn't make much difference by comparison, MiC found a Cameron led Tories would still only be on 22% and still trailing Reform (even if they overtook Labour who were down to 20%) so only Boris returning could see the Tories win most seats again. Though Rishi is somewhat rewarded for his tighter visa wage requirements and end to dependents coming in which have started to cut the BorisWave. A Sunak return as Tory leader would see the Tories back to the 24% they got at the GE the poll found, tied with Reform and Rishi unlike Boris is still an MP and so eligible.
Though if Boris gets a 5% Tory bounce he would certainly hold any by election in a Tory held seat if Kemi allowed him on the approved Conservative candidates list
https://thomas-crapper.com/product-category/toilets-basins/complete-wc-sets/
That dishonest and discredited charlatan pitching up in my seat is pretty much the only thing that would get me voting for whichever party looked like being the best placed alternative, even Labour or Reform. And I doubt I am alone. In British politics, there are no second chances, and rightly so.
Genuinely gobsmacked at that.
Just how low did it go under May?
I think everyone instinctively shares that view which is why we are so captivated by his every utterance. He's one of the most innovative wordsmiths in our language since Shakespeare.
Thou whoreson zed! thou unnecessary
letter! My lord, if you will give me
leave, I will tread this unbolted villain into
mortar, and daub the walls of a jakes with
him
Depends on the question.
"We're so popular we're getting old Tories coming to visit us at Labour HQ. The other day the ex MP for Corby was so keen to see us she got a cab direct from the airport, and I said to her "I see you got an Uber, Mensch?"
YES I AM EXTREMELY BORED
The Autralian system was designed to control immigration to particular goals.
- Be colour blind
- Allow into Australia people with skills that are needed
- Protect wages in industries where there was no shortage of domestic labour
The last was as a result of massive input from the Australia unions. Which are quite powerful.
As a key point, the bar is set very high (number of points), to get into Australia. Indeed, pro-immigration advocates have claimed that Australia is "skimming off" the best immigrants and refusing to do its bit to take the less skilled.
By contrast, a much larger percentage of non-EU migrants are coming to the UK for life: this isn't about earning some extra money, or getting some additional skills - it's about a permanent shift of residence.
This means that a much higher proportion of gross migrant numbers are likely to stay in the UK than in the past.
There's also a lot more "gaming" of the system than previously.
Take study visas. Historically (i.e. before 2020), the vast, vast majority returned home - it was comfortably north of 80%, with the remainder either marrying a Brit, taking another study visa, or (for less than 10%) shifting to a work visa.
By contrast, on the Migration Observatory link I posted earlier, almost one-in-five people on study visas change to a work visa inside the first year! (Historically the number was under 2%, and were almost entirely university jobs.)
The US does many things wrong, but one thing it does do right is that it requires people to return to their home country to apply for a new visa type. You can't come to the US on a non-immigrant visa (like the one I have), and the just shift over to an immigrant one. If you want an immigrant visa, you need to return to your home country, and start the application process all over.
In my experience the higher up the social ladder, the less euphemistic one gets, until you reach
"Excuse me, your Grace, where's the shitter"
So I suggest what you might do if he returned is irrelevant
https://x.com/skyfootball/status/1922279738845876485?s=61
Airbnb acquires Figure robotics, announces western-themed Experience Park
https://x.com/MerrillLutsky/status/1922112234299232380
Durham
Chester le Street South.
UK universities were dying to take foreign students (which they could charge large fees). This meant that the UK government could avoid raising fees on domestic students, and they also thought that - with a reduction in the number of people from the EU coming - that there was ample room to expand numbers.
And the repeat for care staff.
And add in some points based stuff.
And then the fact that they didn't think about dependents, or about the fact that non-EU immigrants were much less likely to return home.
Finally, remember that government decision making is far too slow. After just three months, if visas numbers were coming in far higher than expected, they could have changed course. But they were too slow.
Lest we forget
Brexiteer PM, Brexiteer Home Secretary, Brexiteer Chancellor, and Brexiteer Foreign Secretary in that government.
It ultimately comes down to the belief that Boris Johnson and others never expected to win the referendum and then had to deliver something without trashing the economy.
He’s just a guy who likes to do stuff to make the local community better for all. He left the previous coalition, which he had the health portfolio, as he felt he couldn’t make an impact. Not political at all.
Never claimed a single expense.
As for Reformy, when we had Syrian refugees in the community he organised for locals to go and help them settle in.
My company runs on a principle of incrementalism: what in the next two weeks can we change that will make things better? What is the data telling us, and what small thing can we do, that will improve things?
And over time, those many small things become big things. And you always remember that the data is smarter than you. "Data > Opinions".
