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IMMIGRATION
TURNING BRITAIN INTO A 'MONGREL NATION'
(21 April 2007)
Immigration
into Britain is now running at a level that is without precedent
in our history and which threatens our cohesion as a nation, according
to a report from the independent social policy think-tank Civitas.
In 'A Nation of Immigrants' David Conway takes issue with those
who minimise the threat posed by mass immigration by claiming that
this is nothing new; that we are a 'mongrel nation'; and that, in
the words of the Commission on Racial Equality, 'everyone who lives
in Britain today is either an immigrant or the descendant of an
immigrant' (pp.2-3).
He
argues, to the contrary, that from the time England can be considered
to have become a nation, immigration has never risen above very
low levels and had no serious demographic impact until the last
part of the twentieth century. Since 1997, however, Tony Blair's
Labour government has effectively abandoned even the goal of limiting
immigration. As a result, by encouraging unending mass immigration
as a permanent feature of the political landscape, there may result
a disintegration of the bonds that hold together the group of people
that constitutes a nation:
'The
country may possibly have already reached a tipping point beyond
which it can no longer be said to contain a single nation. Should
that point have been reached, then ironically, in the course of
Britain having become a nation of immigrants, it would have ceased
to be a nation. Once such a point is reached, political disintegration
may be predicted to be not long in following'. (p.95)
WHAT
IS A NATION?
Before
talking about levels of immigration, we have to decide what constitutes
a nation, since no one can be an immigrant until there is a nation
to immigrate to. In 1897 William Cunningham, the author of the classic
study Alien Immigration into England, claimed that nationhood began
for the English in the reign of Edward the Confessor (who reigned
until 1066), since before that there were no political institutions
and settled ways of life that could be said to constitute a nation.
Cunningham regarded the Norman invaders of 1066 as the first true
wave of immigrants, and they were small in number. About ten thousand
Frenchman arrived with William the Conqueror, representing about
one per cent of the population. The total number of Normans settling
in England never exceeded five per cent of the population, although
their cultural influence was out of proportion to their numbers
(pp.31-32).
If
the Norman invasion represented the first wave of immigration by
violence to be experienced by England after its acquisition of nationhood
it was also the last. As George Trevelyan wrote in his History of
England (1926):
'Since
Hastings there has been nothing more catastrophic than a slow, peaceful
infiltration of alien craftsmen and labourers - Flemings, Huguenots,
Irish and others - with the acquiescence of the existing inhabitants
of the island.' (p.5)
NOT
SO MUCH WAVES AS RIPPLES
David
Conway shows just how small these famous historic waves of immigration
actually were. French Protestants fleeing religious persecution,
known as Huguenots, began arriving in Britain in the sixteenth century,
and came in much larger numbers after the revocation of the Edict
of Nantes in 1685. They settled initially in the East End of London
and became successful entrepreneurs, especially in the silk industry.
However, their overall numbers cannot have exceeded 50,000, representing
about one per cent of the population (p.50).
The
wave of Jews escaping the pogroms who began to arrive in London
towards the end of the nineteenth century represented an even smaller
percentage increase to the population. In the last quarter of the
nineteenth century there were 155,811 Jewish immigrants(p.59), and
even if we include immigration between the two world wars, their
numbers would not have been much over 225,000 - representing about
0.5% of the population.
The
situation changed significantly at the end of World War II, when
Britain experienced large-scale immigration from New Commonwealth
countries, especially in Asia and the West Indies. This led to a
series of acts of parliament to restrict immigration, including
the 1962 Commonwealth Immigrants Act (p.73) and the 1971 Immigration
Act (p.76), which brought primary immigration from New Commonwealth
countries under control. However, the political turbulence of the
1990s saw a great increase in applications for asylum, from about
4,000 a year in the 1980s to about 98,000 in 2000 (p.93). Numbers
rose rapidly following the election of New Labour in 1997, and,
in the face of great public disquiet, the government introduced
measures to reduce bogus asylum applications and to remove failed
applicants (p.80). Although they have achieved some measure of success
in these fields, it has done nothing to staunch a flow of immigration
that has now reached the level of a flood:
'
since
1997 asylum seekers have never comprised the majority of immigrants
to Britain
there are four other principal ways by which lawful
entry to Britain may be gained which have all increased markedly
since 1997 as a result of government policies. These are: family
reunion, including marriage; full-time study; through having obtained
a work permit or some other form of authorisation to work here;
and, finally, EU citizenship.' (p.81)
IMMIGRATION
NOW ADS 1% . EVERY 2 YEARS
As
a direct result of the policies of the present government, which
amount to a virtual abandonment of the control of our borders, immigration
is now running at levels which have never been seen before in our
history. In 2004 and 2005 net foreign immigration was 342,000 and
292,000 respectively, representing an increase in the population
of one per cent in two years. Compared with earlier waves of immigration
like the Huguenots and the Jews, who increased the population by
one per cent or less over a period of decades, it is clear that
we are in an unprecedented situation.
THREATS
FROM IMMIGRATION
David
Conway argues that current levels of immigration raise questions
not only about numbers but about integration - although the second
is related to the first. Until the last part of the twentieth century
Britain's immigrant population comprised only a very small proportion
of the total population. As a result, in order to flourish they
had to adapt to the prevailing culture and integrate. This has given
Britain an enviable record of social harmony combined with considerable
ethnic and cultural plurality. However, the presence of large ethnic
communities, for some of whom integration with the host culture
is not an aim, is threatening this social harmony.
Those
who cherish Britain's comparative stability, freedom, and tolerance
cannot afford to ignore the potential threat that is posed to it
by the large-scale changes in its demographic composition now taking
place as a result of recent large-scale immigration in combination
with declining fertility among its indigenous population.
A society
must always find it harder to reproduce its political culture and
to maintain its traditions the less deeply rooted its members become
in it historically and ethnographically. Of late, there has been
a growing realisation of the plausibility of some such claim in
light of the discovery that all four suicide bombers of 7 July 2005
were British-born, second generation British Muslims who had grown
up in Britain in highly segregated enclaves in which normal patterns
of acculturation into mainstream British life have apparently become
far harder to sustain.
It
is particularly in light of how quickly and recently many such enclaves
have sprung up in Britain, and are continuing to grow apace, that
all those who want to see Britain remain the stable, liberal, and
tolerant country it has been for so long need to consider carefully
how much truth or falsehood is contained in the claim hat Britain
is and has always been a nation of immigrants. (p.6)
'A
Nation of Immigrants? A brief demographic history of Britain' by
David Conway is published by Civitas, 77 Great Peter Street, London
SW1P 2EZ tel 020 7799 6677, www.civitas.org.uk,
price £10.00 inc. pp.
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