The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Let’s end the immigratio­n blame game

-

yourself in he and she who are not like you and me.”

But the answer is not to simply criticise people’s often genuinely- held concerns about immigratio­n, which regularly lead to immigrants being unfairly blamed for pressure on schools and the NHS, for instance.

Instead surely it’s up to the UK Government to put in place a system to ensure it can be reasonably and sustainabl­y managed?

This, I’m convinced, would in turn prompt a more positive attitude towards immigrants, encouragin­g people to welcome their contributi­ons rather than vilifying them. Although the latest figures showed a slight dip in net long-term migration, the level is still more than three times the Conservati­ves’ target of tens of thousands.

There were 3.2 million EU citizens in Britain in 2015 – a figure which has almost tripled in just over a decade.

Of course nobody is more aware of this than Theresa May, as she repeatedly came under fire on the issue during her tenure as Home Secretary.

Now, as Prime Minister, she will obviously be keener than ever to bring about a decrease in the numbers.

In doing so, the Tory leader will also have to balance employers’ workforce needs.

It won’t be an easy line to walk and Brexit is unlikely to be the magic bullet either.

According to the statistics, net migration for EU citizens was estimated at 180,000, a minimal drop from 184,000 the previous year.

Immigratio­n minister Robert Goodwill has insisted reducing the number of migrants coming to the UK will be a priority for the withdrawal negotiatio­ns. But there are ultimately no guarantees and free movement could prove the price for access to the single market.

All of that said, this debate should be and is about more than statistics. It is also about the UK’s social fabric.

Madeleine Sumption, director of the Migration Observator­y at the University of Oxford, said this week that the UK’s relationsh­ip with Ireland and the former colonies had long been key factors in shaping its migrant population.

In recent years, the EU had played a similar role, she said, although with the UK’s forthcomin­g departure, this will likely change again in the future.

Tied up with all of this, there’s also the question of identity and how immigrants view themselves.

It will be interestin­g to see in the post- Brexit era whether people will so easily relate to the historical­ly supra-ethnic British identity.

Of course many of those lately settled in Scotland – where emigration has traditiona­lly been the issue – have found a distinct nationalis­t identity more appealing.

And yet – with the economic uncertaint­y in the wake of Brexit – could we now start to see more of the so-called new Scots moving on? A SERIES of summits to discuss Scotland’s vital rural economy will get under way next week.

Rural Secretary Fergus Ewing will host the events, which will bring together all of the industry’s big players to discuss how to grow the sector and the impact of the Brexit vote.

Mr Ewing said: “I want to drive forward the rural economy and that’s why I am hosting a series of summits to identify the barriers to growth and recommend potential actions to increase investment and boost jobs.” THERESA MAY is coming under pressure to explain the Government’s handling of plans to scrap the Human Rights Act.

The new Prime Minister has said she’ll press ahead with the move but it is unclear what the planned Bill of Rights replacemen­t would look like and whether Holyrood could veto it.

SNP MSP Ben Macpherson said: “May’s plan is fast becoming a weight around her neck as the Tories become fixated on one of their ideologica­l pet projects at the expense of the rest of the country.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? ■
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom