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  • under Eric, both thank you for sparing the time to join us the day after the government published its immigration plans to those people who is saying what people wanted was control, not necessarily dropping the numbers way had someone from vote leave on the break in last night saying that all they wanted was control.

  • We had Nigel for, are saying no.

  • They wanted numbers down.

  • Who's right?

  • And does it look like this policy will do the what they hope it'll be different Levers wanted different things on DSO.

  • Does control mean reduce?

  • For Boris Johnson's view is that control is what mattered.

  • Those people want reductions in immigration or selective reduces.

  • They don't want to reduce students.

  • They don't want to reduce high skilled immigration.

  • They don't want to reduce scientists.

  • They wantto have Maur immigration of the type that the prime minister is letting in.

  • Some people then say, but the numbers really need to fall on.

  • Other people are saying, if I've controlled the flows I want, that's what I was doing, So we've got we've got a much more granular immigration debate which comes down to the politics off low skilled and semiskilled immigration from the U.

  • There's actually a big consensus across parties now, with the government having dropped the net migration target that Students Guild migration on what we're debating.

  • That's where the public always were.

  • So I think Boris Johnson has shifted in the direction off the public.

  • There's a breaching agenda that probably half of the leave vote felt very strongly that they wanted big reductions in numbers.

  • Other bits of the leave vote thought that it was the pace of low skilled and semiskilled immigration they're worried about.

  • Hey, do you think this does the trick politically from serving the voters that helped Boris Johnson win the referendum?

  • And when the general well, I don't think it is about control only.

  • Actually, I think you look what I think's happened is you've got a liberalization of attitudes within a part of the British electorate voted, remain or that voted for the Labour Party or liberal Democrats.

  • But you haven't seen that liberalization in the part of the electric motor for Johnson voted for Brexit, for example, this is the kind of polarization party polarization of immigration attitudes we see in the United States and Canada, for example, I think something similares occurring in Britain.

  • You compare 2010 and 2019.

  • From what I've seen, the gap between Labour and conservative voters on the question of whether immigration should be reduced has doubled in size.

  • So I think those voters for Johnson and for Brexit do want a reduction on Di.

  • Don't think that question is gonna go away.

  • But what I would say is that we're in an unusual moment now because Brexit and the economic future of Britain and the political future of Britain, or what people are talking about.

  • And so quite naturally, the immigration issue has dropped down the agenda.

  • The question really didn't ask is in perhaps a year's time when if Brexit is a success economically and that's a big if.

  • But if it is a success economically, then there's gonna be more room for other issues to rise.

  • Our suspect on the sort of leave voting Brexit or Johnson supporting side, you're going to see the profile of immigration rising salience.

  • What we would say is, how long, how high a priority is immigration?

  • Yes, you want less of it.

  • But as a mission compared to health care and the economy, where does it rank for you?

  • And I think you will see a higher ranking.

  • If Brexit is an economic success has gone down from issue number 123 to issue number 10 also hasn't it into some of the public.

  • You think What's gonna bring it back up?

  • Well, so so the priority oven issues determined by a number of things.

  • One is is immigration numbers.

  • A second is competing issues.

  • So if you're in an economic recession or Brexit happens, that's dominating headlines.

  • Immigration is not in the headlines.

  • It's gonna drop as a priority.

  • But if these other issues, particularly Brexit, drops off the headlines, there is a question.

  • What, then replaces it as the issue people are talking about?

  • I would suspect that immigration will be an issue that is maybe talked about Maur if economically, Brexit is is fine and people stop talking and worrying about it.

  • So in a way, the salience of Brexit has crowded out sailings of immigration.

  • We can see similar dynamics that we look at the you know, if you think other things, I think other things have changed.

  • Sailors.

  • If you go back to 2010 11 and 2/3 of the electric was saying, We don't talk about this enough.

  • I'm not sure we're allowed to talk about if you were the very liberal end of the day.

  • You see, I don't have been banging on about it for decades.

  • I don't think that's true.

  • It's much, much harder on people, much less likely to say now.

  • We're not allowed to talk about immigration because we have way concerned a bit, so it's cathartic in a way and that it felt powerful.

  • Two people that were there, the prime minister or the treasure.

