There was a lot to like in Sir Keir’s speech on immigration last week. 
He vowed to “take back control” and end the “one nation experiment in 
open borders”. Even his signature delivery – redolent of an AI-generated
 hologram with a nasty cold – couldn’t detract from the rare veracity of
 his message. Forces are pulling our country apart, he said, and we do 
“need to reduce immigration, significantly”, or “risk becoming an island
 of strangers”. These are self-evident truths, as was his demand that 
immigrants integrate and learn English. 
But his proposals failed
 to match the ambition of his rhetoric. Indeed, when one considers the 
detail of the white paper he unveiled, one inevitably concludes that the
 forces pulling our country apart, making us into “an island of 
strangers”, will continue largely unabated. Okay, there were some 
welcome measures – stricter English language requirements, extending the
 time it takes for migrants to acquire settled status from five years to
 10, linking access to visas to investment in homegrown skills, and 
ending the recruitment of care workers from abroad – but these amount to
 small beer compared to the gargantuan scale of the problem. 
Net
 migration into the UK was over 900,000 in 2023 and 700,000 in 2024 (the
 highest numbers on record), but by her own admission, when interviewed 
by Laura Kuenssberg, Yvette Cooper, the Home Secretary, conceded that, 
after implementation – which won’t happen for at least 18 months – the 
measures will only reduce net migration by a piffling 50,000 people. 
Fifty thousand! After all that lofty jawing? And right on cue, as if to 
underline the emptiness of Sir Keir’s bombast, we discovered that 
another 600 illegal migrants landed in Dover during his speech, taking 
the number to 12,000 since January, a 40% increase on the same period 
last year. 
The inadequacy of these proposals should come as no 
surprise. Bloviating speeches can only do so much to pull the wool over 
the eyes of a sceptical ‘once-bitten-twice-shy’ public that, according 
to recent polls, views immigration as an even more important issue than 
the cost-of-living crisis – that’s why so many voted for Reform in the 
local elections. 85% of Brits want to see net migration slashed to below
 100,000 a year. They won’t be fooled by the insincere utterings of an 
insincere fraud like Sir Keir Starmer. 
This is a man who has 
voted against every immigration reform bill since 2015. He’s never come 
across a foreign criminal he hasn’t wanted to rescue from deportation. 
Once more, during his party’s leadership election campaign, he pledged 
to make the case for freedom of movement, despite the fact that it’s 
opposed by the vast majority of Brits. The man’s an incorrigible 
open-borders fanatic, always has been. He once argued that all border 
controls are racist. But he now wants us to believe he’s changed his 
mind. Actually, more to the point, he wants us to buy the myth that he’s
 always advocated strong borders. It’s a Labour value, apparently – or 
is that laughably? Pull the other one, Sir Keir. You’re an irredeemable 
globalist and your words ring hollow, as proved by your actions, both 
past and present....<<<Read More>>>...
