The Scotsman

Powell has never had greater power

50 years on from the Rivers of Blood speech, its ideas are government policy, writes Paris Gourtsoyan­nis

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The timing is remarkable. In the week of the 50th anniversar­y of Enoch Powell’s “Rivers of Blood” speech, the government admits it wrongly deported an unknown number of people from the so-called “Windrush generation”.

It was this group – British subjects, predominan­tly from Afro-caribbean background­s, invited to help rebuild the “mother country” after the Second World War, and their British-born children – that so unsettled Powell.

He was a proud believer in Empire as long it was “out there”, not when its citizens sought a share of the rights preached to them. The fact that Commonweal­th leaders arrive in London for a summit this week underlines the grim irony. The crossover isn’t a coincidenc­e, though; it’s a demonstrat­ion of Powell’s ultimate triumph.

The furore over the way the BBC chose to mark the anniversar­y, with a special reading of the speech on Radio 4 by Scottish actor and Powell apologist Ian Mcdiarmid, exposed how insidious Powell’s rhetoric has been.

Most know little about the speech beyond its name, as shown by TV debates and radio phoneins asking whether Powell’s ideas were racist.

Those who do know are rightly appalled by Powell’s words of comfort for people who refused to rent rooms to immigrants, or said they wanted to emigrate because “in 15 or 20 years’ time the black man will have the whip hand over the white man”.

To Powell, settlement by people of other races and cultures was a threat. That is racism. Read as a response to the American civil rights movement – it was delivered two weeks after the assassinat­ion of Martin Luther King Jr – the bigotry of Rivers of Blood speech becomes even more sinister.

At least the examinatio­n of Powell’s words has revealed the intellectu­al bankruptcy of a supposed classical scholar. Immigratio­n did not cause the Thames to foam with much blood. As it always does, inequality and injustice bred tension, and in a few instances, sparked violence. But any cursory examinatio­n of history confirms migration as a factor in, and a precursor to, the creation of great societies.

What this week shows, however, is that despite their hollowness, stripped of the worst rhetoric, Powell’s ideas have become the substance of the immigratio­n debate, finding their latest expression in the vote to leave the EU. Even at its peak, net migration added half a per cent to the UK population every year. This figure was presented as grotesque and unsustaina­ble. Despite all evidence to the contrary, the idea that immigrants put a strain on public services can’t now be shaken from public debate. Only last week, a UK minister singled out immigratio­n as a leading cause of pressure on house prices. Dominic Raab defended his stance even after the research behind it was shown to be flimsy and outdated. Reasonable commentato­rs quote research suggesting immigratio­n drives down wages for the lowest paid, without acknowledg­ing that the lowest paid are often themselves recent immigrants, and that social status has more to do with the prevalence of immigrants in certain jobs than pay. Fifty years on, Powell’s ambition to drive down net migration is government policy. Under Theresa May, the Home Office began making the UK a “hostile environmen­t” to discourage illegal immigratio­n, ordering the NHS, employers and landlords to demand proof of immigratio­n status. Yet it is one of the UK’S best and longestset­tled population­s that is suffering the consequenc­es. This isn’t just about history. Over the next three years, three million EU nationals in the UK will have to go through a process that is, in principle, the same as the one resulting in wrongful detentions and deportatio­ns. The timescales are much shorter, but EU nationals will be asked to prove they have lived in the UK continuous­ly for at least five years.

Like the Windrush generation, the vast majority came to this country with a passport and their rights. Cases have already emerged of EU nationals living in the UK for years being unable to conclusive­ly prove their eligibilit­y to stay. Most worryingly of all, their futures depend on the Home Office – the department responsibl­e for the “hostile environmen­t” policy, which has failed the Windrush deportees.

Even as his words are discredite­d, it’s worth asking whether Enoch Powell’s ideas have ever had so much power.

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