  • We thought you should vote one way they could vote the other way.

  • Once you do that and you've got the control, you've got a much more pragmatic granular debate because they will control selectivity.

  • But they will be pragmatic, therefore care.

  • But that's a big part of the job, done as far as you see it.

  • Yes, it's still polarized politically because the voters that were anti migration of labour have drifted.

  • The Conservatives, some of the conservative remains, have gone to the liberal Democrats and so on.

  • But the salient struck and this is very different from America.

  • Where would about Donald Trump tweeting about it.

  • The Democrats very excited about it.

  • Both sides really, you know, flaming up there.

  • There's a lot more than most people in putting a balance is most people in Britain, Sea pressures of immigration, gains of immigration are making distinctions between immigration that they don't have a problem with the tall and immigration where it makes a contribution.

  • But you want to control.

  • I think there's definitely some trick to what you say in terms of which categories of immigration the voters are keen Iran and less king on.

  • But I think even within that there is a desire for for limited numbers, that is important.

  • And I think it's important electric electorally in America again.

  • It's the Republican side where you have very high salience of immigration, much more so than the Democratsside and similarly here that issue's gonna matter a lot more to your leave voter, for example, Jones and voter.

  • I think that the other thing to bear in mind is that because a lot of Brexit, a lot of Brexit voters think that once you have control, numbers are gonna fall.

  • The expectation is that yes, we have control.

  • But control also means reduced numbers in some of the surveys that I've done.

  • For example, if you tell people that post Brexit numbers they're not gonna fall, who are you gonna vote for?

  • Ah, lot of the voters, for exact.

  • This was in 2017.

  • A lot of the voters from UKIP that went over to the Conservatives are gonna said they would go back to UKIP.

  • And so I suspect there is a very significant and important group of voters who, if after Brexit, someone says, Hey, look, the numbers haven't come down.

  • The government's in control, but they're admitting these numbers.

  • It's not a real it's not what we voted for.

  • And we've already seen editorials from the likes of Ian Duncan Smith saying, You know, we're importing a 1,000,000 people every three years and so on.

  • Boris Johnson, the referendum campaign said, importing the city the size of new cars, Boris Johnson's changed his mind.

  • Actually, that time in office on Day one, he says, the net migration target's gone.

  • It's quite sensible to ditch it.

  • You've missed it 39 quarters.

  • It's not about me, it's not credible at all.

  • I'm not going to play a numbers game and actually enter the general election campaign, saying We will curb low skilled immigration.

  • It's drawing the campaign.

  • They then say, and overall numbers will form and you'll tell us exactly yesterday was saying numbers before, But this is what they couldn't tell us.

  • Buy it.

  • Yes, it by how much and they go in.

  • If you read their manifesto, the policy package won't cut the numbers.

  • It will give you different controls because the immigration is going to cut out you.

  • Low skilled immigration has fallen away a lot since the referendum is the value of the pound and salt on there.

  • They are loosening the policy on popular, non EU skilled migration that their policy is to increase the flows off.

  • The immigration is currently high on to curb the immigration that dropped significantly.

  • If employers are going to be allowed to even go first abroad and look abroad for skilled workers and not hit.

  • I think that Eric something that you think voters will be okay ways where I suppose there is another way of asking where does the concern about immigration really come from?

  • Well, I mean, what I would say is the academic literature shows pretty clearly that the main driver of immigration tends to be psychological and cultural rather than economic.

  • So late coming.

  • Put that in layman's terms.

  • Okay, so around the community and feeding people don't look like you.

  • Well, well, well, ethnically ethnic change.

  • Yes, ethnic change.

  • Now it's not.

  • It may not be race.

  • It could be language.

  • It could be religion.

  • But what I would say is, so just a sample question.

  • I'll give you a question.

  • Which says, if you ask Brexit voters how important an issue for you is, pressure on public service is zero not important at all.

  • 100 extremely important.

  • You get about a 49 or 50 out of 100 moderately important issue if you just dropped two words.

  • Immigrants Putting pressure on public service is it's up to sort of 70 or 75 so why would obviously the part of the problem of pressure public service is accounted for by immigration must be smaller than the problem of public service is.

  • It makes no sense, except if you, if you understand that the immigration attitudes are formed.

