Not according to the degree I'm currently doingworld is on fire due to climate change fiasco, utter bull
In places like Bradford West and the seat of Bethnal Green and Stepney in east London, sitting Labour MPs clung on with startling reductions in their majorities.
Well over 80% of Muslims are believed to have voted for Labour in 2019. Research just ahead of the 2024 election suggested that had dropped nationally by up to 20 percentage points, and in some constituencies the Muslim vote for Labour clearly fell further.
Starmer is a coward, his resonse is generic "its all far right thugs" same thing over and over again with him, the police are the same thoseWell, ethnic tensions in the UK was certainly not something I had on my 2024 bingo card. There was a gathering in Portsmouth, which included some counter-protestors, but it didn't kick off (thankfully) the way it has in other towns and cities.
I have to say though, Starmer's reaction and statements to all this have been hilariously bad. No attempt to have some introspection and think about why these tensions and protests may have arisen, he essentially says these are all "far-right thugs". This has only added fuel to the fire and shows incredibly poor tact from him and his party.
But I think @Dave1988 has an interesting point. We saw a shift in Muslim voters away from Labour in the 2024 general election, which saw Labour lose seats in Dewsbury and Batley, Birmingham Perry Barr, and in Blackburn to independent candidates who stood on a Pro-Gaza platform (I've just seen @RadFemHedonist's comment whilst writing my comment, which actually ties nicely into this. I'm not sure how much of the Muslim vote makes up Labour's vote, but there were definitely shifts in the Muslim vote in the most recent general election).
Additionally:
Labour's "landslide" election victory is incredibly fragile. Labour increased their vote share from 2019 by a mere 1% and even dropped their vote share in Wales by 4%. The Tories have been incredibly bad for a decade and the right-wing vote was split by Reform UK, allowing Labour to just have to sit on their hands and not say anything stupid, to win. There is very little enthusiasm for Starmer's Labour party.
We now have a situation where people are being attacked on the street because of the colour of their skin (brown and white), in the UK, in 2024... and to be fair, this is largely the fault of the Tory party who handed over a huge backlog of asylum seeker applications to Labour and have handled immigration overall, very poorly. But now the Labour party need to do something.
I've said it before, but I'll say it again. The British people clearly think immigration into the country is too high and the electorate have voted for governments that have promised to reduce immigration.
Check out this YouGov poll - "Do Brits think that immigration has been too high or low in the last 10 years?"
Even when you filter by demographics that you may not expect to say immigration has been too high, you still find significant numbers:
- 66% of respondents think immigration has been too high.
- 64% of women think immigration has been too high.
- 53% of those aged 18-24 think immigration has been too high.
- 71% of those who live in the Midlands think immigration has been too high.
- 67% in the North of England, 55% in Scotland, 64% in Wales, 71% in the South of England
Are all these people far-right thugs?
- 44% of Labour voters think immigration has been too high.
- 49% of Remain voters think immigration has been too high.
- 55% of Londoners think immigration has been too high.
Now, let me be clear, I do not agree with the way some protestors have gone about their business - setting buildings on fire, vandalising property, attacking people, and so on. There are also a small handful of racists and horrible people of that ilk taking advantage of the situation. However, we have swept this issue under the rug for far too long. We have been unable to have mature discussions about immigration in our parliament and crucially, we have had successive governments that have promised to reduce immigration but have not had the political will in reality to do so. This has resulted in a feeling that large numbers of voters have not been listened to.
The next five years are going to be interesting. If we get to 2029 and there's still a significant cost of living crisis, lots of people still can't afford to have kids or rent/buy a house, and if we're still relying on ~600,000 net migration a year, and thousands are still coming over on the boats from France to join the asylum backlog, then oh boy... expect a political shockwave in the next general election (Farage and his posse will be licking their lips).
Starmer needs to do something and he needs to do it quick. Make it easier for British families to have children (we need to get our birth rate up again), start training our own citizens in key areas of the economy so we can gradually wean ourselves off at least a portion of our immigration statistics. I'm no policy expert, but Labour need to at least appear they are doing something in regards to immigration. You can't just say "far-right thugs", arrest people, and sweep it under the carpet. That's a sure fire way for tensions to bubble away further.
Unfortunately, I don't think the current government have the balls to do anything meaningful - Starmer and his lieutenants are just more neoliberal yes-people in different coloured ties.
They lost 5 seats due to their stance on Gaza: Senior Labour figures admit stance on Gaza cost party seatsdoesnt want to go against the muslims as they make up more than half his votes
Well, ethnic tensions in the UK was certainly not something I had on my 2024 bingo card. There was a gathering in Portsmouth, which included some counter-protestors, but it didn't kick off (thankfully) the way it has in other towns and cities.
I have to say though, Starmer's reaction and statements to all this have been hilariously bad. No attempt to have some introspection and think about why these tensions and protests may have arisen, he essentially says these are all "far-right thugs". This has only added fuel to the fire and shows incredibly poor tact from him and his party.
But I think @Dave1988 alludes to an interesting point. We saw a shift in Muslim voters away from Labour in the 2024 general election, which saw Labour lose seats in Dewsbury and Batley, Birmingham Perry Barr, and in Blackburn to independent candidates who stood on a Pro-Gaza platform (I've just seen @RadFemHedonist's comment whilst writing my comment, which actually ties nicely into this. I'm not sure how much of the Muslim vote makes up Labour's vote, but there were definitely shifts in the Muslim vote in the most recent general election).
Additionally:
Labour's "landslide" election victory is incredibly fragile. Labour increased their vote share from 2019 by a mere 1% and even dropped their vote share in Wales by 4%. The Tories have been incredibly bad for a decade and the right-wing vote was split by Reform UK, allowing Labour to just have to sit on their hands and not say anything stupid, to win. There is very little enthusiasm for Starmer's Labour party.
