The Guardian Australia

Britons have wised up to the benefits of immigratio­n. It’s about time politician­s did too

- Robert Ford

For political veterans, the recent arguments over immigratio­n have a very familiar feel: dire warnings of crisis as official statistics show record numbers of people coming to Britain to work, study and join their families, while a dysfunctio­nal Home Office struggles to cope with a new wave of refugees; a beleaguere­d government pledging to clamp down, yet lacking the means or will to do so. All are familiar plot lines from past political dramas on immigratio­n 10 or even 20 years ago. The political responses are predictabl­e too – social conservati­ves thunder about the failure, yet again, to deliver the swingeing cuts they claim voters demand. Liberals

prevaricat­e and change the subject, afraid their arguments are doomed to fail with a sceptical electorate. All

the players are locked into the same old roles. None of them seems to realise the script has changed.

One of the most remarkable, yet least remarked upon, changes in politics over the past decade has been the dramatic liberal shift in public opinion on immigratio­n. The decades-long tendency to see immigratio­n as a problem to be controlled is now in rapid decline. The rising view is that immigratio­n is a resource that can deliver gains for all. A majority now see immigratio­n as economical­ly and culturally beneficial, as a driver of economic recovery and a vital source of support for public services. The share of voters who say migration levels should stay the same or increase has never been higher, even as migration has hit record highs.

The public now favours increased recruitmen­t of migrants across a wide range of economic sectors, from the NHS and social care to fruit pickers and pint pullers. Some of the largest positive shifts have come in low-paid sectors struggling with shortages, such as catering and constructi­on. Voters see a case for more migration in practicall­y every economic sector asked about. Only migrant bankers are unwanted.

Like all big changes, this liberal shift has many sources. Demographi­c change is moving Britain slowly in a liberal direction on many fronts – inherently more migration-sceptical groups are shrinking a little every year, while pro-migration groups grow. Yet the change of the past decade is too broad and fast for population shifts alone to explain. Brexit may be another part of the story – voters approve of the postBrexit points-based system, which applies equally to all labour migrants, and post-Brexit labour shortages have underlined the economic importance of migrant labour. The Covid and postCovid period may also have generated a wider direct experience of the vital and often high risk work migrants do, from the NHS and social care, to transport and home-delivery services.

The more moderate and pragmatic public mood is not evident in government rhetoric. The Conservati­ves are constraine­d by their heavy reliance on migration sceptics attracted to the party since Brexit by the promise to “take back control”. Fears of an anti-immigrant backlash lock the party into hardline language and proposals, yet fears of an anti-austerity backlash ensure these remain empty gestures. The government needs migrant workers yet cannot bring itself to say so. Likewise, the Rwanda plan for asylum seekers is obviously unworkable yet no one in government can admit it.

This approach is now failing on numerous fronts. Voters have noticed the yawning chasm between Conservati­ve words and deeds. Eight out of 10 disapprove of the government’s record, an all-time low. Even those who approve of the Rwanda scheme see it as gesture politics, expensive and doomed to fail. Nigel Farage remains a more attractive option for migration hardliners, while years of draconian rhetoric have alienated swing voters who now favour a more moderate approach. The Conservati­ves’ reputation on immigratio­n has been trashed across the board – for decades they led Labour by large margins as the best party to handle the issue. Now Labour is favoured in most polls, the only Tory consolatio­n being that most voters distrust both the parties equally.

A flounderin­g government and a warming public should present opportunit­ies for progressiv­e politician­s to make the case for open migration. So far, Labour’s response has been circumspec­t – balancing recognitio­n of migrants’ economic contributi­ons with calls for business to do more to raise the skills, productivi­ty and wages of British workers. Yet caution brings its own risks. Tough language and vague policy may be prudent on the campaign trail, but risk storing up problems once in government.

A Labour government, like the current Conservati­ve one, will rely on migrant contributi­ons to grow the economy and staff public services. The party needs to make the case in opposition for the reforms it will need in government. It has made a start, pledging to make the current points-based selection system more responsive to changing economic and social needs and to junk the expensive, performati­ve cruelty of the Rwanda scheme. Labour could go further, for example, by promising root-and-branch reform of the toxic “hostile environmen­t” and by offering a new deal to migrants who make their lives here with liberalise­d citizenshi­p rules, implemente­d by a swifter, cheaper and more transparen­t migration bureaucrac­y.

Labour’s instinct to tread carefully is understand­able – the party has been bruised by immigratio­n before, the public is still wary and liberalism on migration remains more prevalent in the big city seats the opposition already holds than the rural or small town seats it needs to win. Yet such risks can be overstated – the Tory voters most open to Labour are pragmatic moderates who see immigratio­n as beneficial. The Conservati­ves, distrusted by voters, and terrified of a Farageist revolt on their right, cannot contest the new centre ground. Labour has a once in a generation opportunit­y to change the conversati­on on immigratio­n. It may be a risk worth taking.

•Robert Ford is co-author with Marley Morris of a new report, A New Consensus? How Public Opinion has Changed on Immigratio­n, published by the Institute for Public Policy Research

Do you have an opinion on the issues raised in this article? If you would like to submit a letter of up to 250 words to be considered for publicatio­n, email it to us at observer.letters@observer.co.uk

Even those who approve of the Rwanda scheme see it as gesture politics, expensive and doomed to fail

 ?? Photograph: Martin Pope/Getty ?? A protester in London holds up a sign saying ‘No Borders No Nations Stop Deportatio­ns’.
Photograph: Martin Pope/Getty A protester in London holds up a sign saying ‘No Borders No Nations Stop Deportatio­ns’.

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