  • Four views on public service's public service is then come to be colored by one's views on immigration.

  • So it's not the pressure per se on economics or competition for jobs that's driving these attitudes.

  • It's much more about these subtler psychological and cultural drives.

  • And that's one of the reasons why I'm very skeptical of the idea that talking about skills or the economic impact is really getting it the drivers that are actually shifting politics.

  • But if the people who are coming into the country are blatantly, ah, super middle class, better, better earners, highly skilled, contributing to the national treasury take and the rest of it through their taxes on dhe.

  • By definition, you think not putting pressure on service is because they're actually that their contributions outweigh the pressure.

  • People still gonna go with that because that seems to be the gamble that Boris Johnson is making you say, No, I really don't think they will.

  • I mean, I think they will to some extent, obviously, yes, if immigrants, by the way, who already generally are contributing more than they're taking away.

  • So I actually but that's well, yeah, but I think, though, that it's ultimately these material factors or not, what Dr Opinion And so, for example, I have done another study where we've said Okay, you know, if immigration remains the same after Brexit same levels or even increases slightly, but the skill mix goes up.

  • Are you happy with that?

  • And that does reduce opposition to some degree to immigration.

  • But when you introduce, for example, that this is gonna bring a faster rate of ethno cultural change, then all of a sudden you get a shift by 20 as much as 2025 points in attitudes.

  • Because once that framing comes in, it changes people's outlook.

  • So I think, yes, people want skilled compared to unskilled, but within a context in which that cultural change that they're seeking to slow down occur.

  • So I'm the question.

  • I can't predict exactly when we're going to start to see this new narrative.

  • It's not necessarily gonna be framed in cultural terms because that's very contentious, and that could be easily labeled his racist.

  • So it's gonna be very difficult.

  • There will be a narrative that might be that we were betrayed and we voted for Brexit.

  • We didn't get BU thing is coming.

  • Do you think it is coming?

  • Let let's see what what the real driver walls over 15 and 20 years was that the British public lost confidence in whether their governments competent on the question of immigration, and they had good reasons to lose confidence.

  • You had you had labour governments that had no idea at all that the flow of East European migrants was going to come.

  • And then the public feel they were very slow to respond to that 2000 for 2008.

  • You then had a government with David Cameron and to ease in May.

  • And they say we have got a plan.

  • We will sort out hundreds of thousands out tens of thousands in leave it to us.

  • And of course the opposite happened.

  • So there is good evidence the public that the politicians have not had a grip and said things like that.

  • So do you get cancer?

  • And what?

  • Why is a point system in Australia entire point system So incredibly resident, Everybody has heard of that.

  • It stands for control.

  • It sounds for selectivity, Andi.

  • It stands for pragmatism.

  • Way we want in.

  • This country knows somebody who lives in Australia and stands for something else as well.

  • I do remember something on the leave campaign telling me that the word association of Australia was white country.

  • That's that's a natural, I think, because this skills based preference is across that smells like they can have that perception.

  • But the skills preference is across ethnic groups.

  • So black and Asian voters will say we prefer skills and obviously they won't save my country doesn't look like my country anymore.

  • And other voters might save me, prefer skills In the comparative data, the British public has the strongest skills preference off any of any European public.

  • There are some ethno cultural preferences when we start to think about when we start to think about family migration flows the side.

  • On the whole, the skills preference seems to be wheel.

  • And therefore, if you you split the sampling your for people Pakistani doctors and Polish doctors and Pakistani plumbers and Polish plumbers, they're being driven a lot by the skill level when they make the choices.

  • So as Eric says that there are difficult issues people have about adjusting to change.

  • But if you go on off of them, would you like some ethnic preferences in your immigration was there.

  • That's the last thing we want.

  • We actually have got away from that.

  • We're trying to treat everybody fairly.

  • In the Brexit, voters feel their own reputation for fairness is actually at state.

  • If you start saying to them, Is it really race you about?

  • They won't say no, it really isn't.

  • It's about it's about integration and pressure on service is and, you know, integration.

  • People should join our community and become like us.

  • Yeah, I think we need Thio as, say, a social scientist.

  • Step away from what people say necessarily and look at sort of correlations with attitude.