We now have a situation where people are being attacked on the street because of the colour of their skin (brown and white), in the UK, in 2024... and to be fair, this is largely the fault of the Tory party who handed over a huge backlog of asylum seeker applications to Labour and have handled immigration overall, very poorly. But now the Labour party need to do something.
I've said it before, but I'll say it again. The British people clearly think immigration into the country is too high and the electorate have voted for governments that have promised to reduce immigration.
Check out this YouGov poll - "Do Brits think that immigration has been too high or low in the last 10 years?"
Even when you filter by demographics that you may not expect to say immigration has been too high, you still find significant numbers:
- 66% of respondents think immigration has been too high.
- 64% of women think immigration has been too high.
- 53% of those aged 18-24 think immigration has been too high.
- 71% of those who live in the Midlands think immigration has been too high.
- 67% in the North of England, 55% in Scotland, 64% in Wales, 71% in the South of England
Are all these people far-right thugs?
- 44% of Labour voters think immigration has been too high.
- 49% of Remain voters think immigration has been too high.
- 55% of Londoners think immigration has been too high.
Now, let me be clear, I do not agree with the way some protestors have gone about their business - setting buildings on fire, vandalising property, attacking people, and so on. There are also a small handful of racists and horrible people of that ilk taking advantage of the situation. However, we have swept this issue under the rug for far too long. We have been unable to have mature discussions about immigration in our parliament and crucially, we have had successive governments that have promised to reduce immigration but have not had the political will in reality to do so. This has resulted in a feeling that large numbers of voters have not been listened to.
The next five years are going to be interesting. If we get to 2029 and there's still a significant cost of living crisis, lots of people still can't afford to have kids or rent/buy a house, and if we're still relying on ~600,000 net migration a year, and thousands are still coming over on the boats from France to join the asylum backlog, then oh boy... expect a political shockwave in the next general election (Farage and his posse will be licking their lips).
Starmer needs to do something and he needs to do it quick. Make it easier for British families to have children (we need to get our birth rate up again), start training our own citizens in key areas of the economy so we can gradually wean ourselves off at least a portion of our immigration statistics. I'm no policy expert, but Labour need to at least appear they are doing something in regards to immigration. You can't just say "far-right thugs", arrest people, and sweep it under the carpet. That's a sure fire way for tensions to bubble away further.
Unfortunately, I don't think the current government have the balls to do anything meaningful - Starmer and his lieutenants are just more neoliberal yes-people in different coloured ties.
As I've mentioned in previous posts, I think the only way to really stymie the rise of the far right, racism and bigotry is to start actually improving people's lives, everyone's lives.
But I think you're vastly over-estimating how much the actual immigration numbers are really relevant or how much a reduction would quell what we're witnessing. Immigration is a scapegoat, it's an easily digestible narrative that's been deliberately spun for decades in our mainstream politics and media by the powerful in order manipulate the less well off, get them punching down instead of up.
If Labour somehow cut immigration significantly, but it didn't lead to people's everyday lives tangibly improving, do you honestly believe things would be fixed? I said all this before in my other post, but still, Farage and his kind will always blame the "other", some more vulnerable section of society, they'll continue to stoke hatred and cultivate division and tribalism for their own gain. If not the "boat people" or legal migrants, it'll be the dole scroungers, the disabled, the queer, single mums, or the British born and raised ethnic communities that "haven't integrated enough". They'll always be enough foreigners to blame all of life's woes on.
Some of the people attending these "anti-immigration protests" might have valid points regarding the lack of affordable housing, crumbling public services etc, but they believe completely untrue things about migrants, You'll hear people complain about refugees and immigrants getting preferential access to council housing, benefits, the NHS. It's not true though and in fact it's mostly harder for them to gain access to any of that, but people still believe it anyway because they've been told these lies repeatedly all their lives and it's a simple and easy answer.
But I think it will be a mistake to attempt to pander to or satiate that misguided anger and bigotry, it will only ever play into the hands of the cynical manipulators.
The only solution I see is to actually stand for something, take a stand against the hatred and the lies and division and racism, try to change that narrative completely rather than feed it. That doesn't mean shutting down reasonable debate, but stop the scapegoating, stand up for and alongside migrants, and minorities, robustly and steadfastly, as well as the white working class. Call out the racists and hate mongers. And vitally, go after the super rich and start to redistribute wealth. They'll always be a few racists, but decent living conditions and equality would suck all the power out of these hateful movements.
And personally, I am completely comfortable to describe anyone attending these hate-fuelled, probably mostly racist rallies as far-right. Obviously having worries about immigration doesn't necessarily make you an extremist, but if in the current circumstances of violence being wantonly unleashed on the streets against innocent people who look the wrong shade you still feel compelled to join one of these "protests" in order presumably to stoke more fear and hatred, when people are already feeling very afraid as it is. Then yeah I think it's pretty fair to call someone far right. And it's obviously fair to call the racist thugs smashing stuff up racist thugs. These people are mostly just useful idiot boneheads sure, but if they don't want to be called far right or racists they shouldn't do far right and racist things!
Into the so called black economy*, working in places which are mostly cash only (hand car washes, takeaways, barbers etc) so they get paid cash in hand with no tax etc etc.One of the other issues this causes though is that it is very easy for people who are applying for asylum to vanish, which can very easily lead to abuse of our system. For instance, the Home Office lost contact with ~17,000 asylum applicants who had their applications withdrawn. Here's another article from the BBC stating the Home Office has lost contact with a further 5,600 asylum seekers from January this year.