If you thought "10,000 people will arrive per year", and then 5,000 arrive in the first week, you don't wait, you make a small change, and you see what happens.
Sadly the government runs on big things, with long time horizons (and that is true of planning and so many things), and that means they are incapable of reacting quickly to new information.
And then instead of 100 small changes, you have occasional massive changes, which bring their own issues.
Our governments (and I have no doubt Reform will be the same) fall very definitely into the second category.
Had May won a majority in 2017 then Tory MPs would never have replaced her with Boris
When we did it, we needed to book individual interview for myself, my wife, and our two kids.
But they also all needed to be at the same time as me, as their visas were dependent on mine.
What this would mean is that I'd login to the US Embassy in London, find four empty slots at 9am, and then book one for me... one for my wife... and damn it... the other two slots have been taken.
So, I'd then need to cancel mine and my wife's appointment time, and start over.
It must have taken me five or six hours to actually book an appointment. And then they lost my son's passport.
BUT, that shouldn't distract from the fact that the basic idea - return home to apply for a new visa type, especially one where you move from non-immigrant to immigrant - is a good one.
If they hadn’t been so utterly shit we could have had a once in a lifetime relegation battle involving Spurs and Manchester United, with both being relegated.
We may never see that opportunity again.
MiC has a Starmer led Labour on 22%, a Johnson led Tories on 26%, Farage led Reform on 23% and the LDs on 15%.
So the vast majority of the anti immigration vote stays Reform even if Boris returns, it is centrist swing voters he wins back
If that's true then the Brexit Right performed one of the greatest political sleights of hand in history. Absolutely everyone was led to believe that Australian branding meant it was all about keeping the blighters out.
I don't believe my wife and her colleagues only deserve minimum wage for what they do. I don't think my grandparents should have been looked after by whoever is prepared to do the job for minimum wage, with that being all that matters.
Paying people a reasonable salary is a reasonable solution to solve labour shortages. It's remarkable how many of our sites lefties object to that.
It comes amid warnings new visa rules will tear families apart.
From next spring, British citizens and those settled in the UK must be earning at least £38,700 to bring in foreign family members.'
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-67705178
Obviously, that question turns primarily on how big that majority was. Had she delivered on the pre-2017GE polling then yes. Something Major-1992-sized, probably not.
ie they won't get it below 250,000, and that is the bare minimum given that a lot of people want net NEGATIVE migration. Plus they seem utterly clueless on the boats
SMASH THE GANGS! lol
As things stand, Nigel should at least be ordering the John Lewis catalogue, with a view to furnishing a new home in SW1
“Okay, so that’s your voting intention now with the current discredited Tory leadership. BUT WHAT ABOUT IF BORIS WAS BACK AS LEADER? WHAT THEN? MIGHT THAT TEMPT YOU BACK TO THE TORIES?”
It's an obvious way to only issue visas to shortage areas, and in effect to specific geographic areas too.
- he raised the minimum salary threshold for skilled workers from £26k to £39k (now should have increased it to £50k?, probably, but this was still a 50% bump.)
- international students are no longer allowed to bring dependents
- there was a substantial reduction in the number of social care visas issued
Of course, he didn't get any credit for any of these (while Boris escaped blame for causing the problems), so one would expect a fairly meaningful decline in the net immigration numbers in the next few years.
If it were up to me I'd simplify the system dramatically. In order to get a visa renewal or ILR then visa holders should have hit the threshold in the past 12 months, confirmed by HMRC. No exceptions based on industry/jobs sector. Any industry that has a "shortage" should value its employees enough to hit threshold.
Commit a crime or fail to actually pay taxes on an income of the threshold or above and the visa is not renewed/ILR is not granted.
Hit the threshold and commit no crimes and you're welcome to stay and should have a pathway to ILR then citizenship.
Settlement in the UK is a privilege that is earned, not a right.
He may well turn out to be a lucky general.
Johnson is not the answer
*not much of a General, but entered the dictionary for his facial hair.
The public don't do gratitude based on second order derivatives.
For those who are concerned about immigration then those who have migrated here staying and (net) further hundreds of thousands arriving annually seems unlikely to be something they will express gratitude for.
Just like with inflation prices going high, then prices still going up at a slower rate wasn't something people were grateful for.
Personally I don't care how many people come so long as we build houses for all of them and those who are already here and invest in infrastructure, but I appreciate that's a minority viewpoint.
It couldn't be automated, it requires empathy to get them to cooperate.
What's the old saying about being able to Fool Some of the People All of the Time.
Edit to add: I misread your comment. I agree, the rules on getting ILR need to be significantly tightened.