  • So people might say in the Brexit vote say it was about sovereignty.

  • But we know the correlation with immigration attitudes is actually just one strongest correlation in these.

  • Say it was about an operation.

  • They will say it's about immigration.

  • But then, well, they mean control.

  • They don't they don't mean everything.

  • Selections that they will stay in jail and Australia.

  • I just told him to be wary of a couple things.

  • One is social desirability.

  • What is it?

  • More acceptable?

  • Rationale.

  • It's much more acceptable to say it's about pressure on service is than it is about a couple change.

  • The other thing is that when you ask a question, compare immigrant one to immigrant to.

  • The only difference is color.

  • That's a different question.

  • Of course, people are gonna choose the skilled person.

  • But when you talk about aggregate effects that this is what's going to be the aggregate shift of immigration, not immigrants but immigration, that's gonna change the nature of the answer.

  • That's just two points of the expedition, I think advocates instinct, experience of this.

  • Where Lord Ashcroft had 100 members of the public and have me and migration watch presenting.

  • And then the final migration watch slide was a slide that said, with high immigration by 2050 there won't be a white majority in this country anymore.

  • And it wasn't the liberals in the group that actually pushed back on that it was the migration skeptics they said.

  • We've stopped with De linked it from race.

  • You're making all about race.

  • Don't do that.

  • So Eric might be true that they've got an underlying desire, but if they then say we don't we don't want that.

  • If you wanted an immigration system that preferred white migrants but didn't say it was doing that, you would choose European free movement where 9/10 of the migrants will be white.

  • But you've got a perfectly good rational of the single market access and so on.

  • People didn't want that.

  • They actually wanted a balance between European migration and Commonwealth migration, which is both Australian and Indian.

  • What I would say is that when you actually even asked, leave voters about levels coming from the U and outside the U, which in their mind might include you know, North America, Australia, even though those sources don't actually send any significant numbers, um, you will find actually a slight preference even amongst leave voters for you migrants over knowing you.

  • What I will say here is that again you have to get away from what is an acceptable or socially desirable thing to say about that policy that just rejected Well, just a second.

  • I say I've been U S weapons because I don't want them because it's not socially designed.

  • No, but what?

  • They didn't like the reason that I'm in what I would argue.

  • The reason that they prefer lower numbers is because of this pace of cultural change.

  • And incidentally, if we do look at countries on Canadian If you look Canada, if you look it.

  • Australia in New Zealand, um, the immigration issue is actually an important issue.

  • There is very much a partisan issue, and again, it's just the narrative is different.

  • It may not be as much about competition for jobs, but it will be about population pressure, housing prices, social cohesion.

  • So it's a different narrative.

  • The other thing to point out is, of course, that the numbers are are considerably higher in those societies under a point system.

  • So I don't know what I would say.

  • I would expect the UK debate to move Mawr in the direction of the Canadian New Zealand type immigration debate and less in a debate over, say, low skilled plumbers or something like that.

  • But you've written a book, White Shift, which is talking about what you think presumably is for the foreseeable future.

  • Never present anxiety amongst white populations in North America in Europe that they're going to be outnumbered, right?

  • So this is the backdrop.

  • This is really the backdrop.

  • Now what I'm saying, This solution to that is to sort of start thinking about a trans racial, racially mixed Jordy group.

  • But that takes time and it takes assimilation.

  • And so the question is, it's a question of speed, of assimilation versus speed of immigration.

  • And yes, ultimately, this is a cultural, predominantly cultural issue and not, in my view, a predominantly economic issue and almost bases the this beast.

  • The immigration issue is going to be with us according to your definition for a very long time.

  • Andi yesterday was an insignificant blip in it.

  • In the history is that I think I think we're not in a normal time in the sense that the Brexit debate is elevating concerns over the economy.

  • And that was the relationship you other things were in the news and people's expectations about what's gonna happen.

  • Immigration post Brexit are shaped by this idea.

  • Once we have control, immigration will be what I think I'd like.

  • If that doesn't materialize, I don't know.

  • I don't materialize.

  • I think we're going tohave.

  • Ah, different political situation and I think the Johnson government could be vulnerable to Ah you Kipper Brexit party style force on its right flank like we see in Continental Europe.

