|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
Britain: Blair pledges anti-immigrant clampdown
By Julie Hyland
30 April 2004
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
Prime Minister Tony Blairs April 27 speech on asylum
and immigration to the Confederation of British Industry (CBI)
was a cowardly capitulation to the xenophobia being pumped out
by the media and the Conservative Party.
It is not the first time. Only last week Blair suddenly announced
that he would support a referendum on the European Union constitution
in the next parliament, just three weeks after he had led Labour
MPs in a parliamentary vote against such a possibility.
News analysts were clearRupert Murdoch had threatened
the prime minister that unless he agreed a referendum, he would
switch the support of his newspapers behind the Conservative Party
who were only too willing to make anti-European prejudice central
to their campaign in the upcoming local authority and European
parliamentary elections on June 10.
Blairs latest declaration on immigration was similarly
dictated by the billionaire media magnate and his counterparts,
whose newspapers have been leading a vicious campaign over the
issue for months.
For Murdoch and others of his ilk, the struggle over asylum
and immigration policy combines several of their key concerns.
In the first instance, it is bound up with their hostility to
the European Union, which on May 1 will admit 10 new, and significantly
poorer, members states including Poland, Slovenia, Latvia, Estonia
and Lithuania.
According to the Sun, this means that some 40,000 foreign
shirkers will invade Britain in order
to claim welfare benefits and hospital care. On April 29, the
newspaper carried a purported timeline of invasions of Britain
throughout historyfrom the Romans in 43 AD through to Nazi
Germanys efforts in 1940. Alongside Hitlers armies,
the newspaper bracketed the invasion of West Indians
who migrated to Britain between 1948 and 1970, before warning
that now there could be a mass movement of Roma gypsies.
The Suns objective is not only to whip up hostility
against the EU in particular, and immigrants in general. It is
also aimed at pushing the governments domestic agenda further
to the right. A vociferous opponent of democratic rights, Murdoch
has been demanding that the government enforce tougher measures
to prevent immigrants and asylum-seekers entering Britain, including
stricter border controls and the overturning of legal norms aimed
at protecting those seeking sanctuary.
Whilst accepting that there is some need for the managed
migration of skilled workers, the Sun insists that
there is no case for low skilled migrantsthose employed
on the most menial and lowest paid jobs such as farm labouring,
for examplebecause British workers can be made to do them
instead.
According to the newspaper there are 7.8 million people
of working age not working in the UK who could easily fill
such vacancies, 25 percent of which are under the age of 25. This
figure indicates Murdochs motives, in that it can only be
concocted by including the infirm and the disabled, while the
figure on youth must also include those involved in further education.
In effect he is arguing for the dismantling of all welfare provisions
in order to force people into low-wage employment.
The government has done its best over the past months to meet
such demands. Like Murdoch, it recognises the value of using immigrants
as scapegoats for the social devastation that its pro-business
policies have created. But it has run up against certain legal
limitations, which cannot simply be overturned overnight. On the
issue of EU expansion, for example, citizens of the new member
countries have the legal right to move across the continent freely
for work.
And so Blair used his speech to the CBI to throw himself on
Murdochs mercy. The prime minister officially sanctioned
the racist diatribes being poured forth by the media, insisting
that they were not racist at all.
We cannot simply dismiss any concern about immigration
as racism, he said. If there was hysteria over the matter
this was the outcome of real, not imagined abuses of the
system that [have] led to a sense of genuine unfairness.
In Blairs scenario, the media is simply responding to
popular concern rather than what is taking place in realitymanufacturing
such concerns in order to suit its own agenda. Similarly, the
government would now respond to their [peoples] worries,
Blair continued.
The public quite rightly expects us to deal with
its concerns, he said. Coming from a government that refused to
listen to mass public opposition to the war against Iraq, this
is cynical in the extreme. But by invoking the popular will, Blair
hopes to give his government carte blanche for what he described
as a top to bottom analysis of the immigration systemthe
repercussions of which are a fundamental attack on the civil liberties
of every person in Britain.
Immigration has reached a crunch point, Blair lyingly
claimed, before extolling the draconian measures already taken
by his government to restrict immigration.
Under Labour, the numbers of people denied entry clearance
had trebled, he said. More people than ever were being turned
back through stringent border controls, including
searches of all haulage entering Britain by sea, and checks by
airline liaison officers which had stopped more than 30,000 suspect
passengers travelling to the UK in 2003.
Asylum applications had fallen by more than a half to 3,500,
the lowest since 1998, Blair boasted, and four times faster than
in the rest of Europe. And the government would do its utmost
to cut that back still further, he promised.
Britain was still overwhelmingly white, he reassured his audience,
with just 8 percent of the population comprised of ethnic minorities,
and one of the lowest levels of foreign-born nationals as
a proportion of our total population of the industrialised
countries.
Some level of migration was necessary, he reasoned, from amongst
foreign professionals, such as those working in IT and finance
who have driven Londons growth as the financial centre
of the world in a highly competitive global market for financial
services.
Large swathes of Britains public services-where
wages have been held down for yearsare dependent on foreign
labour, he continued. One quarter of all health professionals
are from overseas, and a similar percentage in higher education.
Moreover, the labour market was so tight that there were half
a million job vacancies that require filling.
Although there was not much that could be done to prevent people
from the new EU member states travelling to work in Britain, the
government would significantly reduce the quotas of non-EU
low-skilled migrants coming in to fill labour shortages in the
agriculture, hospitality and food-processing industriesto
take in account the impact of EU free movement of workers,
he pledged.
In addition, there would be no state assistance for people
who were not working. Everyone would have to be self-sufficient,
he warned.
To top it off, Blair insisted that compulsory ID cards were
on the horizon. Successive governments have tried,
and failed, for years to bring these in, but have had to back
off because of intense public opposition. Now Labour intend to
utilise hysteria over immigration to stifle opposition.
Finally, Blair pleaded that immigration should not become a
party-political issue, especially as that would
do real damage to national cohesion. It is above all an issue
to deal with, not exploit.
His entreaties fell on deaf ears. Whilst Blair insists that
in order to stop the march of the far-right it is necessary to
adopt their clothes, in reality every concession only emboldens
them. And so it was with Blairs speech. The Conservatives
declared it proved that the government was not in control of immigration,
and attacked Blair as a coward for not having acted tougher earlier.
For its part, the Sun pronounced its delight at what
it described as another massive U-turn from the prime
minister, running Blairs pledges over a two-page spread.
But it made clear that he was not off the hook and that the racism
and xenophobia would continue to be churned out. The papers
political editor, Trevor Kavanagh, wrote, Mr. Blair may
now have regrets. But the pass had been sold. The face of Britain
has changed before our eyes, thanks to New Labour.
See Also:
Blair and Bush plan further crimes in
the Middle East
[22 April 2004]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |