A selection of recent media reports

Sarkozy bruised after polls setback
enlarge President Nicolas Sarkozy has suffered a national beating by voters who took their frustrations over the econom...
Belfast Telegraph (15-Mar-2010)
FIRMS FACE LEGAL ACTION OVER JOBS 'ONLY FOR POLISH'
BRITISH workers last night reacted furiously to a job advert banning them from applying if they didnt speak...
Daily Express (15-Mar-2010)
20,000 FAILED ASYLUM SEEKERS STAY IN BRITAIN EVERY YEAR
LABOURS immigration policy is in tatters after official figures revealed that 20,000 failed asylum seekers are allowed t...
Daily Express (15-Mar-2010)
Benefit bill soars for failed asylum seekers as Tories claim system is in chaos
Fewer than a third of failed asylum seekers told they were going to be deported in 2008 were actually removed from the U...
Daily Mail (15-Mar-2010)
UK - Immigration meat packer scandal
UK - Immigration meat packer scandal - Depending on how much is true and how much is media induced there appears to stil...
Meat Trade News Daily (15-Mar-2010)
Just 1 in 3 illegal immigrants get the boot
LESS than a THIRD of failed asylum seekers are being booted out of Britain, shock new figures...
Online Sun (15-Mar-2010)
Only Poles need apply: Factor that 'bars Britons' highlights growing market in cheap migrant labour
British workers are routinely being denied jobs in factories and food processing firms in favour of foreign applicants, ...
Daily Mail (14-Mar-2010)
Mental illness epidemic hits asylum seekers in Scotland
The head of a leading charity has accused the Government of deliberately ignoring an epidemic of poor mental health amon...
Herald Scotland (14-Mar-2010)
Refugees protest against 'United Nations of Hell' high-rise flats
Janice Burns, Sunday Mail REFUGEES seeking asylum in Scotland yesterday demanded an end to their suffering in high-rise...
Daily Record (14-Mar-2010)
The new recession lifestyle trend: quit Scotland for good
On one side of the hall, a dozen families jostle to be the next in line to inquire about a Canadian visa, while a more p...
Herald Scotland (14-Mar-2010)
Sarkozy faces heavy loss in French regional poll
French President Nicolas Sarkozy faces a regional vote on Sunday that opinion polls suggest will result in a heavy loss ...
Yahoo Uk And Ireland News (14-Mar-2010)
MAIL ON SUNDAY COMMENT: Discrimination - An even-handed response at last
This country accepted laws against discrimination because they rightly put a stop to crude, cruel and unjust behaviour b...
The Mail On Sunday (13-Mar-2010)
Illegal immigrants should be allowed to stay
Lots of people seem to have been touched by the story of 31-year-old Sukhwinder Singh, who was stabbed to death in East ...
Timesonline (13-Mar-2010)
BNP 'amends' rules after decision
The British National Party began processing applications within hours of a court order banning recruitment of new member...
The Oxford Times (13-Mar-2010)
Free Churches question whether BNP should be allowed to stand in elections
The Baptist Union of Great Britain, the United Reformed Church and the Methodist Church in Britain have questioned wheth...
Ekklesia (13-Mar-2010)
The only politician with the guts to speak out about immigration: Frank Field reveals his candid opinion on the future o..
British cities are like a tinderbox awaiting a spark, warns Frank Field Surprisingly, it's not just ambitious Tory MPs ...
The Mail On Sunday (13-Mar-2010)
Griffin vs Hodge: the Battle for Barking
A former Labour stronghold has become home to one of the ugliest fights in politics. In one corner, a long-standing mini...
Guardian.co.uk (13-Mar-2010)
ASYLUM SEEKERS GET HOMES WHILE BRITONS HAVE TO WAIT
A MASSIVE £750million of tax-payers cash has been spent by the Government on housing asylum seekers in the last three y...
Daily Star (12-Mar-2010)
Court bans BNP from recruiting new members
The British National Party was today banned from recruiting new members after a court ruled its constitution was illegal...
The Independent (12-Mar-2010)
LABOUR IS ADDING INSULT TO INJURY FOR WORKING CLASSES
WITH nearly two million British citizens stuck on waiting lists for social housing nobody can deny that there is a despe...
Daily Express (12-Mar-2010)

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Press Releases for September 2009

September 23, 2009
New research shows impact of immigration on social housing.
Proportion of foreign born in social housing rises 50% in ten years.