  • And I think that would change the politics of the UK.

  • Incidentally, I should say that electorates in the West are realigning during much on these cultural issues around national identity.

  • Immigration?

  • I don't think Britain's that different.

  • You saved sort in the December election.

  • Yeah.

  • I mean, if you compare 2010 and 2019 and you look at this shift in constituencies towards the Conservatives, I mean these air constituencies that have the conservative views on immigration tended to vote lead.

  • Except I think the answer to the anxieties that Eric was talking about is when you've got the immigration system that seems to make those choices is then to say, Why don't we have an integration debate as well?

  • Because I've never had a strategy in this country Go back 50 years, tow you not Powell on this mythic bi election.

  • What the conservative candidate made contributions made it.

  • We say We don't want integration.

  • Go away.

  • I don't want those people to live next door to me and be like me.

  • And obviously integration is now a positive thing on people's confidence in integration in Britain, in France, in Austria, in Germany affect their appetite for for for further immigration.

  • If you feel that people are integrating them, will carry on with that, But then, if you want the migrants to be able to become us, they're part of your group.

  • I think it is a bit different in this populist strand from some of the other continental European countries because we've had a different race debate over the last two or three generations than they've had in some European countries.

  • Nigel Farraj is at the edge of the mainstream in Britain.

  • He's a populist in the European Parliament has got the most multi ethnic group of any of the party groups, not just among the populist politics but among the Christian Democrats.

  • And he celebrates that because the breath British populist party has to observe British race norms in a way that the French national probably doesn't have to be.

  • Oh, challenge.

  • You're saying this is all about white communities feeling threatened.

  • But actually the immigration make the makeup of his group has wasn't European Parliament and the vote that went for Brexit, some of it driven by immigration.

  • You know, there are lots of any people who say they were concerned about immigration as well, right?

  • So you really have two units of analysis.

  • One is the sort of majority ethnic groups, which is might be the white, British and the other R is the nation, say Britain as a whole, the territorial nation, and you will have ethnic minorities who are attached to Britain, perhaps in its present form, who will also feel that an influx is gonna change that.

  • It's not the only concern they have.

  • But part of that is that it's their nation to which is changing, and they, too, can respond.

  • Their national identity is affected as well.

  • What I would say it's Sundays, right, that the key to this is integration.

  • But my worry is that we have very, very few successful examples of scaleable national integration policies that have worked.

  • I mean, there've been a lot of lots of discussions for 50 years about these integration policies.

  • There is what I think actually matters.

  • Maura's assimilation, that is intermarriage and mixing in at the deep level, which can take a number of generations to actually occur.

  • That is really what lowers the temperature on this issue of the mixed race consolation in Britain.

  • I mean, I've got Irish and Indian parents.

  • It doubled from one sense the last it will double again that's not the only Test.

  • 10 helicopter, 10 a 10th of relationships in this country or or mixed ethnicity.

  • And so that's again.

  • It's a it's a different thing.

  • But you know, we've got mixed record on integration in Britain in different ways.

  • But with the only country with the level of ethnic minority presence across the political spectrum left and right in the British Cabinet, you know, we've got to Asian chancellors to Asian home secretaries.

  • I mean, hopefully, non Asian people get the chance to be chance from the home secretary one day as well.

  • Basically, don't think it's the crisis, the long crisis that Eric forces stretching out in front of people confidence.

  • There is a great deal off social distance and concern about Muslim integration.

  • And then there is a great deal of concern among Muslim communities about where the British Muslims are being offered a fair shore.

  • Equal opportunity, equal identical, have to jump extra bars that Hindus and Sikhs don't get jobs.

  • There's a conversation we need tohave about the people.

  • We feel most distant from the people we don't know.

  • What do you think that Eric was talking there about how the Tories need to make sure they're not outflanked on the right on this.

  • And that has been very much a governing sort in right wing parties in angle.

  • Merkel had it over in Germany, and I think it's fair to say Theresa May probably had it here.

  • Are you impressed so far by the rhetoric off Boris Johnson, you say that we need a different agenda talking about assimilation.

  • If we're gonna talk about immigration, he hasn't.

