Sunday, 1 June 2014

That Open Letter

Dear Ed Miliband,
We are writing to you regarding the free movement of labour within the European Union (EU).

Following the enlargement of the EU in 2004 there was a large flow of immigrants from eastern Europe to this country.

Two million national insurance numbers have been issued to nationals from eastern European accession countries since 2004.

The number of citizens from Poland, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Slovakia, Estonia, Lithuania and Latvia living in this country grew from an estimated 167,000 in 2004 to just over one million in 2012.

In total there were almost three-quarters of a million eastern Europeans working here last year. As things now stand, there is nothing to suggest that we won't face large numbers coming to settle here over the next decade.

With such a significant number of people arriving in this country who are willing to perform low-skilled jobs for poverty pay, thereby applying downward pressure on wages, we are deeply concerned that this EU open-door immigration policy is having an adverse impact on the very communities that the Labour party was founded to represent.

Whilst the benefits of mass migration have been served in abundance to many wealthy people, who are in a position to take advantage of cheap labour, we believe that the lack of affordable housing, school places, hospital capacity and transport infrastructure to accommodate this influx of people means that poorer people's living standards have been squeezed.

While many businesses and individuals have reaped the benefits of mass immigration, poorer households have borne the cost.

The political consequences of these trends could prove catastrophic for our party, unless voters can see we are intent on taking serious action.

Concern with immigration has become an increasingly important priority for a large proportion of working- and middle-class voters.

We therefore urge you to commit the next Labour government, as part of any serious renegotiation of our relationship with the EU, to constraining the free movement of labour from European countries with much lower incomes, thereby removing some of the pressure on wages, welfare, housing and public services in this country.

Above all, such a move would prove to voters that we are intent on regaining control of our own borders.

We would be very happy to meet with you to discuss this further.

Best wishes,

Frank Field MP (Birkenhead),
Ronnie Campbell MP (Blyth Valley),
lan Davidson MP (Glasgow South West),
Roger Godsiff MP (Birmingham Hall Green),
Kate Hoey MP (Vauxhall),
John Mann MP (Bassetlaw),
Graham Stringer MP (Blackley & Broughton)

A very interesting spread, including standing contradictions of the assertion that there are no more working-class MPs, or no more MPs from the traditional Labour Right.

Several of these fall into one or both of those categories, as do many more whom each and all of them are representing by means of this initial gambit or foray.

People who imagine otherwise are ordinarily scornful of the Establishment media, and especially of the BBC. Yet they are wholly dependent on them, to the extent of being downright bovine, if they imagine so ridiculous a thing.

Of course, their Twitter and so on would explode if certain of these MPs ever did turn up on a major television programme. All the more reason for that to happen, say I.

4 comments:

  1. Well we've found seven people in Labour who oppose mass immigration.

    They're all laughable idiots in that case.

    Renegotiation?

    Free movement of people's is based on EU treaties with dozens of other signatories- which cannot be amended without their approval.

    European Commission President Viviane Reding said last month "Absolute freedom of movement is non-negotiable for EU members".

    UKIP has ceaselessly made this point.

    There's still a few Labour MP's who are too thick to get that.

    Pig ignorant idiots.

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  2. Good to see that you know that you are never going to win a seat.

    You have also worked out that on the EU, on immigration, or on anything else, the trends within Labour (and those within each of the other two parties) have absolutely nothing to do with UKIP, and would have been exactly the same if it had never been founded.

    Well done. You are getting there.

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  3. People like Ronnie Campbell, Ian Davidson, Frank Field, Kate Hoey and Roger Godsiff have been against the EU since before even you were born, Mr L, never mind the pig ignorant idiot at 13:08.

    All voted against Maastricht, the other two signatories to this have not been MPs that long. All against the whole thing for 20 years and more before that.

    Labour people are almost the only people with that record, you do get Tories like that but there were only ever three and two of those are dead.

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  4. I especially love that last line.

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