In their bid to be hard-line 'take-our-country-back' Brexiteers, the Tory leadership is promoting Priti Patel in her claim that 8 million of the UK population are 'economically inactive'. [She implies lazy layabouts.] She says that EU (and other) workers in the agriculture, building, NHS and care sectors won't be needed any more and that Brits will step up to the plate. Needless to say, those businesses/organisations which rely very heavily on EU labour are quietly furious about it. As I had the temerity to predict elsewhere, the wheels will come off the Johnson/Cummings machine through internal Tory party discomfort, not through opposition parties.
Priti Patel and her 8 million
Collapse
X
-
I was, like you, gobsmacked: the points system outlined will inevitably put the price up in social care, NHS and education - i.e. precisely those areas that the nation seemed - I say seemed - to suggest it wanted action on in the recent election.
Utterly mind-boggling that one stroke we get a a shortage of labour, an increase in costs for replacing it, and, bob's your uncle, immigration problem solved.
Shame about the care homes, hospital wards etc, the fruit and veg fields etc...........
How far-right a 'solution' is this?
Comment
-
-
....you'd have thought they would hold fire till they actually nknow what final EU Deal they get....but then again this may be a message to Brussels....and we drift nearer to No Deal....Last edited by eighthobstruction; 19-02-20, 21:34.bong ching
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Bella Kemp View PostI think you're right ardcarp. Providing the main opposition party can rid itself of the absurdistas, the ghastly Tories are creating their own doom.
That decision played right into the hands of the Tories, and the extreme right.
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostThe "moderate " Labour Party under Blair helped, in fact were instrumental in the decision to allow immediate free access to citizens of the A9 countries . If they had used the brakes available, ( as the other major economies of Italy, France of Germany did) to allow a more gradual flow of labour into the country, we might well have avoided the shambles of the last few years.
That decision played right into the hands of the Tories, and the extreme right.
http://theconversation.com/the-huge-...-britain-66077
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by cloughie View PostYes but a Brexit choice was not on Blair’s agenda.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostThe "moderate " Labour Party under Blair helped, in fact were instrumental in the decision to allow immediate free access to citizens of the A9 countries . If they had used the brakes available, ( as the other major economies of Italy, France of Germany did) to allow a more gradual flow of labour into the country, we might well have avoided the shambles of the last few years.
That decision played right into the hands of the Tories, and the extreme right.
http://theconversation.com/the-huge-...-britain-66077
There were crops left to rot last year thanks to insufficient foreign workers, and given that the 2020 'allowance' will be I believe 10 000 against the 70 000 seasonal workers agriculture needs, that looks set to be repeated with knobs on. Condoning avoidable food waste in this country while so many cannot afford to feed themselves properly, let alone the suffering millions worldwide is repugnant. The difficulties of getting british workers to do the jobs are longstanding and well known; how are those problems magically going to be overcome in a few months? Even if it were the solution automation doesn't happen overnight.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by oddoneout View PostDidn't one Theresa May, when Home Secretary, add to the problem of lack of control by refusing to adopt the control measures available within EU regulations?
There were crops left to rot last year thanks to insufficient foreign workers, and given that the 2020 'allowance' will be I believe 10 000 against the 70 000 seasonal workers agriculture needs, that looks set to be repeated with knobs on. Condoning avoidable food waste in this country while so many cannot afford to feed themselves properly, let alone the suffering millions worldwide is repugnant. The difficulties of getting british workers to do the jobs are longstanding and well known; how are those problems magically going to be overcome in a few months? Even if it were the solution automation doesn't happen overnight.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by oddoneout View PostDidn't one Theresa May, when Home Secretary, add to the problem of lack of control by refusing to adopt the control measures available within EU regulations?
There were crops left to rot last year thanks to insufficient foreign workers, and given that the 2020 'allowance' will be I believe 10 000 against the 70 000 seasonal workers agriculture needs, that looks set to be repeated with knobs on. Condoning avoidable food waste in this country while so many cannot afford to feed themselves properly, let alone the suffering millions worldwide is repugnant. The difficulties of getting british workers to do the jobs are longstanding and well known; how are those problems magically going to be overcome in a few months? Even if it were the solution automation doesn't happen overnight.Last edited by LMcD; 19-02-20, 23:23.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by oddoneout View PostDidn't one Theresa May, when Home Secretary, add to the problem of lack of control by refusing to adopt the control measures available within EU regulations?
There were crops left to rot last year thanks to insufficient foreign workers, and given that the 2020 'allowance' will be I believe 10 000 against the 70 000 seasonal workers agriculture needs, that looks set to be repeated with knobs on. Condoning avoidable food waste in this country while so many cannot afford to feed themselves properly, let alone the suffering millions worldwide is repugnant. The difficulties of getting british workers to do the jobs are longstanding and well known; how are those problems magically going to be overcome in a few months? Even if it were the solution automation doesn't happen overnight.
Comment
-
Comment