September 1, 2009
How Immigration Affects Population Size


Full Text of Releases : September 2009


September 23, 2009

New research shows impact of immigration on social housing.
Proportion of foreign born in social housing rises 50% in ten years.


New research by Migrationwatch, based on official figures, shows the pressure that uncontrolled immigration has placed – and will place – on social housing.

Speaking at the annual conference of the National Housing Federation in London today, Migrationwatch chairman, Sir Andrew Green said that in the last ten years, the number of UK born tenants in social housing in the UK has fallen by about 1.2 million while non UK-born tenants have increased by 300,000. As a result, the proportion of foreign born has increased from 7.2% to 11.1% - an increase of 54%.

Migrants who arrived here in the last five years and are not refugees are not yet eligible to apply for social housing but could become so in future years if they are granted settlement. Grants of settlement for non-EEA nationals are running at about 160,000 a year, giving a potential pool of 800,000 although, of course, by no means all will apply.

The rise in the proportion of foreign born in social housing is greater because the supply of social housing has not merely failed to meet the demand in a period of very high immigration, but the stock of social housing has actually fallen over the last ten years.

  • In England, the number of social housing units has fallen from 4.4 to 3.9 million in the last ten years.
  • Immigration has added nearly three million to the population of the UK over the same period, mainly in England.
  • The waiting list for social housing in England has risen by 80% in the six years 2002-8, up to 1.8 million, with a sharp peak in 2003-4. Recent research by the National Housing Federation, published in March, suggests that the waiting list could approach two million in 2011.

Earlier this month the Government announced plans to build 2,000 homes in England – which it described as the biggest social housing building project in England for “over 20 years”.

By way of comparison, this would be enough to meet the projected household formation of new immigrants for just over a week.

The pressure on social housing is set to continue:

  • the population of the UK is growing rapidly - twice as fast as in the 1990's and three times as fast as in the 1980's. By 2028 it is set to reach and then exceed 70 million.
  • 70% of this increase is due to immigration. In other words, unless it is controlled, immigration will add the equivalent of 7 cities the size of Birmingham over the next 20 years or so.
  • Immigration is the major factor in household formation – 40% or, on average, nearly 2,000 new households a week - and it is the only one that can be influenced by government. Unless immigration is brought under control, we will need to build one home every six minutes for new immigrants for the next 25 years.

Commenting on the research, Sir Andrew said:

‘In the debate about housing, immigration is a huge elephant in the room. Pressures on the green belt, the need for more affordable housing, overcrowding – all of these are made worse by large scale, uncontrolled immigration. Unless the next Government makes a clear commitment not to allow the population to hit 70 million, and to build its immigration policies around that commitment, we will need to find the money and space to build seven cities the size of Birmingham in the next 25 years just to house new immigrants. We are sitting on top of a population timebomb. It must be a major priority of the next Government to defuse it.’


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September 1, 2009

How Immigration Affects Population Size


A UK population of 70 million remains very likely within 25 years, despite the probably temporary effect of the recession. That is the conclusion of a report issued today by Migrationwatch.

The baby boom and the International Passenger Survey figures released last week have cast the spotlight on the growth in our population. The birth rate has gone up, partly due to immigration, but net immigration is now likely to be much lower for 2008 due largely to a greater outflow of EU citizens – presumably as a result of the recession. Meanwhile, the Minister for Immigration has challenged the validity of the population projections produced by the independent Office for National Statistics (ONS). He has also given the public an assurance that the population of the UK will not reach 70 million.

With immigration now accounting for nearly 70% of projected population growth, the link between the two becomes of major importance in determining the kind of country that Britain will be in decades to come. Briefing Paper 9.24 sets out the very careful manner in which the ONS arrives at the assumption about future immigration which is one of the key variables underlying their population projections.

Commenting, Sir Andrew Green, Chairman of Migrationwatch, said

“The record shows that, at 20 years range, the ONS population projections have been accurate to 2.5% for the past half century. There are bound to be uncertainties about both birth rates and immigration but it is thoroughly irresponsible to dismiss projections that have been carefully arrived at. At a minimum, they demonstrate what is very likely to happen in the absence of a major change in immigration policy. Such changes to our society are, in practice, irreversible as we have already seen.

The government’s own survey, also released last week, showed that 80% of the public want to see immigration reduced, 53% 'by a lot'. The government are in denial about the impact of their failure to control immigration on the whole nature of our society. They must now respond to intense public concern with a firm undertaking to take the measures necessary to limit the growth in our population rather than yet more attempts at spin.”


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