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: Britain
Britain's Conservative Party leader Hague plays the "race
card"
By Julie Hyland
22 April 2000
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Britain's Conservative Party leader William Hague used his
speech to the right-wing Social Market Foundation think tank this
week to hammer home his party's racist and authoritarian credentials.
Claiming that Britain's immigration system was being subjected
to "organised abuse", Hague demanded the rounding up
and detention of all asylum-seekers in army barracks, and the
establishment of a "removals agency" to get failed applicants
out of the country.
Hague's speech came just days after an internal memo said that
the partyreduced to a rump concentrated in the English shire
countiespresently had no chance of winning the general election,
which will probably be held next year.
His speech was clearly designed to garner support on the most
right-wing policies in the upcoming local elections. Ever since
their spectacular defeat in the 1997 general election, the Tory
Party has been thrashing about in an attempt to define a policy
that can win back former voters who transferred their allegiance
to the Labour Party. Their problems have been compounded by the
fact that Prime Minister Tony Blair has stolen most of their political
clothesrecasting the Labour Party as business friendly,
tough on crime and committed to cutting public spending.
Hague's initial response to the widespread anti-Tory mood following
that defeat was to toy with the idea of presenting himself as
more "caring" and "in touch" with the people.
He even took a somewhat "softly-softly" approach to
the most divisive issue within the Conservative Partywhether
Britain joins the European Union's (EU) single currency, the euroin
an effort to reach some kind of consensus.
There is no middle ground on the question of the euro, however,
and Hague's apparent backtracking provoked a furious reaction
from the Thatcherite wing of the party. He had secured the leadership
of the party with Thatcher's backing, but was only regarded as
a caretaker figure due to the absence of the right wing's favoured
candidate, former Defence Secretary Michael Portillo. Portillo's
return to parliament last year, together with the party's continued
inability to revive its political fortunes, has intensified the
pressure on Hague.
With an eye to the recent success of the neo-fascist Austrian
Freedom Party of Joerg Haider, and with opinion polls showing
that a majority of people believed immigration to be an area of
legitimate concern, the Tory Party has decided to cast itself
as the true home of British nationalism. It has taken a more aggressive
line against Europe, backing the "Save the Pound" campaign.
No prejudice is now beyond Tory bounds and Hague's anti-immigrant
rhetoric is part of this.
Playing the "race card" has been the traditional
response of the Conservative right at times of growing social
tensionsfrom Enoch Powell's infamous speech warning of "rivers
of blood" should more blacks and Asians be admitted to Britain
in the 1960s to Thatcher's talk of immigrants "flooding"
the country in the 1980s. Hague is also aware that anti-immigrant
rhetoric is popular with the right-wing tabloid press, who have
led demands for curtailing the right to asylum in recent months.
The Sun, once one of Thatcher's most strident supporters
but generally supportive of Blair, opined that Hague's speech
was "NOT racist. It is REALIST" and claimed that "his
decision to ignore the forces of socialismas opposed to
the forces of conservatismand state hard truths on asylum
seekers will resound around the country". It praised Hague
for "maturing into a politician of stature", but warned
that his real test was yet to come. "The single currencyand,
indeed, much of the EUis beginning to fall apart. If Hague
grasps THIS nettle, he will not regret it. Stand up for Britain,
William. And ignore the opinion polls."
The Telegraph headline was "The resilient unexciting
man from Yorkshire is taking on the establishment". The Evening
Standard admitted that "There is an ugliness about Mr
Hague's scheme that makes us uneasy. But he is perfectly entitled
to put it forward, without being abused as a racist, fascist,
populist or any other sort of '-ist'". Some of the local
press was much worse. The Yorkshire Post praised Hague
for taking on "the race lobby" and "political correctness".
Both the Post and the Times, however, called
on the main parties to admit that the issue was not asylum-seekers
in general, but poor ones. Their concerns were partly influenced
by an EU estimate that the continent will need 40 million immigrants
over the next 25 years to maintain the ratio between workforce
and dependants. The German parliament has agreed to relax its
own stringent immigration rules to recruit 20,000 Information
Technology specialists from India and Eastern Europe. They will
be admitted through a "green card" fast-track immigration
process, in an attempt to fill the hole many businesses face recruiting
specialised workers. German Conservative's in the Christian Democratic
Union have responded by launching a "Kinder statt Inder"
campaign ([German] Children not Indians).
With an education system already run into the ground, there
are concerns that British businesses could face similar problems
to their German counterparts. Britain could lose out against its
continental rivals if immigration laws are tightened indiscriminately,
preventing skilled specialist workers coming from abroad.
The Times said, "the vital question is whether
this [the need for labour] will be recognised and organised, or
whether 400,000 economic migrants a year will go on paying traffickers
to smuggle them in. The record is that the firmer their legal
status, the more these mostly ambitious incomers contribute to
national wealth". The Post put it more bluntly: "It
is not so important to sift the economic migrant from the political
one as to sift the hard-working from the freeloading. Migrant
labour, after all, has been the engine room of many economic powerhouses,
from South-East Asia to the United States, and Britain has benefited
from it in the past".
For its part, Labour attacked Hague's speech whilst continuing
to insist that it was equally harsh on immigrants. Blair's efforts
to accommodate the anti-asylum lobby have created a backlash in
recent weeks. The United Nations Refugees Commissioner chastised
his government for helping to inflame prejudices. Several charities,
including Save the Children and Oxfam, have boycotted the government's
introduction of vouchers for asylum applicants, provided instead
of cash benefits. They complained that since shops where the vouchers
were used would not be required to give back any unspent amount
in cash, this further "discriminated against some of the
most vulnerable people in Britain".
Finally, Bill Morris, the black leader of the Transport and
General Workers Union, denounced the government for pandering
to racial prejudices. Calling for a campaign against the "degrading,
divisive and stigmatising" asylum voucher system, he warned
that Labour was only one step away from introducing the same system
for the unemployed and all those on benefits.
In response, one senior Labour MP complained that the party
was being "hamstrung by the bleeding-heart Islington trendies
who are making charges of 'racism'". Lady Jay, Labour leader
of the House of Lords, subsequently attacked Morris's call, claiming
it was motivated by attempts to protect TGWU lorry driver members
who ferried illegal immigrants into the country (and who now face
fines of up to £2,000).
Following Hague's speech, Home Secretary Jack Straw warned
3,000 mainly Kosovan Albanian refugees, airlifted to Britain during
NATO's bombing campaign, that they face expulsion from the country
over the next two months. With their 12-month permits coming to
an end, Straw threatened that "Enforcement action will be
taken in due course against those who do not go back voluntarily."
Finally, Labour's charge that Hague was "opportunistically"
stirring up concerns over immigration was undermined by news that
the government itself was considering creating new detention centres
for asylum-seekers.
See Also:
Britain: Labour government and Conservative
opposition reported for stoking up anti-immigrant prejudices
[12 April 2000]
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