  • Is it fair to say recently used some of the language, which you might have expected off a leader who wants to own that bit of political terrain and make sure there's nothing to the right of him?

  • Are you impressed You?

  • What do you think?

  • It's his direction of travel.

  • He has a self conception itself, has a mortar at Liverpool Global facing people.

  • His opponents will say, Why did you say that about letter boxes and so on?

  • And I think he will behave differently as prime minister than he did as a columnist on so one, but that that issue of you know he's aware that sort of political correctness going too far.

  • We're not being allowed to say things that people want to hear that.

  • He's allowed to say what he says.

  • He's also aware.

  • I think that we that we observe norms that the conservative party off the Johnson May Cameron era is a transformed party because it wanted to be open Parliament, eh?

  • Really toe people from every ethnic background, people from every class, background, people said The Conservatives would never do that.

  • They're actually the only European center right party that has done that, and that is a point off pride for him on Do you know that that's that's That's quite important.

  • So I think I think he has in his own mind, he's, you know, he sees the future of Britain as multi ethnic, and then you want a confident wave union Jack Sort of London 2012 Olympics view of that.

  • The left says he isn't there a tall and actually he's playing some darker gender.

  • I mean, the proofs, the proof's in the pudding.

  • I use a darker like let's go for judges and lawyers than he has to go for it.

  • I do think I do think there's a difference between the Johnson Strand of the Brexit movement, which I think is actually relatively narrow in terms of If we look at the Brexit voting base, I think it's it's quite different from the outlook of the sort of libertarian global Britain type who tend to be in the elite of the movement.

  • And the real question is whether that contradiction can be maintained as we go forward.

  • I'm not sure without strong pressure on the Brexit issue that that can, that contradiction can be maintained.

  • I think right now the the base is giving him give it, cutting him slack because you know he's fighting for Britain and getting wants to get a good deal for Britain, I would think it would.

  • It would be a different landscape once that deal has been inked.

  • If Brexit is an economic success, I just I think that you can look it.

  • Certainly there's been a simulation and mixing, particularly the Afro Caribbean community, but I think the way these things play out tends to take a long time in it.

  • If you look at the American example, you take the Catholic large scale Catholic wave of immigration to the United States.

  • I mean it actually took from the late 19th century right through till John F.

  • Kennedy's election a little bit later for that group to become completely assimilated into American life and concerns over immigration to really, really a bait.

  • I just skeptical that in yes, we have plenty of examples of very well integrated, economically integrated minorities, and that's fantastic.

  • And that's to the good.

  • But I don't think that's the issue.

  • The issue is this deeper, ethno cultural assimilation, and its question is how diverse, how much diversity and how how rapidly are things.

  • Erica's your demographic uneconomic question with the big sweep of history.

  • Can we afford, not tow, have the source of migration that we now look like we're stopping, given the demographics off this country, other countries as well?

  • I'm I think so.

  • I mean, I think ultimately it's democratically.

  • It's up to the population to decide democratically.

  • If they go for a lower migration option and the economy really is damaged, a debate can occur and people can say, OK, let's increase the numbers.

  • I don't think, though, that the issue that immigration can address the aging problem, that's that's just not demographically the case in the sense that I think the you did a report you would have to bring in sort of tens of millions of people to keep the age structure the way it is because immigrants come in and they age two, and therefore it's kind of like a house of cards.

  • All you're doing is delaying the inevitable.

  • The solution, ultimately is to get, you know, has to do with the retirement age.

  • Groups that are not represented in the workforce need to be in the workforce.

  • Immigration is just not think.

  • There's another way that the demographic cleavage which Israel different groups demographic changes, misunderstood.

  • It's perceived as an argument between the 80% white majority in the 15 20% ethnic minorities is actually a big split among the white population, with 1/3 of the white population.

  • The younger group, the graduates have no interest at all in a sort of white ethnic identity and being celebrated of diversity.

  • 1/3 of the white group really having these very strong anxieties about the pace of change and a large part of the white group and the majority of the ethnic minority group in the middle with this balanced view, yes, the pace of change is Jai.

  • If we worked hard on integration.

  • Let's have people become citizens.

  • Let's celebrate the monarchy and the N.

  • H.

  • S.

  • And so on that a large part of the group will go with that.

