Law2 mins ago
He's A Fine One To Talk!
Tony Blair wants tougher immigration rules for EU citizens
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No best answer has yet been selected by Jackdaw33. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ."If there are migrants doing low paid work that is the fault of their employers..."
No it's not. It's the migrants' fault for coming here. If they were not here they would not be doing low paid work in this country but probably even lower paid work (or none at all) elsewhere.
"...and that would also hold if they were uk nationals."
It certainly would. So why make it easy for employers to exploit workers by importing more who are prepared to work for less than the going rate?
No it's not. It's the migrants' fault for coming here. If they were not here they would not be doing low paid work in this country but probably even lower paid work (or none at all) elsewhere.
"...and that would also hold if they were uk nationals."
It certainly would. So why make it easy for employers to exploit workers by importing more who are prepared to work for less than the going rate?
New Judge's points are typically well-argued and retain the relavent information.
I would find the irony of Tony Blair talking about 'tightening' immigration amusing, were it not the height of arrogance - he remains yesterday's man with blood on his hands.
The EU is busy making life as tough as possible for the negotiations because it is terrified that any other member state with doubts - which is a lot of them - would see a simple straightforward exit as a green light for them to do the same, and the collapse of the EU like a house of cards.
The British government should have learned from Cameron's disaster - if you go in being polite and humble, the EU will first of all laugh at you, and the tear you to pieces.
Mr Hammond should be approaching these negotiations from the position of strength that Britain actually has, and stop pretending that the EU still has the sort of power over us that made the electorate vote to leave its clutches in the first place.
I would find the irony of Tony Blair talking about 'tightening' immigration amusing, were it not the height of arrogance - he remains yesterday's man with blood on his hands.
The EU is busy making life as tough as possible for the negotiations because it is terrified that any other member state with doubts - which is a lot of them - would see a simple straightforward exit as a green light for them to do the same, and the collapse of the EU like a house of cards.
The British government should have learned from Cameron's disaster - if you go in being polite and humble, the EU will first of all laugh at you, and the tear you to pieces.
Mr Hammond should be approaching these negotiations from the position of strength that Britain actually has, and stop pretending that the EU still has the sort of power over us that made the electorate vote to leave its clutches in the first place.