  • Another part of group will never go with that, and you get some very dark stuff on the ends of the Internet.

  • If you're thinking politically, you're not going to chase that group, which is shrinking without also thinking.

  • I've gotten into generational divide.

  • Recall growing number of graduates got fifth of first time voters who are ethnic minorities and they're having built this one off coalition for Brexit.

  • But was Johnson is then thinking, Can I ever get the Children of Tory voters in the south of England can ever get those of Asian black voters.

  • You're paying the top rate of tax or they're going to be offside, and the Trump Party's taken one route, which is to go.

  • They're the Canadian conservative has taken another one.

  • If you're British conservatives, I think you're going to want a multi ethnic voting coalition that reaches them britches.

  • Those.

  • I think that might be the case down the road, but I don't think that future has arrived.

  • I think you're right, that amongst the young population in amongst the university educated population, there is a more liberal attitude, a more pro diversity attitude.

  • But it is only a tendency.

  • So there's still a significant restrictionist group within the young within the university educated.

  • So I think it's not not right to see those groups is monolithic either, and likewise with ethnic minorities.

  • There's a significant restrictionist group, as we see with, say, particularly Latino and Asian trump voters who are also very restrictionist on immigration.

  • So this is your right that that there's changed demographically coming on.

  • Perhaps the median voter will be a bit different in the future, but certainly for the foreseeable next few elections.

  • That calculus is unlikely to play.

  • Dominic Cummings once articulated.

  • What do you hope to achieve in this country?

  • A cz avoiding what he thinks Europe's gonna collapse under the pressures of its internal contradictions, not least the fact that it has an awful lot of migrants coming into it, who can then move around freely inside, upsetting a lot of voters that you're talking about, uh, Eric in your book.

  • He thinks that Brexit will launch that Boyle here and allow Britain actually maintain some moderation in the great scheme of history, and grateful nation will no doubt carry him shoulder high through the streets.

  • At the end of this experiment.

  • Does any of that sort of ring true that maybe something has been lands by Brexit segments of immigration has come down.

  • You say that this approach that they're talking about this week does address those issues that Dominic Cummings maybe on this one, right?

  • His very effective political campaigner.

  • Take back control, get Brexit done.

  • These are very resident slogans.

  • What you didn't have after the referendum in those frustrating years, you don't didn't have a government with the mandates.

  • Do it.

  • You gotta vote, leave government.

  • They've also got to deliver trade deals that go with that.

  • The immigration policy that goes at that can you govern and remain populist?

  • I think there were two very different voices in the leave campaign at ease, while the moderate Boris Johnson Michael Goave Diesel Stewart sort off.

  • It's about control.

  • It's about points.

  • It's about being welcoming.

  • We can launch the boy you also had on the Internet, pushed very hard this message about Turkey.

  • Watch out for Turkey watch out for the Turks, which obviously is the opposite of the position on then you.

  • You sometimes just combine those two masters of these different audiences.

  • Camera, government, do that, you know, have different voices for different audiences.

  • Or does it have to level on what it's going to do?

  • So I think I think you know it is easy is easier to campaign.

  • And, you know, the other side of the argument was all the bad at communicating with the public.

  • But you've now got to take responsibility is not just a blame game.

  • You have a hung parliament.

  • She were in charge.

  • Now you'll say it's the judges on that measure.

  • Well, I think I think it's very.

  • It's very early days.

  • I think there's been a lot of over excitement about the immigration reforms yesterday.

  • I think the government's and this is really tough.

  • There'll be no low skilled immigration business, said much the same thing.

  • It's actually it's a much more sensible policy than they had in the white paper, because pretty there's gonna be 30,000 as a cut off on.

  • Then, if you wanna 20,000 job, come for 12 months and go away again.

  • You've actually, If you want 45,000 you'll actually be able to get roots of your nursery teacher school assistant.

  • So when you'll be able to get routes to settlement and citizenships, that's a better.

  • That's a better policy.

  • There'll be a lot of pragmatism, a lot of devil in the detail here, whether you can sell that to the votes who voted for control.

  • But control is about what do you want, then?

  • People quite torm.

  • They want less immigration, but they want houses built on.

  • They won't carry and stuffed on.

  • So it's quite is quite it gets more difficult.

  • It gets more granular.

  • And that's what takes the heat.

  • After Brett Brett Brexit happened before Trump was elected, we were the We were earlier doctors, the country that was supposed to be forever stable way seem to sort of make what was labeled by some of populist move at that time.

  • Is it possible we're first in first out and that maybe it has launched the boil?

  • I don't think so, I think because this is ultimately a structural thing, and I think we're only entering into a new phase where cultural politics is gonna have a higher profile simply because of these demographic shifts and unanswered questions about who are we right?

  • These questions?

  • I do think Brexit did play a role in deflecting some of that sentiment into what you might think.

  • It is more civic nationalism, worried about politics and economics rather than cultural ethnicity.

  • So in that sense, yes, Brexit did deflect.

  • But I don't think it can do that job once it's off the political agenda.

  • Once it's off the agenda, we're into a new landscape, and I think that landscape will be less kind to a Johnson style political globalizing Brexit.

  • And I think that's when you know, I think that's when we might see a Mork Continental style narrative emerging how it emerges.

  • I can't say for sure, but I would have thought that that all other things being equal, we might expect it given what's going on another, more brazen populists.

  • Well, it may not be brazen.

  • It may not be explicit it it may still use the language of it, might use the language of population pressure or were importing a 1,000,000 people every three years or whatever it is.

  • A lot of depend.

  • First of all, in what is the migration level?

  • What's going on with the economy?

  • Is Brexit really off the table in terms of a talking point?

  • Whereas if the government compose as a defender of Brexit against the U, that can deflect this sentiment.

  • But once that structural narrative is gone, then I think that's when we're more likely to see this.

  • This kind of party, this is the brain is the great challenge of politics in a near of polarization on populism.

  • It's really easy to have a 10% or 15% port it if you just want to speak to the London Metropolitans and the Graduate group about water tragedy.

  • All of this is if you just want to speak to the hardest end of the exit, but you don't do any compromising.

  • It's really hard to have a governing project where you're looking for 40 or 50%.

  • That's the challenge for Qwest Armor Leeson Andy.

  • You know Canada, cities and towns vote for the same Labour government.

  • It's exactly the same challenge for Boris Johnson Camp Boris Johnson, who wants to go to the global conferences as the mayor of London who believes in openness on Dhe, wants to represent and deliver for blind value.

  • It's about the cultural and social distance in our country, between Kensington and Mansfield and Halifax in Hampstead and so on.

  • But these are not different planets.

  • Both of these places are waiting for conservative parties on labour parties, and in some countries you will see you know, eight parties on 10% each.

  • And then you've got to have a negotiation in Britain that the job is the job is to be a preacher.

  • Is Boris Johnson going to be a better Bridger than kissed Armour releasing Andy?

  • Whoever the Labour Party put up?

  • But those projects you're talking about that might take away some of his votes.

  • They're never going to govern the country.

  • A sort of hyper cosmopolitan agenda is never going to govern the country, but it could.

  • It can take away.

  • That's the government policy needs the only thing I agree with you.

  • But I guess the issue is Johnson's coalition now includes a very significant number of Brexit voting immigration skeptic voters in poor working class.

  • What we seem to have seen and we also saw it in the Trump vote is that people who are skeptical about immigration, um but are economically on the left seemed to be more willing to go over to the right than those who are economically well off but relatively cosmopolitan.

  • So in that trade off the it seems as though the sort of Maur skeptical of immigration policy seems to win out.

  • So my and I guess just looking at the Johnson conservatives, if they're new voters, are at risk off leaving toe a new formation.

  • And don't forget Brexit party.

  • You keep these.

  • These have popped up very quickly.

  • Voters are quite willing.

  • Did you drop the old loyalties and go to new ones?

  • Erikson.

  • But thank you very much indeed for sharing your thoughts.

  • Thanks very much, Very grateful.

under Eric, both thank you for sparing the time to join us the day after the government published its immigration plans to those people who is saying what people wanted was control, not necessarily dropping the numbers way had someone from vote leave on the break in last night saying that all they wanted was control.

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布雷克斯後的移民會是什麼樣子? (What will post-Brexit immigration look like?)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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